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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
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Filtered: 7 rules found
preprocessor
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Lines starting with "#" should contain valid preprocessing directives

           Bug
        2. There shall be at most one occurrence of the # or ## operators in a single macro definition

           Code Smell
        3. Macros used in preprocessor directives should be defined before use

           Bug
        4. Function-like macros should not be invoked without all of their arguments

           Bug
        5. Function-like macros should not be used

           Code Smell
        6. Pre-defined macros should not be defined, redefined or undefined

           Code Smell
        7. Macro names should comply with a naming convention

           Code Smell

        Function-like macros should not be used

        intentionality - clear
        maintainability
        Code Smell
        • cppcoreguidelines
        • based-on-misra
        • preprocessor
        • bad-practice
        • cert

        Why is this an issue?

        More Info

        Even if function-like macros may look similar to functions, they work differently. For example, functions provide parameter type-checking, whereas macros do not. Furthermore, since macros result in textual replacements, the code within a macro argument may be evaluated multiple times or in unexpected ways.

        Generally, functions provide a more secure and reliable mechanism than function-like macros. This safety usually outweighs the speed advantages allegedly offered by macros. Therefore, whenever possible, functions should be preferred.

        Noncompliant code example

        #define CUBE (X) ((X) * (X) * (X)) // Noncompliant
        
        void func(void) {
          int i = 2;
          int a = CUBE(++i); // Noncompliant. Expands to: int a = ((++i) * (++i) * (++i))
          // ...
        }
        

        Compliant solution

        inline int cube(int i) {
          return i * i * i;
        }
        
        void func(void) {
          int i = 2;
          int a = cube(++i); // yields 27
          // ...
        }
        

        Exceptions

        In a few situations, actual functions can’t replace function-like macros because the macro relies on features that only work with textual replacement. For instance:

        • Using manipulation of tokens, such as ## (token-pasting) and # (stringification).
        • Getting information about the context into which the macro is expanded by using __FILE__, __LINE__, __func__, or other similar compiler-specific constructs. Note that C++20 std::source_location can be a good replacement for some of these use cases — see S6190.

        This rule will ignore macros that make use of those features.

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