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C

C static code analysis

Unique rules to find Bugs, Vulnerabilities, Security Hotspots, and Code Smells in your C code

  • All rules 315
  • Vulnerability13
  • Bug76
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  • Code Smell207

  • Quick Fix 19
Filtered: 17 rules found
bad-practice
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Pointer and reference parameters should be "const" if the corresponding object is not modified

           Code Smell
        2. Reserved identifiers should not be defined or declared

           Code Smell
        3. Only standard forms of the "defined" directive should be used

           Code Smell
        4. Function-like macros should not be used

           Code Smell
        5. Recursion should not be used

           Code Smell
        6. "continue" should not be used

           Code Smell
        7. Bitwise operators should not be applied to signed operands

           Bug
        8. Functions should be declared explicitly

           Code Smell
        9. Names of well-known C standard library macros and functions should not be used as identifiers

           Code Smell
        10. Macros should not be used as replacements for "typedef" and "using"

           Code Smell
        11. Size of bit fields should not exceed the size of their types

           Code Smell
        12. Pointer and reference local variables should be "const" if the corresponding object is not modified

           Code Smell
        13. Argument of "printf" should be a format string

           Code Smell
        14. Loops with at most one iteration should be refactored

           Bug
        15. "if" statements should be preferred over "switch" when simpler

           Code Smell
        16. Track uses of "NOSONAR" comments

           Code Smell
        17. Deprecated attributes should include explanations

           Code Smell

        Pointer and reference parameters should be "const" if the corresponding object is not modified

        consistency - conventional
        maintainability
        Code Smell
        Quick FixIDE quick fixes available with SonarLint
        • bad-practice
        • misra-c++2008
        • misra-c2004
        • misra-c2012

        Why is this an issue?

        More Info

        Const correctness is an important tool for type safety. It allows for catching coding errors at compile time and it documents the code for maintainers.

        Correctly const-qualifying pointers can be tricky because the indirection they add can also be const.

        For a pointer X * ptr, const can be written in three different places:

        • const X * ptr and X const * ptr are identical and mean that the X object ptr points to cannot be changed.
        • X * const ptr means that the pointer cannot be changed to point to a different X object.

        In a function signature, the first const X * ptr (or its equivalent X const * ptr) is the one that will bring type-safety. It protects against changing the value pointed at.

        void externalFunction(int * a, const int * b);
        
        void myfunc() {
          int a = 1;
          int b = 2;
          externalFunction(&a, &b);
          // a can now have any value
          // We know that b is still '2'
        }
        

        This rule detects when a pointer or reference parameter could be made const

        void myfunc (      int * param1,  // object is modified
                     const int * param2,
                           int * param3, // Noncompliant
                     int * const param4) // Noncompliant: const doesn't qualify what is pointed at.
        {
          *param1 = *param2 + *param3 + *param4;
        }
        
        void increment (int & value,
                        int & increment) // Noncompliant
        {
          value += increment;
        }
        

        When adding all possible const qualifications, we get:

        void myfunc (      int * param1,  // object is modified
                     const int * param2,
                     const int * param3,
                     const int * param4)
        {
          *param1 = *param2 + *param3 + *param4;
        }
        
        void increment (int & value,
                        const int & increment)
        {
          value += increment;
        }
        
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