- CodeChecker
- Easy analysis wrappers
PRODUCT_URL
format- Available CodeChecker commands
log
analyze
parse
store
checkers
analyzers
server
cmd
components
(Source components)runs
(List runs)history
(List of run histories)results
(List analysis results' summary)diff
(Show differences between two runs)sum
(Show summarised count of results)del
(Remove analysis runs)suppress
(Manage and export/import suppressions)products
(Manage product configuration of a server)login
(Authenticate to the server)
- Advanced usage
- Debugging CodeChecker
First of all, you have to setup the environment for CodeChecker. CodeChecker uses SQLite database (by default) to store the results which is also packed into the package.
Running CodeChecker is via its main invocation script, CodeChecker
:
usage: CodeChecker [-h]
{analyze,analyzers,check,checkers,cmd,log,parse,server,store,version}
...
Run the CodeChecker sourcecode analyzer framework.
Please specify a subcommand to access individual features.
positional arguments:
{analyze,analyzers,check,checkers,cmd,log,parse,server,store,version}
commands
analyze Execute the supported code analyzers for the files
recorded in a JSON Compilation Database.
analyzers List supported and available analyzers.
check Perform analysis on a project and print results to
standard output.
checkers List the checkers available for code analysis.
cmd View analysis results on a running server from the
command line.
log Run a build command and collect the executed
compilation commands, storing them in a JSON file.
parse Print analysis summary and results in a human-readable
format.
server Start and manage the CodeChecker Web server.
store Save analysis results to a database.
version Print the version of CodeChecker package that is being
used.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
Example scenario: Analyzing, and storing results
------------------------------------------------
Start the server where the results will be stored and can be viewed
after the analysis is done:
CodeChecker server
Analyze a project with default settings:
CodeChecker check -b "cd ~/myproject && make" -o "~/results"
Store the analyzer results to the server:
CodeChecker store "~/results" -n myproject
The results can be viewed:
* In a web browser: http://localhost:8001
* In the command line:
CodeChecker cmd results myproject
Example scenario: Analyzing, and printing results to Terminal (no storage)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this case, no database is used, and the results are printed on the standard
output.
CodeChecker check -b "cd ~/myproject && make"
Used ports:
5432
- PostgreSQL8001
- CodeChecker server
The server listens only on the local machine.
The initial product is called Default
.
CodeChecker provides, along with the more fine-tuneable commands, some easy out-of-the-box invocations to ensure the most user-friendly operation, the check mode.
It is possible to easily analyse the project for defects without keeping the temporary analysis files and without using any database to store the reports in, but instead printing the found issues to the standard output.
To analyse your project by doing a build and reporting every found issue in the built files, execute
CodeChecker check --build "make"
Please make sure your build command actually compiles (builds) the source files you intend to analyse, as CodeChecker only analyzes files that had been used by the build system.
If you have an already existing JSON Compilation Commands file, you can also
supply it to check
:
CodeChecker check --logfile ./my-build.json
By default, only the report's main messages are printed. To print the
individual steps the analysers took in discovering the issue, specify
--steps
.
check
is a wrapper over the following calls:
- If
--build
is specified, the build is executed as ifCodeChecker log
were invoked. - The resulting logfile, or a
--logfile
specified is used forCodeChecker analyze
, which will put analysis reports into--output
. - The analysis results are fed for
CodeChecker parse
.
After the results has been printed to the standard output, the temporary files used for the analysis are cleaned up.
Please see the individual help for log
, analyze
and parse
(below in this
User guide) for information about the arguments which are not documented
here. For example the CTU related arguments are documented at analyze
subcommand.
usage: CodeChecker check [-h] [-o OUTPUT_DIR] [-q] [-f]
(-b COMMAND | -l LOGFILE) [-j JOBS] [-i SKIPFILE]
[--analyzers ANALYZER [ANALYZER ...]]
[--add-compiler-defaults]
[--saargs CLANGSA_ARGS_CFG_FILE]
[--tidyargs TIDY_ARGS_CFG_FILE] [--timeout TIMEOUT]
[-e checker/group/profile] [-d checker/group/profile]
[--print-steps]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
Run analysis for a project with printing results immediately on the standard
output. Check only needs a build command or an already existing logfile and
performs every step of doing the analysis in batch.
optional arguments:
-h, --help
-o OUTPUT_DIR, --output OUTPUT_DIR
Store the analysis output in the given folder. If it
is not given then the results go into a temporary
directory which will be removed after the analysis.
-t {plist}, --type {plist}, --output-format {plist}
Specify the format the analysis results should use.
(default: plist)
-q, --quiet If specified, the build tool's and the analyzers'
output will not be printed to the standard output.
-f, --force Delete analysis results stored in the database for the
current analysis run's name and store only the results
reported in the 'input' files. (By default,
CodeChecker would keep reports that were coming from
files not affected by the analysis, and only
incrementally update defect reports for source files
that were analysed.)
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
log arguments:
-b COMMAND, --build COMMAND
-l LOGFILE, --logfile LOGFILE
analyzer arguments:
-j JOBS, --jobs JOBS
-c, --clean
-i SKIPFILE, --ignore SKIPFILE, --skip SKIPFILE
--analyzers ANALYZER [ANALYZER ...]
--add-compiler-defaults
--capture-analysis-output
--saargs CLANGSA_ARGS_CFG_FILE
--tidyargs TIDY_ARGS_CFG_FILE
--timeout TIMEOUT
cross translation unit analysis arguments:
These arguments are only available if the Clang Static Analyzer supports
Cross-TU analysis. By default, no CTU analysis is run when 'CodeChecker
analyze' is called.
--ctu, --ctu-all
--ctu-collect
--ctu-analyze
--ctu-on-the-fly
statistical analysis arguments:
These arguments are only available if the Clang Static Analyzer supports
Statistical analysis. By default, no Statistical analysis is run when 'CodeChecker
analyze' is called.
--stats
--stats-collect
--stats-use
checker configuration:
-e checker/group/profile, --enable checker/group/profile
-d checker/group/profile, --disable checker/group/profile
output arguments:
--print-steps
Several subcommands, such as store
and cmd
need a connection specification
on which server and for which Product (read more about
products) an action, such as report storage or result
retrieving, should be done.
This is done via the PRODUCT_URL
where indicated in the subcommand, which
contains the server's access protocol, address, and the to-be-used product's
unique endpoint. The format of this string is:
[http[s]://]host:port/ProductEndpoint
. This URL looks like a standar Web
browsing (HTTP) request URL.
CodeChecker communicates via HTTP requests, thus the first part specifies
whether or not a more secure SSL/TLS-wrapped https
protocol should be used.
If omitted, the default value is http
. The second part is the host and the
port the server listens on. After a /
, the unique endpoint of the product
must be given, this is case-sensitive. This unique endpoint is configured and
allocated when the product is created, by the server's
administrators. The product must exist and be properly configured before any
normal operation could be done on it.
If no URL is specified, the default value http://localhost:8001/Default
will
be used: a standard HTTP CodeChecker server running on the local machine, on
the default port, using the Default product.
The URL https://codechecker.example.org:9999/SampleProduct
will access the
server machine codechecker.example.org
trying to connect to a server
listening on port 9999
via HTTPS. The product SampleProduct
will be used.
The first step in performing an analysis on your project is to record
information about the files in your project for the analyzers. This is done by
recording a build of your project, which is done by the command CodeChecker log
.
usage: CodeChecker log [-h] -o LOGFILE -b COMMAND [-q]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
Runs the given build command and records the executed compilation steps. These
steps are written to the output file in a JSON format. Available build logger
tool that will be used is '...'.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-o LOGFILE, --output LOGFILE
Path of the file to write the collected compilation
commands to. If the file already exists, it will be
overwritten.
-b COMMAND, --build COMMAND
The build command to execute. Build commands can be
simple calls to 'g++' or 'clang++' or 'make', but a
more complex command, or the call of a custom script
file is also supported.
-q, --quiet Do not print the output of the build tool into the
output of this command.
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
Set verbosity level.
Please note, that only the files that are used in the given --build
argument
will be recorded. To analyze your whole project, make sure your build tree has
been cleaned before executing log
.
You can change the compilers that should be logged.
Set CC_LOGGER_GCC_LIKE
environment variable to a colon separated list.
For example (default):
export CC_LOGGER_GCC_LIKE="gcc:g++:clang"
Example:
CodeChecker log -o ../codechecker_myProject_build.log -b "make -j2"
Do the following steps to log compiler calls made by BitBake using CodeChecker.
- Add
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
,LD_PRELOAD
,CC_LOGGER_GCC_LIKE
andCC_LOGGER_FILE
toBB_ENV_EXTRAWHITE
variable in your shell environment:
export BB_ENV_EXTRAWHITE="LD_PRELOAD LD_LIBRARY_PATH CC_LOGGER_FILE CC_LOGGER_GCC_LIKE $BB_ENV_EXTRAWHITE"
Note: BB_ENV_EXTRAWHITE
specifies an additional set of variables to allow through
(whitelist) from the external environment into BitBake's datastore.
- Add the following lines to the
conf/bitbake.conf
file:
export LD_PRELOAD
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH
export CC_LOGGER_FILE
export CC_LOGGER_GCC_LIKE
- Run
CodeChecker log
:
CodeChecker log -o ../compile_commands.json -b "bitbake myProject"
After a JSON Compilation Command Database has been created, the next step is
to invoke and execute the analyzers. CodeChecker will use the specified
logfile
s (there can be multiple given) and create the outputs to the
--output
directory. (These outputs will be plist
files, currently only
these are supported.) The machine-readable output files can be used later on
for printing an overview in the terminal (CodeChecker parse
) or storing
(CodeChecker store
) analysis results in a database, which can later on be
viewed in a browser.
Example:
CodeChecker analyze ../codechecker_myProject_build.log -o my_plists
CodeChecker analyze
supports a myriad of fine-tuning arguments, explained
below:
usage: CodeChecker analyze [-h] [-j JOBS] [-i SKIPFILE] -o OUTPUT_PATH
[-t {plist}] [-q] [-c] [-n NAME]
[--analyzers ANALYZER [ANALYZER ...]]
[--add-compiler-defaults]
[--capture-analysis-output]
[--saargs CLANGSA_ARGS_CFG_FILE]
[--tidyargs TIDY_ARGS_CFG_FILE] [--timeout TIMEOUT]
[-e checker/group/profile]
[-d checker/group/profile] [--enable-all]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
logfile [logfile ...]
Use the previously created JSON Compilation Database to perform an analysis on
the project, outputting analysis results in a machine-readable format.
positional arguments:
logfile Path to the JSON compilation command database files
which were created during the build. The analyzers
will check only the files registered in these build
databases.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-j JOBS, --jobs JOBS Number of threads to use in analysis. More threads
mean faster analysis at the cost of using more memory.
(default: 1)
-i SKIPFILE, --ignore SKIPFILE, --skip SKIPFILE
Path to the Skipfile dictating which project files
should be omitted from analysis. Please consult the
User guide on how a Skipfile should be laid out.
-o OUTPUT_PATH, --output OUTPUT_PATH
Store the analysis output in the given folder.
-t {plist}, --type {plist}, --output-format {plist}
Specify the format the analysis results should use.
(default: plist)
-q, --quiet Do not print the output or error of the analyzers to
the standard output of CodeChecker.
-c, --clean Delete analysis reports stored in the output
directory. (By default, CodeChecker would keep reports
and overwrites only those files that were update by
the current build command).
-n NAME, --name NAME Annotate the run analysis with a custom name in the
created metadata file.
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
Set verbosity level.
-i SKIPFILE, --ignore SKIPFILE, --skip SKIPFILE
Path to the Skipfile dictating which project files
should be omitted from analysis.
Skipfiles filter which files should or should not be analyzed. CodeChecker reads the skipfile from top to bottom and stops at the first matching pattern when deciding whether or not a file should be analyzed.
Each line in the skip file begins with a -
or a +
, followed by a path glob
pattern. -
means that if a file matches a pattern it should not be
checked, +
means that it should be.
- Absolute directory paths should start with
/
. - Relative directory paths should start with
*
. - Path parts should start and end with
*
. - To skip everything use the
-*
mark. Watch out for the order!
-/skip/all/files/in/directory/*
-/do/not/check/this.file
+/dir/do.check.this.file
-/dir/*
In the above example, every file under /dir
will be skipped, except the
one explicitly specified to be analyzed (/dir/do.check.this.file
).
+*/my_project/my_lib_to_skip/important_file.cpp
-*/my_project/my_lib_to_skip*
-*/my_project/3pplib/*
+*/my_project/*
In the above example, important_file.cpp
will be analyzed even if every file
where the path matches to /my_project/my_lib_to_skip
will be skiped.
Every other file where the path contains /myproject
except the files in the
my_project/3pplib
will be analyzed.
The provided shell-style pattern is converted to a regex with the fnmatch.translate.
analyzer arguments:
--analyzers ANALYZER [ANALYZER ...]
Run analysis only with the analyzers specified.
Currently supported analyzers are: clangsa, clang-
tidy.
--add-compiler-defaults
DEPRECATED. Always True.
Retrieve compiler-specific configuration from the
compilers themselves, and use them with Clang. This is
used when the compiler on the system is special, e.g.
when doing cross-compilation.
--capture-analysis-output
Store standard output and standard error of successful
analyzer invocations into the '<OUTPUT_DIR>/success'
directory.
--saargs CLANGSA_ARGS_CFG_FILE
File containing argument which will be forwarded
verbatim for the Clang Static Analyzer.
--tidyargs TIDY_ARGS_CFG_FILE
File containing argument which will be forwarded
verbatim for Clang-Tidy.
--timeout TIMEOUT The amount of time (in seconds) that each analyzer can
spend, individually, to analyze the project. If the
analysis of a particular file takes longer than this
time, the analyzer is killed and the analysis is
considered as a failed one.
CodeChecker supports several analyzer tools. Currently, these analyzers are
the Clang Static Analyzer and
Clang-Tidy. --analyzers
can be
used to specify which analyzer tool should be used (by default, all supported
are used). The tools are completely independent, so either can be omitted if
not present as they are provided by different binaries.
See Configure Clang Static Analyzer and checkers documentation for
a more detailed description how to use the saargs
and tidyargs
arguments.
Some of the include paths are hardcoded during compiler build. If a (cross)
compiler is used to build a project it is possible that the wrong include
paths are searched and the wrong headers will be included which causes
analyses to fail. These hardcoded include paths and defines can be marked for
automatically detection by specifying the --add-compiler-defaults
flag.
CodeChecker will get the hardcoded values for the compilers set in the
CC_LOGGER_GCC_LIKE
environment variable.
export CC_LOGGER_GCC_LIKE="gcc:g++:clang"
If there are still compilation errors after using the --add-compiler-defaults
argument, it is possible that the wrong build target architecture
(32bit, 64bit) is used. Please try to forward these compilation flags
to the analyzers:
-m32
(32-bit build)-m64
(64-bit build)
Forwarded options can modify the compilation actions logged by the build logger or created by CMake (when exporting compile commands). The extra compiler options can be given in config files which are provided by the flags described below.
The config files can contain placeholders in $(ENV_VAR)
format. If the
ENV_VAR
environment variable is set then the placeholder is replaced to its
value. Otherwise an error message is logged saying that the variable is not
set, and in this case an empty string is inserted in the place of the
placeholder.
Use the --saargs
argument to a file which contains compilation options.
CodeChecker analyze mylogfile.json --saargs extra_sa_compile_flags.txt -n myProject
Where the extra_sa_compile_flags.txt
file contains additional compilation
options, for example:
-I~/include/for/analysis -I$(MY_LIB)/include -DDEBUG
(where MY_LIB
is the path of a library code)
Use the --tidyargs
argument to a file which contains compilation options.
CodeChecker analyze mylogfile.json --tidyargs extra_tidy_compile_flags.txt -n myProject
Where the extra_tidy_compile_flags.txt
file contains additional compilation
flags.
Clang-Tidy requires a different format to add compilation options.
Compilation options can be added before (-extra-arg-before=<string>
) and
after (-extra-arg=<string>
) the original compilation options.
Example:
-extra-arg-before='-I~/include/for/analysis' -extra-arg-before='-I~/other/include/for/analysis/' -extra-arg-before='-I$(MY_LIB)/include' -extra-arg='-DDEBUG'
(where MY_LIB
is the path of a library code)
The list of checkers to be used in the analysis can be fine-tuned with the
--enable
and --disable
options. See codechecker-checkers
for the list of
available checkers in the binaries installed on your system.
checker configuration:
-e checker/group/profile, --enable checker/group/profile
Set a checker (or checker group or checker profile)
to BE USED in the analysis.
-d checker/group/profile, --disable checker/group/profile
Set a checker (or checker group or checker profile)
to BE PROHIBITED from use in the analysis.
--enable-all Force the running analyzers to use almost every
checker available. The checker groups 'alpha.',
'debug.' and 'osx.' (on Linux) are NOT enabled
automatically and must be EXPLICITLY specified.
WARNING! Enabling all checkers might result in the
analysis losing precision and stability, and could
even result in a total failure of the analysis. USE
WISELY AND AT YOUR OWN RISK!
Both --enable
and --disable
take individual checkers, checker groups or
checker profiles as their argument and there can be any number of such flags
specified. Flag order is important, subsequent options overwrite previously
specified ones. For example
--enable extreme --disable core.uninitialized --enable core.uninitialized.Assign
will enable every checker of the extreme
profile that do not belong to the
core.uninitialized
group, with the exception of core.uninitialized.Assign
,
which will be enabled after all.
Disabling certain checkers - such as the core
group - is unsupported by
the LLVM/Clang community, and thus discouraged.
Compiler warnings are diagnostic messages that report constructions that are
not inherently erroneous but that are risky or suggest there may have been an
error. Compiler warnings are named clang-diagnostic-<warning-option>
, e.g.
Clang warning controlled by -Wliteral-conversion
will be reported with check
name clang-diagnostic-literal-conversion
.
You can fine-tune which warnings to use in the analysis by setting the enabled
and disabled flags starting from the bigger groups and going inwards. For
example
--enable Wunused --disable Wno-unused-parameter
or
--enable Wunused --disable Wunused-parameter
will enable every unused
warnings except unused-parameter
. These flags
should start with a capital W
or Wno-
prefix followed by the warning name
(E.g.: -e Wliteral-conversion
, -d Wno-literal-conversion
or
-d Wliteral-conversion
). To turn off a compiler warning you can use the
negative form beginning with Wno-
(e.g.: --disable Wno-literal-conversion
)
or you can use the positive form beginning with W
(e.g.:
--enable Wliteral-conversion
). For more information see:
https://clang.llvm.org/docs/DiagnosticsReference.html.
Note: by default -Wall
and -Wextra
warnings are enabled.
Checker profiles describe custom sets of enabled checks which can be specified
in the {INSTALL_DIR}/config/config.json
file. Three built-in options are
available grouping checkers by their quality (measured by their false positive
rate): default
, sensitive
and extreme
. In addition, profile portability
contains checkers for detecting platform-dependent code issues. These issues
can arise when migrating code from 32-bit to 64-bit architectures, and the root
causes of the bugs tend to be overflows, sign extensions and widening
conversions or casts. Detailed information about profiles can be retrieved by
the CodeChecker checkers
command.
Note: list
is a reserved keyword used to show all the available profiles and
thus should not be used as a profile name. Profile names should also be
different from checker(-group) names as they are enabled using the same syntax
and coinciding names could cause unintended behavior.
Specifying --enable-all
will "force" CodeChecker to enable every checker
available in the analyzers. This presents an easy shortcut to force such an
analysis without the need of editing configuration files or supplying long
command-line arguments. However, --enable-all
might result in the analysis
losing stability and precision, and worst case, might result in a complete and
utter failure in the analysis itself. --enable-all
may only be used at
your own risk!
Even specifying --enable-all
will NOT enable checkers from some special
checker groups, such as alpha.
and debug.
. osx.
checkers are only enabled
if CodeChecker is run on a macOS machine. --enable-all
can further be
fine-tuned with subsequent --enable
and --disable
arguments, for example
--enable-all --enable alpha --disable misc
can be used to "further" enable alpha.
checkers, and disable misc
ones.
If the clang
static analyzer binary in your installation supports
Cross Translation Unit analysis,
CodeChecker can execute the analyzers with this mode enabled.
These options are only visible in analyze
if CTU support is present. CTU
mode uses some extra storage space under the specified --output-dir
.
cross translation unit analysis arguments:
These arguments are only available if the Clang Static Analyzer supports
Cross-TU analysis. By default, no such analysis is run when 'CodeChecker
analyze' is called.
--ctu, --ctu-all Perform Cross Translation Unit (CTU) analysis, both
'collect' and 'analyze' phases. In this mode, the
extra files created by 'collect' are cleaned up after
the analysis.
--ctu-collect Perform the first, 'collect' phase of Cross-TU
analysis. This phase generates extra files needed by
CTU analysis, and puts them into '<OUTPUT_DIR>/ctu-
dir'. NOTE: If this argument is present, CodeChecker
will NOT execute the analyzers!
--ctu-analyze Perform the second, 'analyze' phase of Cross-TU
analysis, using already available extra files in
'<OUTPUT_DIR>/ctu-dir'. (These files will not be
cleaned up in this mode.)
--ctu-on-the-fly If specified, the 'collect' phase will not create the
extra AST dumps, but rather analysis will be run with
an in-memory recompilation of the source files.
If the clang
static analyzer binary in your installation supports
statistical checkers CodeChecker can execute the analyzers
with this mode enabled.
These options are only visible in analyze
if the experimental
statistical analysis support is present.
EXPERIMENTAL statistics analysis feature arguments:
These arguments are only available if the Clang Static Analyzer supports
Statistics-based analysis (e.g. statisticsCollector.ReturnValueCheck,
statisticsCollector.SpecialReturnValue checkers are available).
--stats-collect STATS_OUTPUT, --stats-collect STATS_OUTPUT
EXPERIMENTAL feature. Perform the first, 'collect'
phase of Statistical analysis. This phase generates
extra files needed by statistics analysis, and puts
them into '<STATS_OUTPUT>'. NOTE: If this argument is
present, CodeChecker will NOT execute the analyzers!
--stats-use STATS_DIR, --stats-use STATS_DIR
EXPERIMENTAL feature. Use the previously generated
statistics results for the analysis from the given
'<STATS_DIR>'.
--stats EXPERIMENTAL feature. Perform both phases of
Statistical analysis. This phase generates extra files
needed by statistics analysis and enables the
statistical checkers. No need to enable them
explicitly.
parse
is used to read previously created machine-readable analysis results
(such as plist
files), usually previously generated by CodeChecker analyze
.
parse
prints analysis results to the standard output.
usage: CodeChecker parse [-h] [-t {plist}] [--export {html}]
[-o OUTPUT_PATH] [-c] [--suppress SUPPRESS]
[--export-source-suppress] [--print-steps]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
file/folder [file/folder ...]
Parse and pretty-print the summary and results from one or more 'codechecker-
analyze' result files. Bugs which are commented by using "false_positive",
"suppress" and "intentional" source code comments will not be printed by the
`parse` command.
positional arguments:
file/folder The analysis result files and/or folders containing
analysis results which should be parsed and printed.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-t {plist}, --type {plist}, --input-format {plist}
Specify the format the analysis results were created
as. (default: plist)
--suppress SUPPRESS Path of the suppress file to use. Records in the
suppress file are used to suppress the display of
certain results when parsing the analyses' report.
(Reports to an analysis result can also be suppressed
in the source code -- please consult the manual on how
to do so.) NOTE: The suppress file relies on the "bug
identifier" generated by the analyzers which is
experimental, take care when relying on it.
--export-source-suppress
Write suppress data from the suppression annotations
found in the source files that were analyzed earlier
that created the results. The suppression information
will be written to the parameter of '--suppress'.
--print-steps Print the steps the analyzers took in finding the
reported defect.
-i SKIPFILE, --ignore SKIPFILE, --skip SKIPFILE
Path to the Skipfile dictating which project files
should be omitted from analysis. Please consult the
User guide on how a Skipfile should be laid out.
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
Set verbosity level.
export arguments:
-e {html}, --export {html}
Specify extra output format type. (default: None)
-o OUTPUT_PATH, --output OUTPUT_PATH
Store the output in the given folder. (default: None)
-c, --clean DEPRECATED. Delete output results stored in the output
directory. (By default, it would keep output files and
overwrites only those that belongs to a plist file
given by the input argument. (default: True)
For example, if the analysis was run like:
CodeChecker analyze ../codechecker_myProject_build.log -o my_plists
then the results of the analysis can be printed with
CodeChecker parse ./my_plists
Source code comments can be used in the source files to change the review status of a specific or all checker results found in a particular line of code. Source code comment should be above the line where the defect was found, and no empty lines are allowed between the line with the bug and the source code comment.
Comment lines staring with //
or C style /**/
comments are supported.
Watch out for the comment format!
The source code comment has the following format:
// codechecker comment type [checker name] comment
Multiple source code comment types are allowed:
codechecker_suppress
codechecker_false_positive
codechecker_intentional
codechecker_confirmed
Source code comment change the review status
of a bug in the following form:
codechecker_suppress
andcodechecker_false_positive
toFalse positive
codechecker_intentional
toIntentional
codechecker_confirmed
toConfirmed
.
Note: codechecker_suppress
does the same as codechecker_false_positive
.
You can read more about review status here
void test() {
int x;
// codechecker_confirmed [deadcode.DeadStores] suppress deadcode
x = 1; // warn
}
void test() {
int x;
// codechecker_false_positive [all] suppress all checker results
x = 1; // warn
}
void test() {
int x;
/* codechecker_false_positive [all] suppress all checker results */
x = 1; // warn
}
void test() {
int x;
// codechecker_suppress [all] suppress all
// checker resuls
// with a long
// comment
x = 1; // warn
}
void test() {
int x;
/* codechecker_suppress [all] suppress all
checker resuls
with a long
comment */
x = 1; // warn
}
void test() {
int x;
/*
codechecker_suppress [all] suppress all
checker resuls
with a long
comment
*/
x = 1; // warn
}
--export-source-suppress
Write suppress data from the suppression annotations
found in the source files that were analyzed earlier
that created the results.
CodeChecker parse ./my_plists --suppress generated.suppress --export-source-suppress
A Codechecker server
needs to be started before the reports can be stored to
a database.
store
is used to save previously created machine-readable analysis results
(such as plist
files), usually previously generated by CodeChecker analyze
to the database.
usage: CodeChecker store [-h] [-t {plist}] [-n NAME] [--tag TAG] [-f]
[--url PRODUCT_URL]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
[file/folder [file/folder ...]]
Store the results from one or more 'codechecker-analyze' result files in a
database.
positional arguments:
file/folder The analysis result files and/or folders containing
analysis results which should be parsed and printed.
(default: /home/<username>/.codechecker/reports)
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-t {plist}, --type {plist}, --input-format {plist}
Specify the format the analysis results were created
as. (default: plist)
-n NAME, --name NAME The name of the analysis run to use in storing the
reports to the database. If not specified, the '--
name' parameter given to 'codechecker-analyze' will be
used, if exists.
--tag TAG A unique identifier for this individual store of results
in the run's history.
--trim-path-prefix [TRIM_PATH_PREFIX [TRIM_PATH_PREFIX ...]]
Removes leading path from files which will be stored.
So if you have /a/b/c/x.cpp and /a/b/c/y.cpp then by
removing "/a/b/" prefix will store files like c/x.cpp
and c/y.cpp. If multiple prefix is given, the longest
match will be removed.
-f, --force Delete analysis results stored in the database for the
current analysis run's name and store only the results
reported in the 'input' files. (By default,
CodeChecker would keep reports that were coming from
files not affected by the analysis, and only
incrementally update defect reports for source files
that were analysed.)
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
Set verbosity level.
server arguments:
Specifies a 'CodeChecker server' instance which will be used to store the
results. This server must be running and listening, and the given product
must exist prior to the 'store' command being run.
--url PRODUCT_URL The URL of the product to store the results for, in
the format of '[http[s]://]host:port/Endpoint'.
(default: localhost:8001/Default)
The results can be viewed by connecting to such a server in a Web browser or
via 'CodeChecker cmd'.
For example, if the analysis was run like:
CodeChecker analyze ../codechecker_myProject_build.log -o ./my_plists
then the results of the analysis can be stored with this command:
CodeChecker store ./my_plists -n my_project
CodeChecker can also use SQLite for storing the results. In this case the SQLite database will be created in the workspace directory.
In order to use PostgreSQL instead of SQLite, use the --postgresql
command
line argument for CodeChecker server
command.
If --postgresql
is not given then SQLite is used by default in
which case --dbport
, --dbaddress
, --dbname
, and
--dbusername
command line arguments are ignored.
NOTE! Schema migration is not supported with SQLite. This means if you upgrade your CodeChecker to a newer version, you might need to re-check your project.
List the checkers available in the installed analyzers which can be used when performing an analysis.
By default, CodeChecker checkers
will list all checkers, one per each row,
providing a quick overview on which checkers are available in the analyzers.
usage: CodeChecker checkers [-h] [--analyzers ANALYZER [ANALYZER ...]]
[--details] [--profile {PROFILE/list}]
[--only-enabled | --only-disabled]
[-o {rows,table,csv,json}]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
Get the list of checkers available and their enabled status in the supported
analyzers. Currently supported analyzers are: clangsa, clang-tidy.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--analyzers ANALYZER [ANALYZER ...]
Show checkers only from the analyzers specified.
--details Show details about the checker, such as description,
if available.
--profile {PROFILE/list}
List checkers enabled by the selected profile.
'list' is a special option showing details about
profiles collectively.
--only-enabled Show only the enabled checkers.
--only-disabled Show only the disabled checkers.
-o {rows,table,csv,json}, --output {rows,table,csv,json}
The format to list the applicable checkers as.
(default: rows)
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
Set verbosity level.
The list provided by default is formatted for easy machine and human
reading. Use the --only-
options (--only-enabled
and --only-disabled
) to
filter the list if you wish to see just the enabled/disabled checkers.
A detailed view of the available checkers is available via --details
. In the
detailed view, checker status, severity and description (if available) is
also printed.
A machine-readable csv
or json
output can be generated by supplying the
--output csv
or --output json
argument.
The default list of enabled and disabled checkers can be altered by editing
{INSTALL_DIR}/config/config.json
. Note, that this file is overwritten when
the package is reinstalled!
List the available and supported analyzers installed on the system. This command can be used to retrieve the to-be-used analyzers' install path and version information.
By default, this command only lists the names of the available analyzers (with respect to the environment CodeChecker is run in).
usage: CodeChecker analyzers [-h] [--all] [--details]
[-o {rows,table,csv,json}]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
Get the list of available and supported analyzers, querying their version and
actual binary executed.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--all Show all supported analyzers, not just the available
ones.
--details Show details about the analyzers, not just their
names.
-o {rows,table,csv,json}, --output {rows,table,csv,json}
Specify the format of the output list. (default: rows)
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
Set verbosity level.
A detailed view of the available analyzers is available via --details
. In the
detailed view, version string and install path is also printed.
A machine-readable csv
or json
output can be generated by supplying the
--output csv
or --output json
argument.
To view and store the analysis reports in a database, a CodeChecker server
must be started. This is done via the server
command, which creates a
standard Web server and initializes or connects to a database with
the given configuration.
The CodeChecker Viewer server can be browsed by a Web browser by opening the
address of it (by default, http://localhost:8001
),
or via the CodeChecker cmd
command-line client.
usage: CodeChecker server [-h] [-w WORKSPACE] [-f CONFIG_DIRECTORY]
[--host LISTEN_ADDRESS] [-v PORT] [--not-host-only]
[--sqlite SQLITE_FILE | --postgresql]
[--dbaddress DBADDRESS] [--dbport DBPORT]
[--dbusername DBUSERNAME] [--dbname DBNAME]
[--reset-root] [--force-authentication]
[-l | -s | --stop-all]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
The CodeChecker Web server is used to handle the storage and navigation of
analysis results. A started server can be connected to via a Web browser, or
by using the 'CodeChecker cmd' command-line client.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-w WORKSPACE, --workspace WORKSPACE
Directory where CodeChecker can store analysis result
related data, such as the database. (Cannot be
specified at the same time with '--sqlite' or
'--config-directory'.) (default:
/home/<username>/.codechecker)
-f CONFIG_DIRECTORY, --config-directory CONFIG_DIRECTORY
Directory where CodeChecker server should read server-
specific configuration (such as authentication
settings, and SSL certificates) from.
(default: /home/<username>/.codechecker)
--host LISTEN_ADDRESS
The IP address or hostname of the server on which it
should listen for connections. (default: localhost)
-v PORT, --view-port PORT, -p PORT, --port PORT
The port which will be used as listen port for the
server. (default: 8001)
--not-host-only If specified, storing and viewing the results will be
possible not only by browsers and clients running
locally, but to everyone, who can access the server
over the Internet. (Equivalent to specifying '--host
""'.) (default: False)
--skip-db-cleanup Skip performing cleanup jobs on the database like
removing unused files.
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
Set verbosity level.
configuration database arguments:
--sqlite SQLITE_FILE Path of the SQLite database file to use. (default:
<CONFIG_DIRECTORY>/config.sqlite)
--postgresql Specifies that a PostgreSQL database is to be used
instead of SQLite. See the "PostgreSQL arguments"
section on how to configure the database connection.
PostgreSQL arguments:
Values of these arguments are ignored, unless '--postgresql' is specified!
--dbaddress DBADDRESS, --db-host DBADDRESS
Database server address. (default: localhost)
--dbport DBPORT, --db-port DBPORT
Database server port. (default: 5432)
--dbusername DBUSERNAME, --db-username DBUSERNAME
Username to use for connection. (default: codechecker)
--dbname DBNAME, --db-name DBNAME
Name of the database to use. (default: config)
To start a server with default configuration, simply execute
CodeChecker server
--host LISTEN_ADDRESS
The IP address or hostname of the server on which it
should listen for connections. (default: localhost)
--not-host-only If specified, viewing the results will be possible not
only by browsers and clients running locally, but to
everyone, who can access the server over the Internet.
(Equivalent to specifying '--host ""'.) (default:
False)
By default, the running server can only be accessed from the same machine
(localhost
) where it is running. This can be overridden by specifying
--host ""
, instructing the server to listen on all available interfaces.
The --sqlite
(or --postgresql
and the various --db-
arguments) can be
used to specify where the database, containing the analysis reports is.
--config-directory
specifies where the server configuration files, such as
authentication config is. For example, one can start
two servers with two different product layout, but with the same authorisation
configuration:
CodeChecker server --sqlite ~/major_bugs.sqlite -f ~/.codechecker -p 8001
CodeChecker server --sqlite ~/minor_bugs.sqlite -f ~/.codechecker -p 8002
The --workspace
argument can be used to shortcut this specification: by
default, the configuration directory is the workspace itself, and therein
resides the config.sqlite
file, containing the product configuration.
If the server is started in --sqlite
mode and fresh, that is, no product
configuration file is found, a product named Default
, using Default.sqlite
in the configuration directory is automatically created. Please see
Product management for details on how to configure products.
root account arguments:
Servers automatically create a root user to access the server's
configuration via the clients. This user is created at first start and
saved in the CONFIG_DIRECTORY, and the credentials are printed to the
server's standard output. The plaintext credentials are NEVER accessible
again.
--reset-root Force the server to recreate the master superuser
(root) account name and password. The previous
credentials will be invalidated, and the new ones will
be printed to the standard output.
--force-authentication
Force the server to run in authentication requiring
mode, despite the configuration value in
'session_config.json'. This is needed if you need to
edit the product configuration of a server that would
not require authentication otherwise.
You can enforce SSL security on your listening socket. In this case all clients must
access your server using the https://host:port
URL format.
To enable SSL simply place an SSL certificate to <CONFIG_DIRECTORY>/cert.pem
and the corresponding private key to <CONFIG_DIRECTORY>/key.pem
.
You can generate these certificates for example
using the openssl tool.
When the server finds these files upon start-up,
SSL will be automatically enabled.
running server management:
-l, --list List the servers that has been started by you.
-s, --stop Stops the server associated with the given view-port
and workspace.
--stop-all Stops all of your running CodeChecker server
instances.
CodeChecker servers can be started in the background as any other service, via
common shell tools such as nohup
and &!
. The running instances can be
queried via --list
.
Calling CodeChecker server --stop
will stop the "default" server, i.e. one
that was started by simply calling CodeChecker server
. This "stop" command
is equivalent to pressing Ctrl
-C
in the server's terminal, resulting in an
immediate termination of the server.
A server running on a specific and port can be stopped by:
CodeChecker server -w ~/my_codechecker_workspace -p 8002 --stop
--stop-all
will stop every running server that is printed by --list
.
Use these arguments to manage the database versions handled by the server. For a more detailed description about the schema upgrade check out the schema migration guide.
Database management arguments.:
WARNING these commands needs to be called with the same workspace and
configuration arguments as the server so the configuration database will
be found which is required for the schema migration. Migration can be done
without a running server but pay attention to use the same arguments which
will be used to start the server. NOTE: Before migration it is advised to
create a full a backup of the product databases.
--status STATUS Name of the product to get the database status for.
Use 'all' to list the database statuses for all of the
products.
--upgrade-schema PRODUCT_TO_UPGRADE
Name of the product to upgrade to the latest database
schema available in the package. Use 'all' to upgrade
all of the products.NOTE: Before migration it is
advised to create a full backup of the product
databases.
The CodeChecker cmd
is a lightweight command line client that can be used to
view analysis results from the command-line. The command-line client can also
be integrated into a continuous integration loop or can be used to schedule
maintenance tasks.
Most of the features available in a Web browser opening the analysis result
viewer server on its port is available in the cmd
tool.
usage: CodeChecker cmd [-h]
{runs,results,diff,sum,del,suppress,products,login} ...
The command-line client is used to connect to a running 'CodeChecker server'
(either remote or local) and quickly inspect analysis results, such as runs,
individual defect reports, compare analyses, etc. Please see the invidual
subcommands for further details.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
available actions:
{runs,results,diff,sum,del,suppress,products,login}
runs List the available analysis runs.
results List analysis result (finding) summary for a given
run.
diff Compare two analysis runs and show the difference.
sum Show number of reports per checker.
del Delete analysis runs.
suppress Manage and export/import suppressions of a CodeChecker
server.
products Access subcommands related to configuring the products
managed by a CodeChecker server.
login Authenticate into CodeChecker servers that require
privileges.
The operations available in cmd
always require a running CodeChecker
viewer server (i.e. a server started by CodeChecker server
), and the
connection details to access the server. These details either take an URL form
(--url hostname:port/Productname
) if the command accesses analysis results
in a given product, or a server URL (--url hostname:port
), if the command
manages the server.
A server started by default settings (CodeChecker server
, see above)
automatically configure the product Default
under localhost:8001/Default
,
thus the --url
parameter can be omitted.
Most result-giving commands also take an --output
format parameter. If this
is set to json
, a more detailed output is given, in JSON format.
common arguments:
--host HOST The address of the CodeChecker viewer server to
connect to. (default: localhost)
--url SERVER_URL The URL of the server to access, in the format of
'[http[s]://]host:port'. (default: localhost:8001)
--url PRODUCT_URL The URL of the product which will be accessed by the
client, in the format of
'[http[s]://]host:port/Endpoint'.
(default: localhost:8001/Default)
-o {plaintext,rows,table,csv,json}, --output {plaintext,rows,table,csv,json}
The output format to use in showing the data.
(default: plaintext)
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
Set verbosity level.
Results can be filtered by using separate filter options of results
, diff
,
sum
, etc. commands.
filter arguments:
--report-hash [REPORT_HASH [REPORT_HASH ...]]
Filter results by report hashes.
--review-status [REVIEW_STATUS [REVIEW_STATUS ...]]
Filter results by review statuses. This can be used
only if basename or newname is a run name (on the
remote server). (default: ['unreviewed', 'confirmed'])
--detection-status [DETECTION_STATUS [DETECTION_STATUS ...]]
Filter results by detection statuses. This can be used
only if basename or newname is a run name (on the
remote server). (default: ['new', 'reopened',
'unresolved'])
--severity [SEVERITY [SEVERITY ...]]
Filter results by severities.
--tag [TAG [TAG ...]]
Filter results by version tag names. This can be used
only if basename or newname is a run name (on the
remote server).
--file [FILE_PATH [FILE_PATH ...]]
Filter results by file path. The file path can contain
multiple * quantifiers which matches any number of
characters (zero or more). So if you have /a/x.cpp and
/a/y.cpp then "/a/*.cpp" selects both.
--checker-name [CHECKER_NAME [CHECKER_NAME ...]]
Filter results by checker names. The checker name can
contain multiple * quantifiers which matches any
number of characters (zero or more). So for example
"*DeadStores" will matches "deadcode.DeadStores"
--checker-msg [CHECKER_MSG [CHECKER_MSG ...]]
Filter results by checker messages.The checker message
can contain multiple * quantifiers which matches any
number of characters (zero or more).
--component [COMPONENT [COMPONENT ...]]
Filter results by source components. This can be used
only if basename or newname is a run name (on the
remote server).
-s, --suppressed DEPRECATED. Use the '--filter' option to get false
positive (suppressed) results. Show only suppressed
results instead of only unsuppressed ones.
--filter FILTER DEPRECATED. Filter results. Use separated filter
options to filter the results. The filter string has
the following format: [<SEVERITIES>]:[<CHECKER_NAMES>]
:[<FILE_PATHS>]:[<DETECTION_STATUSES>]:[<REVIEW_STATUS
ES>] where severites, checker_names, file_paths,
detection_statuses, review_statuses should be a comma
separated list, e.g.: "high,medium:unix,core:*.cpp,*.h
:new,unresolved:false_positive,intentional"
usage: CodeChecker cmd components [-h] [--url PRODUCT_URL]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
{list,add,del} ...
Source components are named collection of directories specified as directory
filter.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
available actions:
{list,add,del}
list List source components available on the server.
add Creates a new source component.
del Delete a source component from the server.
usage: CodeChecker cmd components add [-h] [--description DESCRIPTION] -i
COMPONENT_FILE [--url PRODUCT_URL]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
NAME
Creates a new source component or updates an existing one.
positional arguments:
NAME Unique name of the source component.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--description DESCRIPTION
A custom textual description to be shown alongside the
source component.
-i COMPONENT_FILE, --import COMPONENT_FILE
Path to the source component file which contains
multiple file paths. Each file path start with a '+'
(results from this path should be listed) or '-'
(results from this path should not be listed) sign.
E.g.:
+/a/b/x.cpp
-/a/b/
Please see the User guide for more information.
Source component helps us to filter run results by multiple file paths.
Each line in the source component file begins with a -
or a +
, followed by
a path glob pattern:
-
means that if a file matches a pattern it should not be filtered+
means that it should be filtered.
Example:
-/dont/filter/files/in/directory/*
-/dont/filter/this.file
-/dir/*
+/dir/filter/in/directory/*
+/dir/filter.this.file
Note: the order of the source component value is not important. E.g.:
+/a/b/x.cpp
-/a/b/
means the same as
-/a/b/
+/a/b/x.cpp
x.cpp
will be included in the run results and all other files under /a/b/
path will not be included.
List the name and basic information about source component added to the server.
usage: CodeChecker cmd components list [-h] [--url PRODUCT_URL]
[-o {plaintext,rows,table,csv,json}]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
List the name and basic information about source component added to the
server.
usage: CodeChecker cmd components del [-h] [--url PRODUCT_URL]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
NAME
Removes the specified source component.
positional arguments:
NAME The source component name which will be removed.
usage: CodeChecker cmd runs [-h] [--url PRODUCT_URL]
[-o {plaintext,rows,table,csv,json}]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
List the analysis runs available on the server.
With this command you can list out the specific storage events which happened during storage processes under multiple run names.
usage: CodeChecker cmd history [-h] [-n [RUN_NAME [RUN_NAME ...]]]
[--url PRODUCT_URL]
[-o {plaintext,rows,table,csv,json}]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
Show run history for some analysis runs.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-n [RUN_NAME [RUN_NAME ...]], --name [RUN_NAME [RUN_NAME ...]]
Names of the analysis runs to show history for. If
this argument is not supplied it will show the history
for all runs. This has the following format:
"<run_name_1> <run_name_2> <run_name_3>" where run
names can be a Pythonregex expression. So if you have
run_1_a_name, run_2_b_name, run_2_c_name, run_3_d_name
then "run_2* run_3_d_name" shows history for the last
three runs. Use 'CodeChecker cmd runs' to get the
available runs.
Prints basic information about analysis results, such as location, checker name, summary.
usage: CodeChecker cmd results [-h]
[--report-hash [REPORT_HASH [REPORT_HASH ...]]]
[--review-status [REVIEW_STATUS [REVIEW_STATUS ...]]]
[--detection-status [DETECTION_STATUS [DETECTION_STATUS ...]]]
[--severity [SEVERITY [SEVERITY ...]]]
[--tag [TAG [TAG ...]]]
[--file [FILE_PATH [FILE_PATH ...]]]
[--checker-name [CHECKER_NAME [CHECKER_NAME ...]]]
[--checker-msg [CHECKER_MSG [CHECKER_MSG ...]]]
[--component [COMPONENT [COMPONENT ...]]] [-s]
[--filter FILTER] [--url PRODUCT_URL]
[-o {plaintext,rows,table,csv,json}]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
RUN_NAMES
Show the individual analysis reports' summary.
positional arguments:
RUN_NAME Names of the analysis runs to show result summaries of.
This has the following format:
<run_name_1>:<run_name_2>:<run_name_3> where run names
can contain * quantifiers which matches any number of
characters (zero or more). So if you have
run_1_a_name, run_2_b_name, run_2_c_name, run_3_d_name
then "run_2*:run_3_d_name" selects the last three runs.
Use 'CodeChecker cmd runs' to get the available runs.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
#Get analysis results for a run:
CodeChecker cmd results my_run
# Get analysis results for multiple runs:
CodeChecker cmd results "my_run1:my_run2"
# Get analysis results by using regex:
CodeChecker cmd results "my_run*"
# Get analysis results for a run and filter the analysis results:
CodeChecker cmd results my_run --severity critical high medium \
--file "/home/username/my_project/*"
This mode shows analysis results (in the same format as results
) does, but
from the comparison of two runs.
usage: CodeChecker cmd diff [-h] -b BASE_RUN -n NEW_RUN
[--report-hash [REPORT_HASH [REPORT_HASH ...]]]
[--review-status [REVIEW_STATUS [REVIEW_STATUS ...]]]
[--detection-status [DETECTION_STATUS [DETECTION_STATUS ...]]]
[--severity [SEVERITY [SEVERITY ...]]]
[--tag [TAG [TAG ...]]]
[--file [FILE_PATH [FILE_PATH ...]]]
[--checker-name [CHECKER_NAME [CHECKER_NAME ...]]]
[--checker-msg [CHECKER_MSG [CHECKER_MSG ...]]]
[--component [COMPONENT [COMPONENT ...]]] [-s]
[--filter FILTER]
(--new | --resolved | --unresolved)
[--url PRODUCT_URL]
[-o {plaintext,rows,table,csv,json,html}]
[-e EXPORT_DIR] [-c]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
Compare two analysis runs to show the results that differ between the two.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-b BASE_RUN, --basename BASE_RUN
The 'base' (left) side of the difference: this
analysis run is used as the initial state in the
comparison. The basename can contain * quantifiers
which matches any number of characters (zero or more).
So if you have run-a-1, run-a-2 and run-b-1 then
"run-a*" selects the first two.
-n NEW_RUN, --newname NEW_RUN
The 'new' (right) side of the difference: this
analysis run is compared to the -b/--basename run. The
parameter can be a run name(on the remote server) or a
local report directory (result of the analyze
command). In case of run name the newname can contain
* quantifiers which matches any number of characters
(zero or more). So if you have run-a-1, run-a-2 and
run-b-1 then "run-a*" selects the first two.
comparison modes:
--new Show results that didn't exist in the 'base' but
appear in the 'new' run.
--resolved Show results that existed in the 'base' but
disappeared from the 'new' run.
--unresolved Show results that appear in both the 'base' and the
'new' run.
The command can be used in local or remote compare modes.
In local mode the results of a local analysis (see CodeChecker analyze
)
can be compared to the results stored (see CodeChecker store
) on a remote
CodeChecker server:
CodeChecker cmd diff -p 8001 --basename my_project --newname ./my_updated_plists --new
In remote compare mode, two runs stored on a remote CodeChecker server can be compared to each other:
CodeChecker cmd diff -p 8001 --basename my_project --newname my_new_checkin --new
There is opportunity to compare a run to multiple baselines. You can simply
provide a regular expression by -b
flag which covers the required run names.
The Python regex syntax has to be used:
https://docs.python.org/2/library/re.html#regular-expression-syntax.
usage: CodeChecker cmd sum [-h] (-n RUN_NAME [RUN_NAME ...] | -a)
[--disable-unique]
[--report-hash [REPORT_HASH [REPORT_HASH ...]]]
[--review-status [REVIEW_STATUS [REVIEW_STATUS ...]]]
[--detection-status [DETECTION_STATUS [DETECTION_STATUS ...]]]
[--severity [SEVERITY [SEVERITY ...]]]
[--tag [TAG [TAG ...]]]
[--file [FILE_PATH [FILE_PATH ...]]]
[--checker-name [CHECKER_NAME [CHECKER_NAME ...]]]
[--checker-msg [CHECKER_MSG [CHECKER_MSG ...]]]
[--component [COMPONENT [COMPONENT ...]]] [-s]
[--filter FILTER] [--url PRODUCT_URL]
[-o {plaintext,rows,table,csv,json}]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
Show checker statistics for some analysis runs.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-n RUN_NAME [RUN_NAME ...], --name RUN_NAME [RUN_NAME ...]
Names of the analysis runs to show result count
breakdown for. This has the following format:
<run_name_1>:<run_name_2>:<run_name_3> where run names
can be a Python regex expression. So if you have
run_1_a_name, run_2_b_name, run_2_c_name, run_3_d_name
then "run_2*:run_3_d_name"selects the last three runs.
Use 'CodeChecker cmd runs' to get the available runs.
-a, --all Show breakdown for all analysis runs.
--disable-unique List all bugs even if these end up in the same bug
location, but reached through different paths. By
uniqueing the bugs a report will be appeared only once
even if it is found on several paths.
# Get statistics for a run:
CodeChecker cmd sum -n my_run
# Get statistics for all runs filtered by multiple checker names:
CodeChecker cmd sum --all --checker-name "core.*" "deadcode.*"
# Get statistics for all runs and only for severity 'high':
CodeChecker cmd sum --all --severity "high"
usage: CodeChecker cmd del [-h]
(-n RUN_NAME [RUN_NAME ...] |
--all-before-run RUN_NAME |
--all-after-run RUN_NAME |
--all-after-time TIMESTAMP |
--all-before-time TIMESTAMP)
[--url PRODUCT_URL]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
Remove analysis runs from the server based on some criteria. NOTE! When a run
is deleted, ALL associated information is permanently lost!
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-n RUN_NAME [RUN_NAME ...], --name RUN_NAME [RUN_NAME ...]
Full name of the analysis run or runs to delete.
--all-before-run RUN_NAME
Delete all runs that were stored to the server BEFORE
the specified one.
--all-after-run RUN_NAME
Delete all runs that were stored to the server AFTER
the specified one.
--all-after-time TIMESTAMP
Delete all analysis runs that were stored to the
server AFTER the given timestamp. The format of
TIMESTAMP is 'year:month:day:hour:minute:second' (the
"time" part can be omitted, in which case midnight
(00:00:00) is used).
--all-before-time TIMESTAMP
Delete all analysis runs that were stored to the
server BEFORE the given timestamp. The format of
TIMESTAMP is 'year:month:day:hour:minute:second' (the
"time" part can be omitted, in which case midnight
(00:00:00) is used).
usage: CodeChecker cmd suppress [-h] [-f] -i SUPPRESS_FILE [--url PRODUCT_URL]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
RUN_NAME
Imports suppressions from a suppress file to a CodeChecker server.
positional arguments:
RUN_NAME Name of the analysis run to suppress or unsuppress a
report in.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-f, --force Enable suppression of already suppressed reports.
-i SUPPRESS_FILE, --import SUPPRESS_FILE
Import suppression from the suppress file into the
database.
-i SUPPRESS_FILE, --import SUPPRESS_FILE
Import suppression from the suppress file into the
database.
--import
appends the suppressions found in the given suppress file to
the database on the server.
Please see Product management for details.
usage: CodeChecker cmd login [-h] [-d] [--url SERVER_URL]
[--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}]
[USERNAME]
Certain CodeChecker servers can require elevated privileges to access analysis
results. In such cases it is mandatory to authenticate to the server. This
action is used to perform an authentication in the command-line.
positional arguments:
USERNAME The username to authenticate with. (default: <username>)
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-d, --deactivate, --logout
Send a logout request to end your privileged session.
common arguments:
--verbose {info,debug,debug_analyzer}
Set verbosity level.
If a server requires privileged access, you must
log in before you can access the data on the particular server. Once
authenticated, your session is available for some time and CodeChecker cmd
can be used normally.
The password can be saved on the disk. If such "preconfigured" password is not found, the user will be asked, in the command-line, to provide credentials.
You may want to configure CodeChecker to do the analysis on separate machines in a distributed way.
Start the postgres database on a central machine (in this example it is called codechecker.central) on a remotely accessible address and port and then run
CodeChecker check
on multiple machines (called host1 and host2), specify the remote dbaddress and dbport and use the same run name.
Create and start an empty database to which the CodeChecker server can connect.
Before the first use, you have to setup PostgreSQL. PostgreSQL stores its data files in a data directory, so before you start the PostgreSQL server you have to create and init this data directory. I will call the data directory to pgsql_data.
Do the following steps:
# on machine codechecker.central
mkdir -p /path/to/pgsql_data
initdb -U codechecker -D /path/to/pgsql_data -E "SQL_ASCII"
# Start PostgreSQL server on port 5432
postgres -U codechecker -D /path/to/pgsql_data -p 5432 &>pgsql_log &
# Start the central CodeChecker server
CodeChecker server -w ~/codechecker_workspace --dbaddress localhost --dbport 5432 --view-port 8001
Then you can run CodeChecker on multiple hosts but using the same run name (in this example this is called "distributed_run". CodeChecker server is listening on codechecker.central port 8001.
# On host1 we check module1
CodeChecker check -w /tmp/codechecker_ws -b "cd module_1;make" --port 8001 --host codechecker.central distributed_run
# On host2 we check module2
CodeChecker check -w /tmp/codechecker_ws -b "cd module_2;make" --port 8001 --host codechecker.central disributed_run
If a CodeChecker is run with a user that needs database authentication, the PGPASSFILE environment variable should be set to a pgpass file For format and further information see PostgreSQL documentation: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq-pgpass.html
To change the log levels check out the logging documentation.