1 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" 2 "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd"> 3 <html> 4 <head> 5 <title>scan-build: running the analyzer from the command line</title> 6 <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="content.css"> 7 <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="menu.css"> 8 <script type="text/javascript" src="scripts/menu.js"></script> 9 <script type="text/javascript" src="scripts/dbtree.js"></script> 10 </head> 11 <body> 12 13 <div id="page"> 14 <!--#include virtual="menu.html.incl"--> 15 <div id="content"> 16 17 <h1>scan-build: running the analyzer from the command line</h1> 18 19 <table style="margin-top:0px" width="100%" cellpadding="0px" cellspacing="0"> 20 <tr><td> 21 22 <h3>What is it?</h3> 23 <p><b>scan-build</b> is a command line utility that enables a user to run the 24 static analyzer over their codebase as part of performing a regular build (from 25 the command line).</p> 26 27 <h3>How does it work?</h3> 28 <p>During a project build, as source files are compiled they are also analyzed 29 in tandem by the static analyzer.</p> 30 31 <p>Upon completion of the build, results are then presented to the user within a 32 web browser.</p> 33 34 <h3>Will it work with any build system?</h3> 35 <p><b>scan-build</b> has little or no knowledge about how you build your code. 36 It works by overriding the <tt>CC</tt> and <tt>CXX</tt> environment variables to 37 (hopefully) change your build to use a "fake" compiler instead of the 38 one that would normally build your project. This fake compiler executes either 39 <tt>clang</tt> or <tt>gcc</tt> (depending on the platform) to compile your 40 code and then executes the static analyzer to analyze your code.</p> 41 42 <p>This "poor man's interposition" works amazingly well in many cases 43 and falls down in others. Please consult the information on this page on making 44 the best use of <b>scan-build</b>, which includes getting it to work when the 45 aforementioned hack fails to work.</p> 46 47 </td> 48 <td style="padding-left:10px; text-align:center"> 49 <img src="images/scan_build_cmd.png" width="450px" alt="scan-build"><br> 50 <a href="images/analyzer_html.png"><img src="images/analyzer_html.png" width="450px" alt="analyzer in browser"></a> 51 <br><b>Viewing static analyzer results in a web browser</b> 52 </td></tr></table> 53 54 <h2>Contents</h2> 55 56 <ul id="collapsetree" class="dbtree onclick multiple"> 57 <li><a href="#scanbuild">Getting Started</a> 58 <ul> 59 <li><a href="#scanbuild_basicusage">Basic Usage</a></li> 60 <li><a href="#scanbuild_otheroptions">Other Options</a></li> 61 <li><a href="#scanbuild_output">Output of scan-build</a></li> 62 </ul> 63 </li> 64 <li><a href="#recommendedguidelines">Recommended Usage Guidelines</a> 65 <ul> 66 <li><a href="#recommended_debug">Always Analyze a Project in its "Debug" Configuration</a></li> 67 <li><a href="#recommended_verbose">Use Verbose Output when Debugging scan-build</a></li> 68 <li><a href="#recommended_autoconf">Run './configure' through scan-build</a></li> 69 </ul> 70 </li> 71 <li><a href="#iphone">Analyzing iPhone Projects</a></li> 72 </ul> 73 74 <h2 id="scanbuild">Getting Started</h2> 75 76 <p>The <tt>scan-build</tt> command can be used to analyze an entire project by 77 essentially interposing on a project's build process. This means that to run the 78 analyzer using <tt>scan-build</tt>, you will use <tt>scan-build</tt> to analyze 79 the source files compiled by <tt>gcc</tt>/<tt>clang</tt> during a project build. 80 This means that any files that are not compiled will also not be analyzed.</p> 81 82 <h3 id="scanbuild_basicusage">Basic Usage</h3> 83 84 <p>Basic usage of <tt>scan-build</tt> is designed to be simple: just place the 85 word "scan-build" in front of your build command:</p> 86 87 <pre class="code_example"> 88 $ <span class="code_highlight">scan-build</span> make 89 $ <span class="code_highlight">scan-build</span> xcodebuild 90 </pre> 91 92 <p>In the first case <tt>scan-build</tt> analyzes the code of a project built 93 with <tt>make</tt> and in the second case <tt>scan-build</tt> analyzes a project 94 built using <tt>xcodebuild</tt>.<p> 95 96 <p>Here is the general format for invoking <tt>scan-build</tt>:</p> 97 98 <pre class="code_example"> 99 $ <span class="code_highlight">scan-build</span> <i>[scan-build options]</i> <span class="code_highlight"><command></span> <i>[command options]</i> 100 </pre> 101 102 <p>Operationally, <tt>scan-build</tt> literally runs <command> with all of the 103 subsequent options passed to it. For example, one can pass <tt>-j4</tt> to 104 <tt>make</tt> get a parallel build over 4 cores:</p> 105 106 <pre class="code_example"> 107 $ scan-build make <span class="code_highlight">-j4</span> 108 </pre> 109 110 <p>In almost all cases, <tt>scan-build</tt> makes no effort to interpret the 111 options after the build command; it simply passes them through. In general, 112 <tt>scan-build</tt> should support parallel builds, but <b>not distributed 113 builds</b>.</p> 114 115 <p>It is also possible to use <tt>scan-build</tt> to analyze specific 116 files:</p> 117 118 <pre class="code_example"> 119 $ scan-build gcc -c <span class="code_highlight">t1.c t2.c</span> 120 </pre> 121 122 <p>This example causes the files <tt>t1.c</tt> and <tt>t2.c</tt> to be analyzed. 123 </p> 124 125 <h3 id="scanbuild_otheroptions">Other Options</h3> 126 127 <p>As mentioned above, extra options can be passed to <tt>scan-build</tt>. These 128 options prefix the build command. For example:</p> 129 130 <pre class="code_example"> 131 $ scan-build <span class="code_highlight">-k -V</span> make 132 $ scan-build <span class="code_highlight">-k -V</span> xcodebuild 133 </pre> 134 135 <p>Here is a subset of useful options:</p> 136 137 <table class="options"> 138 <thead><tr><td>Option</td><td>Description</td></tr></thead> 139 140 <tr><td><b>-o</b></td><td>Target directory for HTML report files. Subdirectories 141 will be created as needed to represent separate "runs" of the analyzer. If this 142 option is not specified, a directory is created in <tt>/tmp</tt> to store the 143 reports.</td></tr> 144 145 <tr><td><b>-h</b><br><i>(or no arguments)</i></td><td>Display all 146 <tt>scan-build</tt> options.</td></tr> 147 148 <tr><td><b>-k</b><br><b>--keep-going</b></td><td>Add a "keep on 149 going" option to the specified build command. <p>This option currently supports 150 <tt>make</tt> and <tt>xcodebuild</tt>.</p> <p>This is a convenience option; one 151 can specify this behavior directly using build options.</p></td></tr> 152 153 <tr><td><b>-v</b></td><td>Verbose output from scan-build and the analyzer. <b>A 154 second and third "-v" increases verbosity</b>, and is useful for filing bug 155 reports against the analyzer.</td></tr> 156 157 <tr><td><b>-V</b></td><td>View analysis results in a web browser when the build 158 command completes.</td></tr> </table> 159 160 <p>A complete list of options can be obtained by running <tt>scan-build</tt> 161 with no arguments.</p> 162 163 <h3 id="scanbuild_output">Output of scan-build</h3> 164 165 <p> 166 The output of scan-build is a set of HTML files, each one which represents a 167 separate bug report. A single <tt>index.html</tt> file is generated for 168 surveying all of the bugs. You can then just open <tt>index.html</tt> in a web 169 browser to view the bug reports. 170 </p> 171 172 <p> 173 Where the HTML files are generated is specified with a <b>-o</b> option to 174 <tt>scan-build</tt>. If <b>-o</b> isn't specified, a directory in <tt>/tmp</tt> 175 is created to store the files (<tt>scan-build</tt> will print a message telling 176 you where they are). If you want to view the reports immediately after the build 177 completes, pass <b>-V</b> to <tt>scan-build</tt>. 178 </p> 179 180 181 <h2 id="recommendedguidelines">Recommended Usage Guidelines</h2> 182 183 <p>This section describes a few recommendations with running the analyzer.</p> 184 185 <h3 id="recommended_debug">ALWAYS analyze a project in its "debug" configuration</h3> 186 187 <p>Most projects can be built in a "debug" mode that enables assertions. 188 Assertions are picked up by the static analyzer to prune infeasible paths, which 189 in some cases can greatly reduce the number of false positives (bogus error 190 reports) emitted by the tool.</p> 191 192 <h3 id="recommend_verbose">Use verbose output when debugging scan-build</h3> 193 194 <p><tt>scan-build</tt> takes a <b>-v</b> option to emit verbose output about 195 what it's doing; two <b>-v</b> options emit more information. Redirecting the 196 output of <tt>scan-build</tt> to a text file (make sure to redirect standard 197 error) is useful for filing bug reports against <tt>scan-build</tt> or the 198 analyzer, as we can see the exact options (and files) passed to the analyzer. 199 For more comprehensible logs, don't perform a parallel build.</p> 200 201 <h3 id="recommended_autoconf">Run './configure' through scan-build</h3> 202 203 <p>If an analyzed project uses an autoconf generated <tt>configure</tt> script, 204 you will probably need to run <tt>configure</tt> script through 205 <tt>scan-build</tt> in order to analyze the project.</p> 206 207 <p><b>Example</b></p> 208 209 <pre class="code_example"> 210 $ scan-build ./configure 211 $ scan-build make 212 </pre> 213 214 <p>The reason <tt>configure</tt> also needs to be run through 215 <tt>scan-build</tt> is because <tt>scan-build</tt> scans your source files by 216 <i>interposing</i> on the compiler. This interposition is currently done by 217 <tt>scan-build</tt> temporarily setting the environment variable <tt>CC</tt> to 218 <tt>ccc-analyzer</tt>. The program <tt>ccc-analyzer</tt> acts like a fake 219 compiler, forwarding its command line arguments over to the compiler to perform 220 regular compilation and <tt>clang</tt> to perform static analysis.</p> 221 222 <p>Running <tt>configure</tt> typically generates makefiles that have hardwired 223 paths to the compiler, and by running <tt>configure</tt> through 224 <tt>scan-build</tt> that path is set to <tt>ccc-analyzer</tt>.</p> 225 226 <!-- 227 <h2 id="Debugging">Debugging the Analyzer</h2> 228 229 <p>This section provides information on debugging the analyzer, and troubleshooting 230 it when you have problems analyzing a particular project.</p> 231 232 <h3>How it Works</h3> 233 234 <p>To analyze a project, <tt>scan-build</tt> simply sets the environment variable 235 <tt>CC</tt> to the full path to <tt>ccc-analyzer</tt>. It also sets a few other 236 environment variables to communicate to <tt>ccc-analyzer</tt> where to dump HTML 237 report files.</p> 238 239 <p>Some Makefiles (or equivalent project files) hardcode the compiler; for such 240 projects simply overriding <tt>CC</tt> won't cause <tt>ccc-analyzer</tt> to be 241 called. This will cause the compiled code <b>to not be analyzed.</b></p> If you 242 find that your code isn't being analyzed, check to see if <tt>CC</tt> is 243 hardcoded. If this is the case, you can hardcode it instead to the <b>full 244 path</b> to <tt>ccc-analyzer</tt>.</p> 245 246 <p>When applicable, you can also run <tt>./configure</tt> for a project through 247 <tt>scan-build</tt> so that configure sets up the location of <tt>CC</tt> based 248 on the environment passed in from <tt>scan-build</tt>: 249 250 <pre> 251 $ scan-build <b>./configure</b> 252 </pre> 253 254 <p><tt>scan-build</tt> has special knowledge about <tt>configure</tt>, so it in 255 most cases will not actually analyze the configure tests run by 256 <tt>configure</tt>.</p> 257 258 <p>Under the hood, <tt>ccc-analyzer</tt> directly invokes <tt>gcc</tt> to 259 compile the actual code in addition to running the analyzer (which occurs by it 260 calling <tt>clang</tt>). <tt>ccc-analyzer</tt> tries to correctly forward all 261 the arguments over to <tt>gcc</tt>, but this may not work perfectly (please 262 report bugs of this kind). 263 --> 264 265 <h2 id="iphone">Analyzing iPhone Projects</h2> 266 267 <p>Conceptually Xcode projects for iPhone applications are nearly the same as 268 their cousins for desktop applications. <b>scan-build</b> can analyze these 269 projects as well, but users often encounter problems with just building their 270 iPhone projects from the command line because there are a few extra preparative 271 steps they need to take (e.g., setup code signing).</p> 272 273 <h3>Recommendation: use "Build and Analyze"</h3> 274 275 <p>The absolute easiest way to analyze iPhone projects is to use the <a 276 href="http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/featuredarticles/StaticAnalysis/index.html"><i>Build 277 and Analyze</i> feature in Xcode 3.2</a> (which is based on the Clang Static 278 Analyzer). There a user can analyze their project with the click of a button 279 without most of the setup described later.</p> 280 281 <p><a href="/xcode.html">Instructions are available</a> on this 282 website on how to use open source builds of the analyzer as a replacement for 283 the one bundled with Xcode.</p> 284 285 <h3>Using scan-build directly</h3> 286 287 <p>If you wish to use <b>scan-build</b> with your iPhone project, keep the 288 following things in mind:</p> 289 290 <ul> 291 <li>Analyze your project in the <tt>Debug</tt> configuration, either by setting 292 this as your configuration with Xcode or by passing <tt>-configuration 293 Debug</tt> to <tt>xcodebuild</tt>.</li> 294 <li>Analyze your project using the <tt>Simulator</tt> as your base SDK. It is 295 possible to analyze your code when targeting the device, but this is much 296 easier to do when using Xcode's <i>Build and Analyze</i> feature.</li> 297 <li>Check that your code signing SDK is set to the simulator SDK as well, and make sure this option is set to <tt>Don't Code Sign</tt>.</li> 298 </ul> 299 300 <p>Note that you can most of this without actually modifying your project. For 301 example, if your application targets iPhoneOS 2.2, you could run 302 <b>scan-build</b> in the following manner from the command line:</p> 303 304 <pre class="code_example"> 305 $ scan-build xcodebuild -configuration Debug -sdk iphonesimulator2.2 306 </pre> 307 308 Alternatively, if your application targets iPhoneOS 3.0: 309 310 <pre class="code_example"> 311 $ scan-build xcodebuild -configuration Debug -sdk iphonesimulator3.0 312 </pre> 313 314 <h3>Gotcha: using the right compiler</h3> 315 316 <p>Recall that <b>scan-build</b> analyzes your project by using a compiler to 317 compile the project and <tt>clang</tt> to analyze your project. The script uses 318 simple heuristics to determine which compiler should be used (it defaults to 319 <tt>clang</tt> on Darwin and <tt>gcc</tt> on other platforms). When analyzing 320 iPhone projects, <b>scan-build</b> may pick the wrong compiler than the one 321 Xcode would use to build your project. For example, this could be because 322 multiple versions of a compiler may be installed on your system, especially if 323 you are developing for the iPhone.</p> 324 325 <p>When compiling your application to run on the simulator, it is important that <b>scan-build</b> 326 finds the correct version of <tt>gcc/clang</tt>. Otherwise, you may see strange build 327 errors that only happen when you run <tt>scan-build</tt>. 328 329 <p><b>scan-build</b> provides the <tt>--use-cc</tt> and <tt>--use-c++</tt> 330 options to hardwire which compiler scan-build should use for building your code. 331 Note that although you are chiefly interested in analyzing your project, keep in 332 mind that running the analyzer is intimately tied to the build, and not being 333 able to compile your code means it won't get fully analyzed (if at all).</p> 334 335 <p>If you aren't certain which compiler Xcode uses to build your project, try 336 just running <tt>xcodebuild</tt> (without <b>scan-build</b>). You should see the 337 full path to the compiler that Xcode is using, and use that as an argument to 338 <tt>--use-cc</tt>.</p> 339 340 </div> 341 </div> 342 </body> 343 </html> 344 345