Flawfinder version 2.0.10, (C) 2001-2019 David A. Wheeler.
Number of rules (primarily dangerous function names) in C/C++ ruleset: 223
Examining data/libxml-bare-perl-0.53/parser.h
Examining data/libxml-bare-perl-0.53/bench/src/ezxml_main.c
Examining data/libxml-bare-perl-0.53/bench/src/barexml.c
Examining data/libxml-bare-perl-0.53/bench/src/xmlio_testread.cpp
Examining data/libxml-bare-perl-0.53/bench/src/tinyxml.cpp
Examining data/libxml-bare-perl-0.53/parser.c

FINAL RESULTS:

data/libxml-bare-perl-0.53/bench/src/barexml.c:11:10:  [2] (misc) fopen:
  Check when opening files - can an attacker redirect it (via symlinks),
  force the opening of special file type (e.g., device files), move things
  around to create a race condition, control its ancestors, or change its
  contents? (CWE-362).
  file = fopen(argv[1],"r");

ANALYSIS SUMMARY:

Hits = 1
Lines analyzed = 1203 in approximately 0.04 seconds (27864 lines/second)
Physical Source Lines of Code (SLOC) = 1066
Hits@level = [0]  25 [1]   0 [2]   1 [3]   0 [4]   0 [5]   0
Hits@level+ = [0+]  26 [1+]   1 [2+]   1 [3+]   0 [4+]   0 [5+]   0
Hits/KSLOC@level+ = [0+] 24.3902 [1+] 0.938086 [2+] 0.938086 [3+]   0 [4+]   0 [5+]   0
Dot directories skipped = 1 (--followdotdir overrides)
Minimum risk level = 1
Not every hit is necessarily a security vulnerability.
There may be other security vulnerabilities; review your code!
See 'Secure Programming HOWTO'
(https://dwheeler.com/secure-programs) for more information.