Some functions and macros are found to have properties relevant to the Xen codebase. For this reason, the file docs/properties.json contains all the needed properties.
Here is an example of the properties.json file:
{
"version": "1.0",
"content": [
{
"description": ""
"type": "function", // required
"value:": "^printk*.$", // required
"properties":{
"pointee_write": "1..2=never",
"pointee_read": "",
"taken": ""
"attribute": ""
}
}
]
}
Here is an explanation of the fields inside an object of the "content" array:
description: a brief description of why the properties apply
type: this is the kind of the element called: it may be either
macro
orfunction
value: must be a regex, starting with ^ and ending with $ and matching function fully qualified name or macro name.
properties: a list of properties applied to said function. Possible values are:
- pointee_write: indicate the write use for call arguments that correspond to parameters whose pointee types are non-const
- pointee_read: indicate the read use for call arguments that correspond to parameters whose pointee types are non-const
- taken: indicates that the specified address arguments may be stored in objects that persist after the function has ceased to exist (excluding the returned value); address arguments not listed are never taken
- attribute: attributes a function may have. Possible values are pure, const and noeffect.
pointee_read and pointee_write use a specific kind of argument, structured as pointee_arg=rw:
pointee_arg: argument index for callee. Index 0 refers to the return value, the indices of the arguments start from 1. It can be either a single value or a range.
rw: a value that's either always, maybe or never
- always: for pointee_read: argument pointee is expected to be fully read in the function body, for pointee_write: argument pointee is fully initialized at function exit
- maybe: for pointee_read: argument pointee may be expected to be read in the function body, for pointee_write: argument pointee may be written by function body
- never: for pointee_read: argument pointee is not expected to be read in the function body, for pointee_write: argument pointee is never written by function body