English

Validating Static Warnings via Testing Code Fragments

Software Engineering 2021-06-30 v3

Abstract

Static analysis is an important approach for finding bugs and vulnerabilities in software. However, inspecting and confirming static warnings are challenging and time-consuming. In this paper, we present a novel solution that automatically generates test cases based on static warnings to validate true and false positives. We designed a syntactic patching algorithm that can generate syntactically valid, semantic preserving executable code fragments from static warnings. We developed a build and testing system to automatically test code fragments using fuzzers, KLEE and Valgrind. We evaluated our techniques using 12 real-world C projects and 1955 warnings from two commercial static analysis tools. We successfully built 68.5% code fragments and generated 1003 test cases. Through automatic testing, we identified 48 true positives and 27 false positives, and 205 likely false positives. We matched 4 CVE and real-world bugs using Helium, and they are only triggered by our tool but not other baseline tools. We found that testing code fragments is scalable and useful; it can trigger bugs that testing entire programs or testing procedures failed to trigger.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2106.04735,
  title  = {Validating Static Warnings via Testing Code Fragments},
  author = {Ashwin Kallingal Joshy and Xueyuan Chen and Benjamin Steenhoek and Wei Le},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2106.04735},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

In Proceedings of the 30th ACM SIGSOFT International Symposium on Software Testing and Analysis July 11 to 17, 2021, Denmark. 13 pages