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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: 69 rules found
misra-required
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. A function call shall not violate the function's preconditions

           Bug
        2. An "integer-literal" of type "long long" shall not use a single "L" or "l" in any suffix

           Code Smell
        3. The literal value zero shall be the only value assigned to "errno"

           Code Smell
        4. There shall be no occurrence of "undefined" or "critical unspecified behaviour"

           Bug
        5. User-defined identifiers shall have an appropriate form

           Code Smell
        6. "Global variables" shall not be used

           Code Smell
        7. The "volatile" qualifier shall be used appropriately

           Bug
        8. "Integral promotion" and the "usual arithmetic conversions" shall not change the signedness or the "type category" of an operand

           Code Smell
        9. The operands of "bitwise operators" and "shift operators" shall be appropriate

           Bug
        10. The argument to a "mixed-use macro parameter" shall not be subject to further expansion

           Code Smell
        11. An "object pointer type" shall not be cast to an integral type other than "std::uintptr_t" or "std::intptr_t"

           Code Smell
        12. The library function "system" from "<cstdlib>" shall not be used

           Vulnerability
        13. Reads and writes on the same file stream shall be separated by a positioning operation

           Bug
        14. Line-splicing shall not be used in "//" comments

           Bug
        15. Octal escape sequences, hexadecimal escape sequences and universal character names shall be terminated

           Code Smell
        16. Dynamic memory shall be managed automatically

           Code Smell
        17. Local variables shall not have static storage duration

           Code Smell
        18. The facilities provided by the standard "header file" "<csignal>" shall not be used

           Code Smell
        19. The macro "offsetof" shall not be used

           Code Smell
        20. The standard "header file" "<csetjmp>" shall not be used

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

           Code Smell
        22. The "#include" directive shall be followed by either a "<filename>" or ""filename"" sequence

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

           Bug
        24. Precautions shall be taken in order to prevent the contents of a "header file" being included more than once

           Code Smell
        25. All "#else", "#elif" and "#endif" preprocessor directives shall reside in the same file as the "#if", "#ifdef" or "#ifndef" directive to which they are related

           Code Smell
        26. The "defined" preprocessor operator shall be used appropriately

           Bug
        27. A named bit-field with "signed integer type" shall not have a length of one bit

           Bug
        28. A bit-field shall have an appropriate type

           Code Smell
        29. Within an enumerator list, the value of an implicitly-specified "enumeration constant" shall be unique

           Code Smell
        30. A conversion from function type to pointer-to-function type shall only occur in appropriate contexts

           Code Smell
        31. A function with non-"void" return type shall return a value on all paths

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

           Code Smell
        33. The features of "<cstdarg>" shall not be used

           Code Smell
        34. Functions shall not call themselves, either directly or indirectly

           Code Smell
        35. An assignment operator shall not assign the address of an object with automatic storage duration to an object with a greater lifetime

           Code Smell
        36. The "asm" declaration shall not be used

           Code Smell
        37. The "goto" statement shall jump to a label declared later in the function body

           Code Smell
        38. A "goto" statement shall reference a label in a surrounding block

           Code Smell
        39. The structure of a "switch" statement shall be appropriate

           Code Smell
        40. All "if ... else if" constructs shall be terminated with an "else" statement

           Code Smell
        41. The body of an "iteration-statement" or a "selection-statement" shall be a "compound-statement"

           Code Smell
        42. An object with integral, enumerated, or pointer to "void" type shall not be cast to a pointer type

           Code Smell
        43. Casts shall not be performed between a pointer to function and any other type

           Bug
        44. A cast shall not remove any "const" or "volatile" qualification from the type accessed via a pointer or by reference

           Code Smell
        45. The built-in relational operators ">", ">=", "<" and "<=" shall not be applied to objects of pointer type, except where they point to elements of the same array

           Bug
        46. Subtraction between pointers shall only be applied to pointers that address elements of the same array

           Bug
        47. Pointer arithmetic shall not form an invalid pointer

           Bug
        48. Operations on a memory location shall be sequenced appropriately

           Bug
        49. The same type aliases shall be used in all "declarations" of the same "entity"

           Code Smell
        50. The source code used to implement an "entity" shall appear only once

           Bug
        51. The "one-definition rule" shall not be violated

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

           Bug
        53. Block scope "declarations" shall not be "visually ambiguous"

           Code Smell
        54. A "header file" shall not contain definitions of functions or objects that are non-inline and have external linkage

           Code Smell
        55. A line whose first token is "#" shall be a valid preprocessing directive

           Bug
        56. All identifiers used in the controlling expression of "#if" or "#elif" preprocessing directives shall be defined prior to evaluation

           Bug
        57. Parentheses shall be used to ensure macro arguments are expanded appropriately

           Code Smell
        58. Tokens that look like a preprocessing directive shall not occur within a macro argument

           Bug
        59. Function-like macros shall not be defined

           Code Smell
        60. String literals with different encoding prefixes shall not be concatenated

           Bug
        61. The lowercase form of "L" shall not be used as the first character in a literal suffix

           Code Smell
        62. Unsigned "integer literals" shall be appropriately suffixed

           Code Smell
        63. Octal constants shall not be used

           Code Smell
        64. Within character literals and non raw-string literals, "\" shall only be used to form a defined escape sequence or universal character name

           Bug
        65. A variable declared in an "inner scope" shall not hide a variable declared in an "outer scope"

           Code Smell
        66. The character sequence "/*" shall not be used within a C-style comment

           Code Smell
        67. A named function parameter shall be "used" at least once

           Code Smell
        68. The value returned by a function shall be "used"

           Code Smell
        69. A function shall not contain "unreachable" statements

           Bug

        A variable declared in an "inner scope" shall not hide a variable declared in an "outer scope"

        intentionality - clear
        maintainability
        Code Smell
        • confusing
        • pitfall
        • 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 6.4.1 - A variable declared in an inner scope shall not hide a variable declared in an outer scope

        Category: Required

        Analysis: Decidable,Single Translation Unit

        Amplification

        A variable declaration [1] in an inner scope is considered to hide a variable in an outer scope when it has the same name and the variable in the outer scope would be found by name lookup in the inner scope at a point immediately before the declaration [1].

        The terms outer scope and inner scope are defined as follows:

        • The global scope is the outermost scope;
        • Each block (compound-statement), namespace or class introduces an inner scope;
        • In a function definition, the function parameters have the same scope as the corresponding function body (compound-statement or function-try-block);
        • A derived class is treated as an inner scope with respect to the base class;
        • The definition of a member function introduces an inner scope to the class’s definition;
        • The selection-statement_s and _iteration-statement_s introduce an _inner scope which contains the controlled statement(s) and corresponding condition and init-statement.

        If declarations [1] from a namespace are introduced into a scope by a using-declaration, then they are treated as though they were declared in that scope.

        For the purposes of this rule, the following are treated as the declaration [1] of variables:

        • All data member and function parameter declarations [1]; and
        • The enumerators of an unscoped enumeration type [2] (which have the same scope as the enumeration type).

        Rationale

        Identifier hiding may lead to developer confusion.

        Note: this rule prevents the name of a global variable from being reused as the name of a local variable.

        Exception

        A class constructor may have a parameter with the same name as a member variable, provided the only use made of that parameter is to initialize the member. This is a common idiom that poses no risk.

        Example

        int16_t i;
        
        void f1()
        {
          int32_t i;                // Non-compliant - hides i in global scope
          int32_t z;
        
          if ( i == 3 )             // It could be confusing as to which i this refers
          {
            int32_t z;              // Non-compliant - hides z before if
          }
        }
        
        void f2( int8_t i )         // Non-compliant - hides i in global scope
        {
        }
        
        class C
        {
          float i;                  // Non-compliant - hides i in global scope
          float j;
        
        public:
          C ( float j )             // Compliant by exception
            : j ( j ) {}
        
          C ( float j, float k )
            : j ( j )
          {
            j += k;                 // Non-compliant - 'j' hides C::j
          }
        
          void f3()
          {
            int32_t j = 0;          // Non-compliant - hides C::j
          }
        };
        
        namespace NS1
        {
          int32_t i;                // Non-compliant - hides i in global scope
        
          void f4( int32_t j )      // Compliant - parameter j does not hide C::j
          {
            int32_t l = i + j;      // Compiles using ::i if NS1::i declaration removed
          }
        }
        
        namespace NS2
        {
          int32_t v;
        }
        
        using NS2::v;
        
        void f5()
        {
          float v;                  // Non-compliant - using hides NS2::v in global scope
        }
        
        enum E { e0, e1, e2 };
        
        namespace
        {
          int32_t e1 = 32;          // Non-compliant - hides e1 member of E (in global
        }                           // scope)
        

        Note that compiler reporting of a redeclaration [3] error against para is inconsistent for the following example:

        int16_t f6( int16_t para )  // 'para' has same scope as function body
        try
        {                           // Inner scope within function body
          int16_t para = 1;         // Non-compliant - hides parameter
          int16_t a    = 2;
        
          return para + a;
        }
        
        catch( ... )
        {                           // Inner scope within function body
          int16_t para = 1;         // Non-compliant - hides parameter
          int16_t a    = 2;
        
          return para + a;
        }
        
        void f7( int32_t i )
        {
          for ( int32_t i = 0; i < 9; ++i ) {}   // Non-compliant
        
          for ( int32_t j = 0; j < i; ++j ) {}
        
          for ( int32_t j = 0; j < i; ++j ) {}   // Compliant - new scope
        
          for ( int32_t k = 0; k < i; ++k ) {}
        
          int32_t k = i;                         // Compliant - for-loop 'k' not in scope
        
          for ( int32_t k = 0; k < i; ++k ) {}   // Non-compliant - hides 'k' above
        
          if ( get() )                           // Introduces an inner scope into which 'k'
          {                                      //   is defined.
            int32_t k;                           // Non-compliant - hides 'k' in outer scope
          }
        }
        

        In the following example, there is no hiding in the compliant examples as the local

        variable z cannot be found by name lookup within the body of a lambda.

        void f8()
        {
          char z;
        
          auto L1 = [ z ](){ return z; };        // Compliant - no hiding
          auto L2 = []( char z ){ return z; };   // Compliant - no hiding
          auto L3 = [](){ char z { 'a' }; };     // Compliant - no hiding
          auto L4 = [ z ](){ char z { 'a' }; };  // Non-compliant - captured z is hidden
        }
        

        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 [4]. All subsequent declarations are called redeclarations [3].

        A definition [5] is a declaration, as described in [basic.def]/2.

        [2] Unscoped enumeration type

        A type created with the enum keyword that is not created as enum class or enum struct. Values of such a type will be subject to integral promotion.

        [3] Redeclaration

        See declaration [1].

        [4] Introduction

        See declaration [1].

        [5] Definition

        See declaration [1].

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