Encountered while investigating https://trac.cppcheck.net/ticket/11708.
This has been like this since the introduction of `internalError` in
b6bcdf2936 (almost ten years ago to the
day). Logging internal errors which bail out(!) of the analysis simply
to `std::cout` for them possibly never to be seen (and also not affected
the exitcode) is pretty bad IMO. They should always be visible.
I also removed the filename from the message as it is already available
(and thus redundant) and its existence should be defined by the
template.
Scanning the `cli` folder with `DISABLE_VALUEFLOW=1` `Tokenizer::dump()`
will consume almost 25% of the total Ir count when an addon is
specified. This is mainly caused by the usage of `std::ostream`.
Encountered while profiling #4958.
Still ran into an assert failure in `Tokenizer::hasIfdef()`, since some
checks assume that the tokenizer is always present. Seems like
clangimport is yet another rogue under-tested feature...
Commit 73251544a ("Fix #11842 FN constParameterPointer with library
function (#5257)") most likely introduced a regression for (C) function
pointers passed to functions provided by the standard library that
cppcheck has knowledge about.
This was introduced in #5279. We were transferring the terminating `\0`
via the pipe and also added another one in the parsing. As we are now
directly writing into a `std::string` these extra characters will now
show up in it. So just get rid of them.
This adds a new checker to check for pointer to bool conversions that
are always known. I removed the previous knownConditionTrueFalse checks
since this was too noisy.
There was no need for the `Tokenizer` parameter to be a pointer as it
could never be `nullptr` and was also dereferenced without checking
first.
As a reference to the `Settings` was already available via the
`Tokenizer` there was no need to pass it separately. In the production
code there will only be one instance of it but in the tests we could
have accidentally passed a different one.
Both are bugprone since they just take the next parameter which doesn't
start with `-`.
Also `--template` has not been documented since
17842394c0 back in 2011(!). And
`--template-location` has never been documented since its induction in
f058d9ad08. That's also why we can have a
short deprecation period.
It was also used inconsistently and seemed to imply there is some
special handling which wasn't the case. It was just an alias for
`std::to_string()` for non-`double` types. So there was no need for it.
---------
Co-authored-by: Robert Reif <reif@earthlink.net>
In cppcheck 2.11.1 (macOS), using `-j 0` actually causes cppcheck to do
nothing–it stalls indefinitely.
I could only find one place where `mSettings.jobs` was validated against
> 0 and it's simply an assert, so you wouldn't hit it in a release
build.
- Require -j >= 1 ✅
- Cap -j at 1024, not 10000 ✅ (I don't even know what would happen if
you created 10,000 threads, but nothing good; likely exhaust virtual
memory or grind the process to a halt). 1024 is still obscene but there
may be some hypercomputers out there that have that many logical cores.