152 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
152 lines
6.3 KiB
Plaintext
README of the Y2038 cppcheck addon
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==================================
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Contents
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1. What is Y2038?
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2. What is the Y2038 ccpcheck addon?
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3. How does the Y2038 cppcheck addon work?
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4. How to use the Y2038 cppcheck addon
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---
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1. What is Y2038?
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In a few words:
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In Linux, the current date and time is kept as the number of seconds elapsed
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since the Unich epoch, that is, since January 1st, 1970 at 00:00:00 GMT.
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Most of the time, this representation is stored as a 32-bit signed quantity.
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On January 19th, 2038 at 03:14:07 GMT, such 32-bit representations will reach
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their maximum positive value.
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What happens then is unpredictable: system time might roll back to December
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13th, 1901 at 19:55:13, or it might keep running on until February 7th, 2106
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at 06:28:15 GMT, or the computer may freeze, or just about anything you can
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think of, plus a few ones you can't.
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The workaround for this is to switch to a 64-bit signed representation of time
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as seconds from the Unix epoch. This representation will work for more than 250
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billion years.
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Working around Y2038 requires fixing the Linux kernel, the C libraries, and
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any user code around which uses 32-bit epoch representations.
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There is Y2038-proofing work in progress on the Linux and GNU glibc front.
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2. What is the Y2038 ccpcheck addon?
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The Y2038 cppcheck addon is a tool to help detect code which might need fixing
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because it is Y2038-sensitive. This may be because it uses types or functions
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from libc or from the Linux kernel which are known not to be Y2038-proof.
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3. How does the Y2038 cppcheck addon work?
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The Y2038 cppcheck addon takes XML dumps produced by cppcheck from source code
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files and looks for the names of types or functions which are known to be Y2038-
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sensitive, and emits diagnostics whenever it finds one.
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Of course, this is of little use if your code uses a Y2038-proof glibc and
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correctly configured Y2038-proof time support.
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This is why y2038.py takes into account two preprocessor directives:
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_TIME_BITS and __USE_TIME_BITS64.
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_TIME_BITS is defined equal to 64 by user code when it wants 64-bit time
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support from the GNU glibc. Code which does not define _TIME_BITS equal to 64
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(or defines it to something else than 64) runs a risk of not being Y2038-proof.
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__USE_TIME_BITS64 is defined by the GNU glibc when it actualy provides 64-bit
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time support. When this is defined, then all glibc symbols, barring bugs, are
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Y2038-proof (but your code might have its own Y2038 bugs, if it handles signed
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32-bit Unix epoch values).
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The Y2038 cppcheck performs the following checks:
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1. Upon meeting a definition for _TIME_BITS, if that definition does not
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set it equal to 64, this error diagnostic is emitted:
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Error: _TIME_BITS must be defined equal to 64
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This case is very unlikely but might result from a typo, so pointing
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it out is quite useful. Note that definitions of _TIME_BITS as an
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expression evaluating to 64 will be flagged too.
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2. Upon meeting a definition for _USE_TIME_BITS64, if _TIME_BITS is not
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defined equal to 64, this information diagnostic is emitted:
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Warning: _USE_TIME_BITS64 is defined but _TIME_BITS was not
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This reflects the fact that even though the glibc checked default to
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64-bit time support, this was not requested by the user code, and
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therefore the user code might fail Y2038 if built against a glibc
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which defaults to 32-bit time support.
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3. Upon meeting a symbol (type or function) which is known to be Y2038-
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sensitive, if _USE_TIME_BITS64 is undefined or _TIME_BITS not properly
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defined, this warning diagnostic is emitted:
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Warning: <symbol> might be Y2038-sensitive
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This reflects the fact that the user code is referring to a symbol
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which, when glibc defaults to 32-bit time support, might fail Y2038.
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General note: y2038.py will handle multiple configurations, and will
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emit diagnostics for each configuration in turn.
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4. How to use the Y2038 cppcheck addon
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The Y2038 cppcheck addon is used like any other cppcheck addon:
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cppcheck --dump file1.c [ file2.c [...]]]
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y2038.py file1.c [ file2.c [...]]]
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Sample test C file is provided:
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test/y2038-test-1-bad-time-bits.c
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test/y2038-test-2-no-time-bits.c
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test/y2038-test-3-no-use-time-bits.c
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test/y2038-test-4-good.c
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These cover the cases described above. You can run them through cppcheck
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and y2038.py to see for yourself how the addon diagnostics look like. If
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this README is not outdated (and if it is, feel free to submit a patch),
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you can run cppcheck on these files as on any others:
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cppcheck --dump addons/y2038/test/y2038-*.c
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y2038.py addons/y2038/test/y2038-*.dump
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If you havve not installed cppcheck yet, you will have to run these
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commands from the root of the cppcheck repository:
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make
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sudo make install
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./cppcheck --dump addons/y2038/test/y2038-*.c
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PYTHONPATH=addons python addons/y2038/y2038.py addons/y2038/test/y2038-*.c.dump
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In both cases, y2038.py execution should result in the following:
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Checking addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-1-bad-time-bits.c.dump...
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Checking addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-1-bad-time-bits.c.dump, config ""...
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Checking addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-2-no-time-bits.c.dump...
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Checking addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-2-no-time-bits.c.dump, config ""...
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Checking addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-3-no-use-time-bits.c.dump...
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Checking addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-3-no-use-time-bits.c.dump, config ""...
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Checking addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-4-good.c.dump...
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Checking addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-4-good.c.dump, config ""...
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# Configuration "":
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# Configuration "":
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[addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-1-bad-time-bits.c:8]: (error) _TIME_BITS must be defined equal to 64
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[addons/y2038/test/y2038-inc.h:9]: (warning) _USE_TIME_BITS64 is defined but _TIME_BITS was not
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[addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-1-bad-time-bits.c:10]: (information) addons/y2038/test/y2038-inc.h was included from here
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[addons/y2038/test/y2038-inc.h:9]: (warning) _USE_TIME_BITS64 is defined but _TIME_BITS was not
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[addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-2-no-time-bits.c:8]: (information) addons/y2038/test/y2038-inc.h was included from here
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[addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-3-no-use-time-bits.c:13]: (warning) timespec might be Y2038-sensitive
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[addons/y2038/test/y2038-test-3-no-use-time-bits.c:15]: (warning) clock_gettime might be Y2038-sensitive
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Note: y2038.py recognizes option --template as cppcheck does, including
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pre-defined templates 'gcc', 'vs' and 'edit'. The short form -t is also
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recognized.
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