Since, in Objective-C, private methods are not really private (the method dispatch mechanism doesn't distinguish between private v/s public methods), it is really easy for a subclass to override private methods of a superclass (more on this at Cocoa Coding Guidelines).
However, it is not so easy to detect this. I am looking for a readymade tool that can help me with this.
This cannot simply be a static analysis tool because private methods are not exposed in the interface. This tool will either have to examine the binaries or figure this out at runtime. According to me, this tool will have to do something similar to the following:
Get a list of all the public methods of every class used by the project by examining the headers, then perform either step 2 or step 3
Get the overridden private methods by examining the binaries
a) Read the app binary + all the dynamic libraries it links against to get a list of all the methods defined by every class used by the app.
b) Of these, methods not found in step 1 are private methods.
c) Go through the class hierarchy and figure out subclasses that override private methods of superclasses
Get the overridden private methods at runtime
a) Run the app
b) Using the Objective-C runtime methods, we can get all methods defined for all the classes.
c) Again, methods not found in step 1 are private methods
d) Go through the class hierarchy and figure out subclasses that override private methods of superclasses
This will not always work -- since classes and methods can be added/removed at runtime, some cases will get missed (most notably, NSManagedObject
subclasses, where methods for Core Data properties are provided at runtime). That's okay though, I am willing to live with this limitation.
I believe its very much possible to achieve this using libclang, object file inspection tools like otool
or nm
, and the Objective-C runtime, but is there a readymade tool that does all this?
Note: I am not looking for ways to mitigate this issue; just how to detect this condition.