Intel® Inspector User Guide for Windows* OS

ID 767798
Date 10/31/2024
Public
Document Table of Contents

Applying Suppression Files from the Command Line

After creating or converting suppression files, you can apply suppression files during analysis, finalization (symbol re-resolution) or when generating a report. There are several ways to pass suppression files to the Intel Inspectorinspxe-cl command tool, including passing them in through an option file, which can be useful when you have many suppression files.

Ideally, a suppression file should be created for a specific analysis type, as described in Creating Suppression Files.

To make it easy to switch between the GUI and the command line, store suppression files in the Microsoft Visual Studio* IDE standard suppressions directory: C:\myProject\My Inspector Results-[project name]\suppressions.

NOTE:

Suppression files can be used along with other problem-suppression tactics, such as assigning a problem the Not a Problem state, then filtering out all problems with this state when viewing problems in the GUI or generating a report on the command line. You can also propagate this state assignment forward into other results using one of the following techniques:

  • To merge problem state assignments from one existing result to another, use the merge-states option. State assignments from the merge-from result are used to update state assignments in the merge-to result. Problem states in the merge-to result are edited according to a set of rules.

  • To propagate problem state assignments forward when performing analysis, finalization or generating a report, use the baseline-result option.

Specifying Suppression Files

Depending on the number of suppression files you want to apply and their locations, you may want to specify a single suppression file, multiple individual suppression files, or the suppressions directory, as shown in these examples. The example commands all perform analysis using the ti2Detect Deadlocks and Data Races analysis type, and the project is named myTi2Analysis.

Single Suppression File

If you want to use a single suppression file only, for example, you may have created a suppress-all file on the command line, you can specify just this one file. In this command, a suppress-all file myTi2SuppressAllFile.sup is specified when running an analysis.

$ inspxe-cl -collect ti2 -s-f "C:\myTi2Analysis\My Inspector Results-myTi2Analysis\suppressions\myTi2SuppressAllFile.sup"

Example: Multiple Individual Suppression Files, Possibly with Different Paths

You may want to specify multiple individual suppression files if you have suppression files stored in multiple directories, or if you only want to apply some of the suppression files stored in your project's suppressions directory. Use one of these two syntax variations when you want to pass in multiple individual suppression files.

Specify the suppression-file option followed by a comma-separated string of suppression file PATH/names (no spaces).

$ inspxe-cl -collect ti2 -s-f "C:\myTi2Analysis\Results\suppressions\myTi2SuppressAllFile.sup","C:\myTi2Analysis\Results\suppressions\myTi2SuppressAllFile5.sup" -- myApp

Or specify the suppression-file option multiple times, each one followed by a suppression file PATH/name.

$ inspxe-cl -collect ti2 -s-f "C:\myTi2Analysis\Results\suppressions\myTi2SuppressAllFile.sup"-s-f "C:\myTi2Analysis\Results\suppressions\myTi2SuppressAllFile5.sup" -- myApp

NOTE:

It is easiest to use an option file to pass in multiple suppression files, as explained in the next section.

Example: Multiple Suppression Files in a Single Suppressions Directory

If you have multiple suppression files in the same directory and want to apply all the suppression files in this directory, you can simply specify the directory.

$ inspxe-cl -collect ti2 -s-f "C:\myTi2Analysis\Results\suppressions" -- myApp

Using an Option File to Pass in Multiple Suppression Files

If you have multiple suppression files but cannot specify the suppressions directory as described above, you can use the option-file option to pass in an option file with the suppression-file option and arguments. The option file is a plain text file with each option and its arguments followed by a newline. As you create new suppression files, you can add them to the option file as desired.

This option file is named myOptionFile.txt. It specifies suppression files from three different directories, including a suppress-all file from the baseline result directory, all suppressions from a suppressions directory that holds converted suppression files, and the latest suppression file from the current result directory.

-s-f "C:\myTi2Analysis\BaselineResult\suppressions\myTi2SuppressAllFile.sup" 
-s-f "C:\myConvertedSuppressions\"
-s-f "C:\myNewTi2Analysis\Results\suppressions\myNewTi2Suppressions.sup" 		

Now myOptionFile.txt is passed into the analysis process, so all the suppression files specified in myOptionFile.txt are applied.

$ inspxe-cl -collect ti2 -option-file .\myOptionFile.txt -- myApp

Applying Suppression Files During Analysis

Use the collect or collect-with action with the suppression-file option to pass in one or more suppression files.

As previously described, it is easiest to configure analysis through the Intel Inspector GUI, then use the Dialog Box Corresponding inspxe-cl Command Options to copy the command with the analysis type and other arguments to your clipboard, and then save it for use on the command line or in scripts.

In this example, the collect action is used with the ti2Detect Deadlocks and Data Races analysis type. The command is simplified, so all other analysis settings are left to default. This command:

  • Runs a Detect Deadlocks and Data Races (ti2) analysis on the application myApp.

  • Uses the short name -s-f for the suppression-file option.

  • Specifies the suppression directory, rather than individual suppression files. When the directory is specified, the inspxe-cl command tool applies all suppression files in this directory.

  • To make it easy to switch between the GUI and the command line, the suppression files were stored in the Microsoft Visual Studio* IDE standard location for suppression files: C:\myProject\My Inspector Results-[project name]\suppressions.

$ inspxe-cl -collect ti2 -s-f "C:\myProject\My Inspector Results\suppressions" -- myApp

Applying Suppression Files When Generating a Problems Report

If a suppression file was not used during analysis and data collection, it can be applied when generating a Problems report. Use the report action with the suppression-file option to pass in one or more suppression files, or a suppressions directory. For most complete suppression of problems, the suppression file should be based on the same analysis type as the result.

This simple report-generation command uses all default settings except that it:

  • Uses a result from a Deadlocks and Data Races (ti2) analysis.

  • Uses the short name -s-f for the suppression-file option.

  • Generates a Problems report of only new, unsuppressed problems.

$ inspxe-cl -report problems -s-f "C:\myProject\My Inspector Results\suppressions\myTi2Suppress-AllFile"