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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: 30 rules found
misra-advisory
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Floating-point arithmetic should be used appropriately

           Bug
        2. The "goto" statement should not be used

           Code Smell
        3. The built-in unary "+" operator should not be used

           Code Smell
        4. Functions with "limited visibility" should be "used" at least once

           Code Smell
        5. All variables should be initialized

           Code Smell
        6. "Dynamic memory" should not be used

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

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

           Code Smell
        9. Program-terminating functions should not be used

           Code Smell
        10. Bit-fields should not be declared

           Code Smell
        11. A "declaration" should not declare more than one variable or member variable

           Code Smell
        12. The target type of a pointer or "lvalue" reference parameter should be const-qualified appropriately

           Code Smell
        13. The result of an assignment operator should not be "used"

           Code Smell
        14. An unsigned arithmetic operation with constant operands should not wrap

           Bug
        15. The comma operator should not be used

           Code Smell
        16. The right-hand operand of a logical "&&" or "||" operator should not contain "persistent side effects"

           Bug
        17. The built-in unary "-" operator should not be applied to an expression of unsigned type

           Bug
        18. A cast should not convert a pointer type to an integral type

           Code Smell
        19. The "declaration" of an object should contain no more than two levels of pointer indirection

           Code Smell
        20. Parentheses should be used to make the meaning of an expression appropriately explicit

           Code Smell
        21. The names of the "standard signed integer types" and "standard unsigned integer types" should not be used

           Code Smell
        22. A function or object with external linkage should be "introduced" in a "header file"

           Code Smell
        23. "#undef" should only be used for macros defined previously in the same file

           Code Smell
        24. "#include" directives should only be preceded by preprocessor directives or comments

           Code Smell
        25. Sections of code should not be "commented out"

           Code Smell
        26. "Trigraph-like sequences" should not be used

           Code Smell
        27. A value should not be "unnecessarily written" to a local object

           Code Smell
        28. Types with "limited visibility" should be "used" at least once

           Code Smell
        29. Variables with "limited visibility" should be "used" at least once

           Code Smell
        30. Controlling expressions should not be invariant

           Bug

        The right-hand operand of a logical "&&" or "||" operator should not contain "persistent side effects"

        intentionality - logical
        reliability
        security
        Bug
        • symbolic-execution
        • misra-c++2023
        • misra-advisory

        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 8.14.1 - The right-hand operand of a logical && or || operator should not contain persistent side effects [1]

        Category: Advisory

        Analysis: Undecidable,System

        Rationale

        The evaluation of the right-hand operand of the && and || operators is conditional on the value of the left-hand operand. If the right-hand operand contains side effects then those side effects may or may not occur, which may be contrary to developer expectations.

        If evaluation of the right-hand operand would produce side effects which are not persistent at the point in the program where the expression occurs then it does not matter whether the right-hand operand is evaluated or not.

        The term persistent side effect [1] is defined in [[|glossary:chapter:Appendix]].

        Example

        uint16_t f( uint16_t y )              // The side effects within f are not
        {                                     // persistent, as seen by the caller
          uint16_t temp = y;
        
          temp = y + 0x8080U;
        
          return temp;
        }
        
        uint16_t h( uint16_t y )
        {
          static uint16_t temp = 0;
        
          temp = y + temp;                    // This side effect is persistent
        
          return temp;
        }
        
        void g( bool ishigh )
        {
          if ( ishigh && ( a == f( x ) ) )    // Compliant - f() has no persistent
          {                                   //             side effects
          }
        
          if ( ishigh && ( a == h( x ) ) )    // Non-compliant - h() has a persistent
          {                                   //                 side effect
          }
        }
        
        volatile uint16_t v;
                 uint16_t x;
        
        if ( ( x == 0u ) || ( v == 1u ) )     // Non-compliant - access to volatile v
        {                                     //                 is persistent
        }
        
        ( fp != nullptr ) && ( *fp )( 0 );    // Non-compliant if fp points to a function
                                              // with persistent side effects
        if ( fp != nullptr )
        {
          ( *fp )( 0 );                       // Compliant version of the above
        }
        

        Glossary

        [1] Persistent side effect

        A side effect is said to be persistent at a particular point in execution if it might have an effect on the execution state at that point. All of the following side effects are persistent at a given point in the program:

        • Modifying a file, stream, etc.;
        • Modifying an object, including via a pointer or reference;
        • Accessing a volatile object;
        • Raising an exception that transfers control outside of the current function.

        When a function is called, it may have side effects. Modifying a file or accessing a volatile object are persistent as viewed by the calling function. However any objects modified by the called function, whose lifetimes have ended by the time it returns, do not affect the caller’s execution state. Any side effects arising from modifying such objects are not persistent from the point of view of the caller.

        The determination of whether a function has persistent side effects takes no consideration of the possible values for parameters or other non-local objects.

        Copyright The MISRA Consortium Limited © 2023

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