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mirror of https://github.com/danog/psalm.git synced 2024-11-26 12:24:49 +01:00
psalm/docs
Oliver Hader ae54b72dba
Update documentation for taints and global configuration (#5098)
* [DOCS] Extend documentation on global variables configuration

* [DOCS] Synchronize meaning of @psalm-taint-source input with source code

* [DOCS] Add documentation for conditional @psalm-taint-escape

* [DOCS] Add documentation for @psalm-taint-unescape
2021-01-29 11:47:35 +01:00
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annotating_code Fix broken links in documentation (#4730) 2021-01-29 11:47:04 +01:00
contributing More to contributing docs 2021-01-29 11:47:08 +01:00
manipulating_code
running_psalm Update documentation for taints and global configuration (#5098) 2021-01-29 11:47:35 +01:00
security_analysis Update documentation for taints and global configuration (#5098) 2021-01-29 11:47:35 +01:00
README.md Improve feature list 2021-01-29 11:47:21 +01:00

About Psalm

Psalm is a static analysis tool that attempts to dig into your program and find as many type-related bugs as possible.

It has a few features that go further than other similar tools:

  • Mixed type warnings
    If Psalm cannot infer a type for an expression then it uses a mixed placeholder type. mixed types can sometimes mask bugs, so keeping track of them helps you avoid a number of common pitfalls.

  • Intelligent logic checks
    Psalm keeps track of logical assertions made about your code, so if ($a && $a) {} and if ($a && !$a) {} are both treated as issues. Psalm also keeps track of logical assertions made in prior code paths, preventing issues like if ($a) {} elseif ($a) {}.

  • Property initialisation checks
    Psalm checks that all properties of a given object have values after the constructor is called.

  • Taint analysis
    Psalm can detect security vulnerabilities in your code.

  • Language Server
    Psalm has a Language Server thats compatible with a range of different IDEs.

  • Automatic fixes
    Psalm can fix many of the issues it finds automatically.

  • Automatic refactoring
    Psalm can also perform simple refactors from the command line.

Example output

Given a file implode_strings.php:

<?php
$a = ['foo', 'bar'];
echo implode($a, ' ');
> ./vendor/bin/psalm implode_strings.php
ERROR: InvalidArgument - somefile.php:3:14 - Argument 1 of implode expects `string`, `array` provided (see https://psalm.dev/004)

Inspirations

There are two main inspirations for Psalm:

  • Etsy's Phan, which uses nikic's php-ast extension to create an abstract syntax tree
  • Facebook's Hack, a PHP-like language that supports many advanced typing features natively, so docblocks aren't necessary.

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