On Tue, Nov 15, 2016 at 3:20 PM, Josef Bacik <jba...@fb.com> wrote:
> On 11/15/2016 08:47 AM, Jann Horn wrote:
>> In states_equal():
>> if (rold->type == NOT_INIT ||
>>    (rold->type == UNKNOWN_VALUE && rcur->type != NOT_INIT))
>> <------------
>> continue;
>>
>> I think this is broken in code like the following:
>>
>> int value;
>> if (condition) {
>>   value = 1; // visited first by verifier
>> } else {
>>   value = 1000000; // visited second by verifier
>> }
>> int dummy = 1; // states seem to converge here, but actually don't
>> map[value] = 1234;
>>
>> `value` would be an UNKNOWN_VALUE for both paths, right? So
>> states_equal() would decide that the states converge after the
>> conditionally executed code?
>>
>
> Value would be CONST_IMM for both paths, and wouldn't match so they wouldn't
> converge.  I think I understood your question right, let me know if I'm
> addressing the wrong part of it.

Okay, true, but what if you load the values from a map and bounds-check them
instead of hardcoding them? Then they will be of type UNKNOWN_VALUE, right?
Like this:

int value = map[0];
if (condition) {
  value &= 0x1; // visited first by verifier
} else {
  // nothing; visited second by verifier
}
int dummy = 1; // states seem to converge here, but actually don't
map[value] = 1234;

And then `rold->type == UNKNOWN_VALUE && rcur->type != NOT_INIT` will be
true in the `dummy = 1` line, and the states converge. Am I missing something?

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