* addons: Reduce memory consumption
Parse dump files incrementaly using ElementTree.iterparse. Clean unused
resources during parsing. This method is explained in following
article: https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/xml/library/x-hiperfparse/
Memory consumption was reduced about 30% (measured with mprof),
execution time increased about 5% (measured with time utility).
More description available in PR.
* Switch to lxml and update iterparse routines
Use lxml module instead default xml.etree. Lxml provides convenient
wrappers around iterparse method that accepts `tag` argument. That
easer incremental parsing routines to select specific tags from roottree
like `dump` and `dumps`.
Element.clear() method was replaced by `lxml_clean` because lxml
keeps additional information to nodes that should be removed.
Added note about large consumption RAM on large dump files.
This commit doesn't solve this problem completely, but provides a way
to improve current parser to add incremental Configuration serialization
later.
* Working on iterative parser
* Added iterative Configurations parser
* fix
* Fix varlist iteration
* make sure that standards node was loaded
* y2038 addon: Fix that check can never return True, add tests
At the beginning of `check_y2038_safe()` the variable `y2038safe` should
be initialized with `True` and only be set to `False` if there are any
issues. Otherwise it could never become `True`.
In the unit tests the return value of `check_y2038_safe()` is now
verified. But it does not yet work for the "good" example. The "good"
example also returns `False` since it finds warnings in the include
file. So this verification is marked with a "FIXME" comment.
* y2038 tests: Add "good" test file that does not use time functionality
The test file y2038-test-5-good-no-time-used.c does not use any time
functionality so the y2038 addon is not allowed to issue any warnings
and the check must return with `True` (code is safe).
Use Python 3 instead of Python 2 if addons are executed directly.
Running cert.py and misra.py against test/cfg/std.c.dump shows that
Python 3 needs only half the time compared to Python 2. I have tested
it repeatedly and the results are always the same. This is no surprise
at all. The memory footprint is very likely also significantly better
but i have not tested it.
* addons: Add '--recursive' arg. Clean up and clarify errors messages.
This commit introduce '--recursive' option for cppcheck addons.
Iff this option is set addon will recursively traverse directories in
given input files to find files with '.dump' suffix that would be
checked. Otherwise it will treat input directory as error (current
behaviour).
Add additional error handling with more clear error messages, clean up
the code.
* Add regex specifier
* Roll back --recursive option
* Update addons section in manual
* Update addons structure. Make Y2038 addon works.
All addons are now located in same directory, where cppcheck-gui is
looking for them.
Y2038 addon has been updated to latest cppcheck version. Output is same
as 303622f01c commit as it described in
README: 303622f01c/addons/y2038/README.
* Clean up .travis.yml
* Update travis.yml paths.
* misra.py: Bring back -P argument for backward compatibility
* Fix paths
* Normalize dumpfile paths tpo cppcheck format
* Fixup 3 test.
* Add arguments regression test.
* Fixing travis build