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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 420
  • Vulnerability14
  • Bug111
  • Security Hotspot19
  • Code Smell276

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Filtered: 5 rules found
full-project
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Functions that are not used in a project should be removed

           Code Smell
        2. Server hostnames should be verified during SSL/TLS connections

           Vulnerability
        3. Server certificates should be verified during SSL/TLS connections

           Vulnerability
        4. The parameters in all "declarations" or overrides of a function shall either be unnamed or have identical names

           Code Smell
        5. All "declarations" of a variable or function shall have the same type

           Bug

        All "declarations" of a variable or function shall have the same type

        intentionality - logical
        maintainability
        reliability
        Bug
        • unpredictable
        • suspicious
        • full-project
        • misra-c++2023
        • misra-required

        Why is this an issue?

        More Info

        This rule is part of MISRA C++:2023.

        Usage of this content is governed by Sonar’s terms and conditions. Redistribution is prohibited.

        Rule 6.2.2 - All declarations [1] of a variable or function shall have the same type

        [basic.def.odr] NDR 2; Undefined 5
        [dcl.link]
        [over.load] / 2.1
        [dcl.attr.noreturn] NDR 1

        Category: Required

        Analysis: Decidable,System

        Amplification

        Two variable declarations [1] with the same name refer to the same variable if they have the same scope. Two function declarations [1] with the same name refer to the same function if they have the same scope and have equivalent parameter declarations (see [over.dcl]/1). Declarations [1] of variables in the global scope and declarations [1] of variables and functions with C linkage that have the same identifier declare a single entity (note there is no overloading in C).

        For the purposes of this rule:

        • An array declared with an unknown bound has the same type as an array declared with the same element type and a known bound; and
        • A pointer to an incomplete type has the same type as a pointer to the complete type.

        The following restrictions apply:

        • When several declarations [1] of the same entity exist, they shall have the same type;
        • All declarations [1] of a function declared with the [[noreturn]] attribute shall have that attribute (see [dcl.attr.noreturn]).

        Note: functions with C linkage are always distinct from functions with C++ linkage.

        Rationale

        It is undefined behaviour if the declarations [1] of a variable or function in two different translation units do not have the same type.

        While attributes are not part of a function type, inconsistent use of the [[noreturn]] attribute results in an ill-formed (no diagnostic required) program.

        Example

        All the declarations [1] of f3 in the following files conflict with each other and are non-compliant.

        // File a.cpp
        typedef int32_t myint;
        extern     int32_t a;                // Non-compliant - see b.cpp
        extern     int32_t b [];             // Compliant
        extern     char    c;                // Non-compliant - see b.cpp
        extern     int32_t d;                // Compliant
        extern     myint e;                  // Compliant
        
                   int32_t f1();             // Non-compliant - see b.cpp
                   int32_t f2( int32_t );    // Compliant
        extern "C" int32_t f3( int32_t );    // Non-compliant
                   int32_t f4();             // Non-compliant - see b.cpp
        
        // File b.cpp
        extern     int64_t a;                // Non-compliant - see a.cpp
        extern     int32_t b [ 5 ];          // Compliant
                   int16_t c;                // Non-compliant - see a.cpp
                   int32_t d { 1 };          // Compliant
                   int32_t e;                // Compliant
        
                   char f1();                // Non-compliant - see a.cpp
                   char f2( char );          // Compliant - not the same function as
                                             //             int32_t f2( int32_t )
        extern "C" int32_t f3( char );       // Non-compliant
                   int32_t f4() noexcept;    // Non-compliant - see a.cpp
                                             //   Different exception specification
        
        // File c.cpp
        extern "C" int32_t f3;               // Non-compliant
        
        // File d.cpp
        int32_t f3;                          // Non-compliant
        

        Glossary

        [1] Declaration

        A declaration introduces the name of an entity into a translation unit (see [basic.def]/1).

        An entity may be declared several times. The first declaration of an entity in a translation unit is called an introduction [2]. All subsequent declarations are called redeclarations [3].

        A definition [4] is a declaration, as described in [basic.def]/2.

        [2] Introduction

        See declaration [1].

        [3] Redeclaration

        See declaration [1].

        [4] Definition

        See declaration [1].

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