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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: 45 rules found
suspicious
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. "offsetof" macro should not be used

           Code Smell
        2. "errno" should not be used

           Code Smell
        3. Function names should be used either as a call with a parameter list or with the "&" operator

           Code Smell
        4. "enum" values should not be used as operands to built-in operators other than [ ], =, ==, !=, unary &, and the relational operators <, <=, >, >=

           Code Smell
        5. "bool" expressions should not be used as operands to built-in operators other than =, &&, ||, !, ==, !=, unary &, and the conditional operator

           Code Smell
        6. A cast shall not remove any const or volatile qualification from the type of a pointer or reference

           Code Smell
        7. Trigraphs should not be used

           Code Smell
        8. "#pragma pack" should be used correctly

           Bug
        9. Only valid arguments should be passed to UNIX/POSIX functions

           Code Smell
        10. Only valid arguments should be passed to stream functions

           Code Smell
        11. "^" should not be confused with exponentiation

           Code Smell
        12. Size of variable length arrays should be greater than zero

           Code Smell
        13. "mktemp" family of functions templates should have at least six trailing "X"s

           Code Smell
        14. Unevaluated operands should not have side effects

           Code Smell
        15. Size argument of memory functions should be consistent

           Code Smell
        16. Return value of "nodiscard" functions should not be ignored

           Code Smell
        17. Implicit casts should not lower precision

           Code Smell
        18. Appropriate size arguments should be passed to "strncat" and "strlcpy"

           Code Smell
        19. User-defined types should not be passed as variadic arguments

           Bug
        20. Array values should not be replaced unconditionally

           Bug
        21. A conditionally executed single line should be denoted by indentation

           Code Smell
        22. Conditionals should start on new lines

           Code Smell
        23. "case" ranges should cover multiple values

           Code Smell
        24. "switch" statements should cover all cases

           Code Smell
        25. Redundant pointer operator sequences should be removed

           Code Smell
        26. Conditionally executed code should be reachable

           Bug
        27. Flexible array members should not be declared

           Code Smell
        28. Track parsing failures

           Code Smell
        29. Recursion should not be infinite

           Bug
        30. Two branches in a conditional structure should not have exactly the same implementation

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

           Code Smell
        32. Switch cases should end with an unconditional "break" statement

           Code Smell
        33. "switch" statements should not contain non-case labels

           Code Smell
        34. Methods should not be empty

           Code Smell
        35. Assignments should not be made from within conditions

           Code Smell
        36. Variables should not be shadowed

           Code Smell
        37. Nested blocks of code should not be left empty

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

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

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

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

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

           Bug
        43. The built-in unary "-" operator should not be applied to an expression of unsigned 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. All "declarations" of a variable or function shall have the same type

           Bug

        Only valid arguments should be passed to stream functions

        intentionality - logical
        maintainability
        Code Smell
        • symbolic-execution
        • suspicious

        Passing invalid arguments to standard C library functions for handling I/O streams results in undefined behavior.

        Why is this an issue?

        How can I fix it?

        More Info

        The standard C library includes a number of functions for handling I/O streams. These functions put certain constraints on the values of their parameters. The constraints include the following:

        • The value for the FILE*-typed parameter may not be NULL
        • The third argument of fseek must be either of SEEK_SET, SEEK_END, or SEEK_CUR

        Failing to pass correctly constrained parameters renders them invalid and will result in undefined behavior.

        #include <stdio.h>
        
        size_t get_file_size() {
          FILE *f = fopen("example_file.txt", "r");
          // `f` may be NULL if `fopen` fails.
          fseek(f, 0L, SEEK_END); // Leads to undefined behavior, if `f` is NULL.
          size_t size = ftell(f); // Leads to undefined behavior, if `f` is NULL.
          fclose(f);
          return size;
        }
        

        What is the potential impact?

        Using the standard C library’s functions for handling I/O streams with invalid arguments leads to undefined behavior.

        When a program comprises undefined behavior, the compiler no longer needs to adhere to the language standard, and the program has no meaning assigned to it.

        Due to the resulting NULL pointer dereferences in the C library functions, the application might just crash, but in the worst case, the application may appear to execute correctly, while losing data or producing incorrect results.

        Besides affecting the application’s availability, NULL pointer dereferences may lead to code execution, in rare circumstances. If NULL is equivalent to the 0x0 memory address that can be accessed by privileged code, writing and reading memory is possible, which compromises the integrity and confidentiality of the application.

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          Developer Edition
          Available Since
          9.1

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