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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 798
  • Vulnerability14
  • Bug173
  • Security Hotspot19
  • Code Smell592

  • Quick Fix 99
Filtered: 110 rules found
cert
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. "abort", "exit", "getenv" and "system" from <stdlib.h> should not be used

           Bug
        2. "atof", "atoi" and "atol" from <stdlib.h> should not be used

           Bug
        3. "setjmp" and "longjmp" should not be used

           Code Smell
        4. Reserved identifiers should not be defined or declared

           Code Smell
        5. In the definition of a function-like macro, each instance of a parameter shall be enclosed in parentheses, unless it is used as the operand of # or ##

           Code Smell
        6. Function-like macros should not be used

           Code Smell
        7. The address of an automatic object should not be assigned to another object that may persist after the first object has ceased to exist

           Bug
        8. Function exit paths should have appropriate return values

           Bug
        9. Functions should not be defined with a variable number of arguments

           Code Smell
        10. The right-hand operands of && and || should not contain side effects

           Code Smell
        11. Increment (++) and decrement (--) operators should not be used in a method call or mixed with other operators in an expression

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

           Bug
        13. Boolean operations should not have numeric operands, and vice versa

           Bug
        14. Limited dependence should be placed on operator precedence

           Code Smell
        15. Objects with integer type should not be converted to objects with pointer type

           Bug
        16. A cast shall not remove any const or volatile qualification from the type of a pointer or reference

           Code Smell
        17. Signed and unsigned types should not be mixed in expressions

           Code Smell
        18. Array declarations should include an explicit size specification

           Code Smell
        19. Literal suffix "L" for long integers shall be upper case

           Code Smell
        20. String literals with different prefixes should not be concatenated

           Bug
        21. Bit fields should be declared with appropriate types

           Code Smell
        22. Appropriate char types should be used for character and integer values

           Code Smell
        23. Identifiers should not be longer than 31 characters

           Code Smell
        24. Trigraphs should not be used

           Code Smell
        25. All uses of the #pragma directive should be documented

           Code Smell
        26. Names of well-known C standard library macros and functions should not be used as identifiers

           Code Smell
        27. Hard-coded secrets are security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        28. "sprintf" should not be used

           Security Hotspot
        29. Accessing files should not introduce TOCTOU vulnerabilities

           Vulnerability
        30. Macros should not be used as replacements for "typedef" and "using"

           Code Smell
        31. Using "tmpnam", "tmpnam_s" or "tmpnam_r" is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        32. Using "strncpy" or "wcsncpy" is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        33. Using "strncat" or "wcsncat" is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        34. Using "strcat" or "wcscat" is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        35. Using "strlen" or "wcslen" is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        36. Using "strcpy" or "wcscpy" is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        37. POSIX functions should not be called with arguments that trigger buffer overflows

           Vulnerability
        38. Relational and subtraction operators should not be used with pointers to different arrays

           Bug
        39. Cipher algorithms should be robust

           Vulnerability
        40. Encryption algorithms should be used with secure mode and padding scheme

           Vulnerability
        41. Moved-from objects should not be relied upon

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

           Bug
        43. Expanding archive files without controlling resource consumption is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        44. Server certificates should be verified during SSL/TLS connections

           Vulnerability
        45. Integral operations should not overflow

           Bug
        46. Reference types should not be qualified with "const" or "volatile"

           Code Smell
        47. Local variables should not be volatile

           Code Smell
        48. Classes should have regular copy and move semantic

           Code Smell
        49. Closed resources should not be accessed

           Bug
        50. Dynamically allocated memory should be released

           Bug
        51. Freed memory should not be used

           Bug
        52. Memory access should be explicitly bounded to prevent buffer overflows

           Bug
        53. Zero should not be a possible denominator

           Bug
        54. Standard namespaces should not be modified

           Code Smell
        55. Function declarations that look like variable declarations should not be used

           Bug
        56. Format strings should be used correctly

           Code Smell
        57. Members should be initialized in the order they are declared

           Code Smell
        58. "sizeof" should not be called on pointers

           Bug
        59. Declarations should not be empty

           Code Smell
        60. Multiline blocks should be enclosed in curly braces

           Code Smell
        61. "nonnull" parameters and return values of "returns_nonnull" functions should not be null

           Bug
        62. Setting loose POSIX file permissions is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        63. Conditionally executed code should be reachable

           Bug
        64. Printf-style format strings should not lead to unexpected behavior at runtime

           Bug
        65. Null pointers should not be dereferenced

           Bug
        66. Using pseudorandom number generators (PRNGs) is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        67. "for" loop counters should not have essentially floating type

           Bug
        68. Resources should be closed

           Bug
        69. Hard-coded passwords are security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        70. Comment styles "//" and "/* ... */" should not be mixed within a file

           Code Smell
        71. Obsolete POSIX functions should not be used

           Code Smell
        72. Code annotated as deprecated should not be used

           Code Smell
        73. Related "if/else if" statements should not have the same condition

           Bug
        74. Unused assignments should be removed

           Code Smell
        75. Pointers should not be cast to integral types

           Bug
        76. Identical expressions should not be used on both sides of a binary operator

           Bug
        77. All code should be reachable

           Bug
        78. "#pragma warning (default: ...)" should not be used

           Code Smell
        79. Virtual functions should not be called from constructors or destructors

           Code Smell
        80. Multiple variables should not be declared on the same line

           Code Smell
        81. Variables should not be self-assigned

           Bug
        82. File names should comply with a naming convention

           Code Smell
        83. Octal values should not be used

           Code Smell
        84. Using hardcoded IP addresses is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        85. "switch" statements should have "default" clauses

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

           Code Smell
        87. "operator delete" should be written along with "operator new"

           Bug
        88. "if ... else if" constructs should end with "else" clauses

           Code Smell
        89. Polymorphic base class destructor should be either public virtual or protected non-virtual

           Code Smell
        90. Appropriate memory de-allocation should be used

           Bug
        91. Control structures should use curly braces

           Code Smell
        92. Generic exceptions should not be caught

           Code Smell
        93. Unused function parameters should be removed

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

           Code Smell
        95. Generic exceptions should never be thrown

           Code Smell
        96. Variables should not be shadowed

           Code Smell
        97. Empty statements should be removed

           Code Smell
        98. "/*" and "//" should not be used within comments

           Code Smell
        99. Insecure functions should not be used

           Vulnerability
        100. Unused labels should be removed

           Code Smell
        101. Standard outputs should not be used directly to log anything

           Code Smell
        102. Handlers in a single try-catch or function-try-block for a derived class and some or all of its bases should be ordered most-derived-first

           Bug
        103. Exception classes should be caught by reference

           Bug
        104. Handlers of a function-try-block implementation of a class constructor or destructor shall not reference non-static members from this class or its bases

           Bug
        105. Control should not be transferred into a complex logic block using a "goto" or a "switch" statement

           Code Smell
        106. Header files should not contain unnamed namespaces

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

           Bug
        108. 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
        109. Subtraction between pointers shall only be applied to pointers that address elements of the same array

           Bug
        110. A value should not be "unnecessarily written" to a local object

           Code Smell

        A value should not be "unnecessarily written" to a local object

        intentionality - logical
        maintainability
        Code Smell
        • cwe
        • symbolic-execution
        • cert
        • unused
        • 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 0.1.1 - A value should not be unnecessarily written to a local object

        Category: Advisory

        Analysis: Undecidable,System

        Amplification

        This rule applies to all accesses, either direct or through a pointer or reference, to objects with automatic storage duration that:

        • Have trivially destructible types (including basic types and enumeration types); or
        • Are arrays of trivially destructible types; or
        • Are STL containers (including std::string), where the value_type is trivially destructible.

        The rule also applies to accesses to subobjects or elements of such objects.

        An object is unnecessarily written when on each feasible path:

        • The object is destroyed before being observed; or
        • The object is written to again before being read.

        An object is observed within an expression if its value affects the external state of the program, the control flow of the program, or the value of a different object.

        The following examples illustrate different types of access to an object i:

        int32_t f( int32_t j );
        
        int32_t i = f( 1 );    // Written
        i;                     // Read
        i = 0;                 // Written (even if 'i' was 0 before the assignment)
        auto j = i;            // Read and observed
        ++i;                   // Read and written
        i += 3;                // Read and written
        i = i + j;             // Read and written
        auto k1 = ++i;         // Read, written, read and observed
        auto k2 = i++;         // Read, observed and written
        arr[ i ] = f( 1 );     // Read and observed
        if ( i ) { }           // Read and observed
        ( void )f( i );        // Read and observed
        

        Observing any element of a container is considered to observe the full container and all of its elements. Observing a subobject is considered to observe the full object and all of its subobjects. Additionally, an object that is created outside of an iteration statement is considered to be observed (but not read) at the end of the iteration statement, provided it is also observed during any iteration.

        A function’s compliance with this rule is determined independently of the context in which the function is called. For example, a Boolean parameter is treated as if it may have a value of true or false, even if all the calls expressed in the current program use a value of true — see example f4, below.

        Rationale

        Giving an object a value that is never subsequently used is inefficient, and may indicate that a coding defect is present. Such writes are referred to as dataflow anomalies [1]:

        • A DU (Define–Use) dataflow anomaly is present if a value that is written is never observed;
        • A DD (Define–Define) dataflow anomaly is present if a value overwrites another value before it has been read.

        Within a loop, a value may be written to an object with the intent that it will be observed during the next iteration, meaning that the value written on the last iteration may never be observed. Whilst it is possible to restructure the loop to avoid this behaviour, there is a risk that the resulting code may be of lower quality (less clear, for example). This rule therefore considers observation during any iteration to apply to all values written to such an object, including a value written during the last iteration of a loop that is not actually observed — see example f3, below.

        Observing part of a bigger object is considered to observe the object in its entirety; it is common to have code that operates on objects as a whole (initializing or writing to all subobjects), even if the value of only some of its subobjects are actually read. Requiring fine-grained writes would break encapsulation — see examples f5 and f6, below.

        A function, assuming its preconditions are respected, should always behave as specified. This is true irrespective of the calling context, including possible contexts that are not expressed in the current program. For this reason, path feasibility (within this rule) is determined without taking the actual calling contexts into consideration.

        Exception

        Even though the values passed as arguments to functions are written to their corresponding parameter objects, it is permitted for function parameters to remain unobserved when the function returns. This exception prevents crosstalk with M23_011: MISRA C++ 2023 Rule 0.2.2 which requires, in a decidable way, that function parameters are used. Note that writing to an unread parameter in a function body is a DD anomaly, which is a violation of this rule.

        Example

        int32_t f1( int32_t i )
        {
          auto j = i;       // Non-compliant - j is not observed after being written
        
          i++;              // Non-compliant - i is not observed after being written
        
          return 0;
        }
        
        int32_t f2( int32_t i )
        {
          auto & j = i;     // Rule does not apply to j, which is not an object
        
          j++;              // Compliant - writes object i that is observed in the return
        
          return i;
        }
        
        int32_t f3( int32_t j, int32_t k, int32_t m )
        {
          for ( int32_t i = 0; i < 10; ++i )  // Compliant - i is observed in i < 10
          {
            m = 10;         // Non-compliant - when looping, overwrites incremented value
            ++k;            // Non-compliant - k is never observed
        
            use( j );       // Observation of j inside of the loop
        
            ++j;            // Compliant - observation above is sufficient for final write
        
            ++m;            // Compliant - observed in the return
          }                 // j is considered observed here as it was observed in the loop
        
          return m;
        }
        
        int32_t f4( bool    b,
                    int32_t i,
                    int32_t j )  // Compliant by exception - j is never observed
        {
          i = 0;             // Non-compliant - value passed is overwritten
        
          int32_t k = 4;     // Compliant - value is observed in one feasible path
        
          if ( b )           // Both branches are considered feasible, even if the function
          {                  // is only called with b set to true
            return i;
          }
          else
          {
            return k;
          }
        }
        
        struct Point { int32_t x; int32_t y; int32_t z; int32_t t; };
        
        int32_t f5()
        {
          Point p {};        // Compliant - p and its subobjects are observed in the return
        
          p.x = 2;
          p.x = 3;           // Non-compliant - overwrite the value 2 that is never read
          p.z = 4;           // Compliant - p.z is observed in the return
        
          return p.y;        // Observation of p.y also observes p, p.x, p.z and p.t
        }
        
        int32_t f6()
        {
          std::vector< int32_t > v( 4, 0 );  // Compliant - v and its elements are observed
                                             //             in the return
        
          v[ 0 ] = 2;
          v[ 0 ] = 3;        // Non-compliant - overwrite the value 2 that is never read
          v[ 2 ] = 4;        // Compliant - v[ 2 ] is observed in the return
        
          return v[ 1 ];     // Observation of v[ 1 ] observes v and all of its elements
        }
        
        void f7( std::mutex & m )
        {
          std::scoped_lock lock { m };  // Rule does not apply - destructor is non-trivial
        }
        
        char f8( bool b )
        {
          char c = f( 1 );   // Non-compliant - assigned value never read
        
          if ( b )
          {
            c = 'h';         // The value of c is overwritten here
        
            return c;
          }
          else
          {
            return '\0';     // The value of c is not observed here
          }
        }
        
        void callee( int32_t & ri )
        {
          ri++;              // Rule does not apply - reference is not an object
        }
        
        void caller()
        {
          int32_t i = 0;
        
          callee( i );       // Non-compliant - i written and not subsequently observed
        }
        

        Glossary

        [1] Dataflow anomaly

        The state of a variable at a point in a program can be described using the following terms:

        • Undefined (U) — the value of the variable is indeterminate; and
        • Referenced ® — the variable is used in some way (e.g. in an expression); and
        • Defined (D) — the variable is explicitly initialized or assigned a value.

        Given the above, the following dataflow anomalies can be defined:

        • UR dataflow anomaly — variable not assigned a value before the specified use; and
        • DU dataflow anomaly — variable is assigned a value that is never subsequently used; and
        • DD dataflow anomaly — variable is assigned a value twice with no intermediate use.

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