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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

  • Quick Fix 27
Filtered: 18 rules found
lock-in
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. "<time.h>" should not be used

           Code Smell
        2. "<stdio.h>" should not be used in production code

           Code Smell
        3. "<signal.h>" should not be used

           Bug
        4. Preprocessor operators "#" and "##" should not be used

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

           Bug
        6. Non-standard attributes should not be used

           Code Smell
        7. Bit fields should be declared with appropriate types

           Code Smell
        8. Multicharacter literals should not be used

           Code Smell
        9. Arguments evaluation order should not be relied on

           Bug
        10. "#include_next" should not be used

           Code Smell
        11. GNU extensions should not be used

           Code Smell
        12. The "sizeof" and "alignof" operator should not be used with operands of a "void" type

           Bug
        13. Keywords introduced in later specifications should not be used as identifiers

           Code Smell
        14. Control should not be transferred into a complex logic block using a "goto" or a "switch" statement

           Code Smell
        15. The "#pragma" directive and the "_Pragma" operator should not be used

           Code Smell
        16. The "#" and "##" preprocessor operators should not be used

           Code Smell
        17. A macro parameter immediately following a "#" operator shall not be immediately followed by a "##" operator

           Code Smell
        18. The "'" or """ or "\" characters and the "/*" or "//" character sequences shall not occur in a "header file" name

           Bug

        Non-standard attributes should not be used

        consistency - conventional
        maintainability
        Code Smell
        • lock-in

        Non-standard attributes should not be used

        Why is this an issue?

        How can I fix it?

        More Info

        Attributes provide a standardized syntax for conveying implementation-defined language extensions and hints to the compiler. While the {C++} standard defines several attributes (such as [[deprecated]], [[maybe_unused]], and [[nodiscard]]), compilers also support vendor-specific attributes for compiler-specific features and optimizations.

        Using non-standard attributes introduces portability risks. When code with compiler-specific attributes is compiled with a different toolchain, unrecognized attributes are silently ignored, which can lead to:

        • Loss of intended behavior (e.g., optimization hints, alignment requirements, or safety checks)
        • Runtime failures when the ignored attribute was critical for correctness
        • Maintenance burden when vendor-specific attributes are scattered across the codebase

        This rule allows only standard attributes that are specified using the standard [[...]] syntax. It reports: * All attributes that are not defined in the {C++} standard itself, whether expressed using standard attribute syntax with vendor namespaces (e.g., [[msvc::no_unique_address]]), GNU-style __attribute__ syntax (e.g., __attribute__((packed))), or MSVC’s __declspec syntax (e.g., __declspec(align(16))) * Standard attributes that are specified using non-standard syntax (e.g., __attribute__((noreturn)) instead of [[noreturn]])

        The goal is to ensure that such attributes are reviewed to be well-behaved under all used toolchains, or replaced with standard-conforming alternatives when possible.

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