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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: 79 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. std::string_view::data() should not be passed to API expecting C-style strings

           Code Smell
        9. The condition of "assert" should not be trivially true

           Code Smell
        10. "std::format" numeric types should be 0-padded using the numerical padding and not the character padding

           Bug
        11. "std::format" should not have unused arguments

           Code Smell
        12. Type-constraints should not be used for forwarding reference parameters

           Bug
        13. Perfect forwarding constructors should be constrained

           Bug
        14. Requires-expression should not contain unevaluated concept checks or type predicates

           Bug
        15. Coroutine should have co_return on each execution path or provide return_void

           Bug
        16. Thread local variables should not be used in coroutines

           Code Smell
        17. The return value of "std::move" should be used in a function

           Code Smell
        18. "std::to_address" should be used to convert iterators to raw pointers

           Code Smell
        19. [[nodiscard]] should be used when the return value of a function should not be ignored

           Code Smell
        20. "dynamic_cast" should be used for downcasting

           Code Smell
        21. Pointers or references obtained from aliased smart pointers should not be used as function parameters

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

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

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

           Code Smell
        25. "Forwarding references" parameters should be used only to forward parameters

           Code Smell
        26. The order for arguments of the same type in a function call should be obvious

           Code Smell
        27. "std::move" and "std::forward" should not be confused

           Bug
        28. "std::move" should only be used where moving can happen

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

           Code Smell
        30. An object with pointer type shall not be converted to an unrelated pointer type, either directly or indirectly

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

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

           Code Smell
        33. Unevaluated operands should not have side effects

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

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

           Code Smell
        36. Implicit casts should not lower precision

           Code Smell
        37. "reinterpret_cast" should be used carefully

           Bug
        38. Appropriate size arguments should be passed to "strncat" and "strlcpy"

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

           Bug
        40. RAII objects should not be temporary

           Bug
        41. "std::auto_ptr" should not be used

           Bug
        42. Methods should not have identical implementations

           Code Smell
        43. Array values should not be replaced unconditionally

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

           Code Smell
        45. Conditionals should start on new lines

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

           Code Smell
        47. Default capture should not be used

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

           Code Smell
        49. Redundant pointer operator sequences should be removed

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

           Code Smell
        51. Conditionally executed code should be reachable

           Bug
        52. Exceptions should not be ignored

           Code Smell
        53. Flexible array members should not be declared

           Code Smell
        54. Track parsing failures

           Code Smell
        55. Recursion should not be infinite

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

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

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

           Code Smell
        59. C-style memory allocation routines should not be used

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

           Code Smell
        61. Methods should not be empty

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

           Code Smell
        63. Variables should not be shadowed

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

           Code Smell
        65. "using namespace" directives should not be used in header files

           Code Smell
        66. "Assignment" between numeric types shall be appropriate

           Code Smell
        67. There shall be no conversion from type "bool"

           Code Smell
        68. "Exception-unfriendly" functions shall be "noexcept"

           Code Smell
        69. The result of "std::remove", "std::remove_if", "std::unique" and "empty" shall be "used"

           Bug
        70. The argument to "std::move" shall be a non-const "lvalue"

           Code Smell
        71. A comparison of a "potentially virtual" pointer to member function shall only be with "nullptr"

           Bug
        72. Within an enumerator list, the value of an implicitly-specified "enumeration constant" shall be unique

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

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

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

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

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

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

           Code Smell
        79. All "declarations" of a variable or function shall have the same type

           Bug

        "Assignment" between numeric types shall be appropriate

        intentionality - logical
        maintainability
        Code Smell
        • pitfall
        • suspicious
        • 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 7.0.6 - Assignment between numeric types shall be appropriate

        [conv]

        Category: Required

        Analysis: Decidable,Single Translation Unit

        Amplification

        This rule applies to all assignments where the source and target have numeric type.

        A call is non-extensible when it is:

        • A qualified call to a member function (such as a.f( x ), this->f( x ), or A::f(x)); or
        • A call to an operator().

        A function argument arg is overload-independent when the call is:

        • Through a pointer to function or pointer to member function; or
        • Non-extensible, and, for all overloads that are callable with the same number of arguments, the parameters corresponding to arg have the same type. Note that a parameter of a function template that is dependent on a function template parameter never has the same type.

        The source and target within an assignment shall have the same type when the source expression is:

        • An argument to a function call (including an implicit constructor call) and the corresponding parameter is not overload-independent; or
        • Passed through the ellipsis parameter in a function call (where the target type is the promoted type of the argument).

        For all other assignments:

        • The source and target shall have types of the same type category, signedness and size; or
        • The source and target shall have types of the same type category, signedness, the source size shall be smaller than the target size, and the source shall be an id-expression; or
        • The source shall be an integer constant expression and the target shall be either:
          • Any numeric type with a range large enough to represent the value, even if the value is not exactly representable (when storing to a float, for example); or
          • A bit-field whose value representation width (see [class.bit]/1) and signedness are capable of representing the value.

        Rationale

        The C++ built-in operators perform many implicit conversions on their operands. These conversions can lead to unexpected information loss, change of signedness, implementation-defined behaviour or undefined behaviour. This rule therefore places restrictions on the presence of implicit numeric conversions on assignment.

        For floating-point types, the exact representation of a value is often not possible, so loss of precision when assigning a constant value is not a violation of this rule, provided it is within the range of the target type.

        Additionally, implicit conversions on assignment to a function parameter are undesirable as they could result in a silent change in overload selection due to changes elsewhere within the code, such as the addition of a #include. For this reason, the implicit conversion of a function argument is not permitted — except when the corresponding parameter is overload-independent, in which case an implicit conversion of the type category is permitted as a silent change in overload selection cannot occur.

        Exception

        The assignment to a parameter within a call to a constructor that is callable with a single numeric argument is permitted to have a target type that is a wider version of the source type, provided that the class has no other constructors that are callable with a single argument, apart from copy or move constructors. This allows an instance of the class to be created and used as a function parameter without requiring an explicit widening conversion of the source type.

        Example

        u32 = 1;                        // Compliant
        s32 = 4u * 2u;                  // Compliant
        u8  = 3u;                       // Compliant
        u8  = 3_u8;                     // Compliant
        u8  = 300u;                     // Non-compliant - value does not fit
        

        The use of bit-fields in the following example violates M23_159: MISRA C++ 2023 Rule 12.2.1.

        struct S { uint32_t b : 2; } s; // Bit-field is considered to be uint8_t
        
        s.b = 2;                        // Compliant
        s.b = 32u;                      // Non-compliant - value does not fit
        s.b = u8;                       // Compliant - same width, but may truncate
        s.b = u16;                      // Non-compliant - narrowing
        
        void sb1( uint32_t );
        void sb1( uint8_t  );
        void sb2( uint8_t  );
        
        void sb3()
        {
          sb1( s.b );                   // Non-compliant - s.b considered to be uint8_t,
                                        //                 but sb1( uint32_t ) is called
          sb2( s.b );                   // Compliant
        }
        
        enum Colour : uint16_t
        {
          red, green, blue
        } c;
        
        u8  = red;                      // Compliant - value can be represented
        u32 = red;                      // Compliant - value can be represented
        u8  = c;                        // Non-compliant - different sizes (narrowing)
        u32 = c;                        // Compliant - widening of id-expression
        
        enum States
        {
          enabled, disabled
        };
        
        u8 = enabled;                   // Rule does not apply - source type not numeric
        
        unsigned long ul;
        unsigned int  ui = ul;          // Compliant - if sizes are equal
        
          u8 = s8;                      // Non-compliant - different signedness
          u8 = u8 + u8;                 // Non-compliant - change of sign and narrowing
        
        flt1 = s32;                     // Non-compliant - different type category
        flt2 = 0.0;                     // Non-compliant - different sizes and not an
                                        //                 integral constant expression
        flt3 = 0.0f;                    // Compliant
        flt4 = 1;                       // Compliant
        flt5 = 9999999999;              // Compliant - loss of precision is possible
        
        int f( int8_t s8 )
        {
          int16_t val1 = s8;            // Compliant
          int16_t val2 { s8 };          // Compliant
          int16_t val3 ( s8 );          // Compliant
          int16_t val4 { s8 + s8 };     // Non-compliant - narrowing, as s8 + s8 is int
        
          switch ( s8 )
          {
            case 1:                     // Compliant
            case 0xFFFF'FFFF'FFFF:      // Non-compliant - value does not fit in int8_t
              return s8;                // Compliant - widening of id-expression
          }
        
          return s8 + s8;               // Compliant - s8 + s8 is of type int
        }
        

        The following examples demonstrate the assignment to function parameters that are not overload-independent:

        void f1( int64_t i );
        
        f1( s32 + s32 );                // Non-compliant - implicit widening conversion
        
        void f2( int i );
        
        f2( s32 + s64 );                // Non-compliant - implicit narrowing conversion
        f2( s16 + s16 );                // Compliant - result of addition is int
        
        struct A
        {
          explicit A( int32_t i );
          explicit A( int64_t i );
        };
        
        A a { s16 };                    // Non-compliant
        
        void f3( long l );
        
        void ( *fp )( long l) = &f3;
        
        f3( 2 );                        // Non-compliant - implicit conversion from int to
                                        // long. Adding a #include would silently change
                                        // the selected overload if it added void f3( int )
        
        fp( 2 );                        // Compliant - calling through function pointer is
                                        //             overload-independent
        
        struct MyInt
        {
          explicit MyInt( int32_t );
                   MyInt( int32_t, int32_t );
        };
        
        void f4( MyInt );
        
        void bar ( int16_t s )
        {
          f4( MyInt { s } );            // Compliant by exception - no need to cast s
          MyInt i { s };                // Compliant by exception - no need to cast s
        }
        
        void log( char const * fmt, ... );
        
        void f( uint8_t c )
        {
          log( "f( %c )", c );          // Non-compliant - conversion of c from uint8_t
        }                               //                 to int
        

        In the following example, all overloads of the function A::set that can be called with two arguments have the type size_t for their first parameter. Therefore, the first parameter in a qualified call to A::set is overload-independent:

        struct A
        {
          void set( short value );
          void set( size_t index, int value );
          void set( size_t index, std::string value );
          void set( int index, double value ) = delete;   // Not callable
          void g();
        };
        
        void f( A & a )
        {
          a.set( 42, "answer" );        // Compliant - size_t can represent 42, and it is
        }                               // assigned to an overload-independent parameter
        
        void A::g()
        {
          set( 42, "answer" );          // Non-compliant - even though this non-qualified
                                        // call will only select an overload in the class
        }
        

        In the following example, both overloads of the function B::set can be called with two arguments, but their first parameters do not have the same type (even if int and long have the same size). Therefore, the first parameter in a qualified call to B::set is not overload-independent:

        struct B
        {
          void set(  int index, int value );
          void set( long index, std::string value );
        };
        
        void f( B & b )
        {
          b.set( 42, "answer" );        // Non-compliant - conversion from int to long not
        }                               // allowed as parameter is not overload-independent
        
        struct C
        {
          int32_t x;
          int64_t y;
          int64_t z;
        };
        
        C c1 {
               s16 + s16,               // Compliant - s16 + s16 is of type int
               s16 + s16,               // Non-compliant - widening from int
               s16                      // Compliant - widening of id-expression
             };
        
        template< typename T >
        struct D
        {
          void set1( T index, int value );
          void set1( T index, std::string value );
        
          template< typename S1 > void set2( S1 index, int value );
          template< typename S2 > void set2( S2 index, std::string value );
        };
        
        void f( D< size_t > & a )
        {
          a.set1( 42, "X" );            // Compliant - size_t is same type
          a.set2< size_t >( 42, "X" );  // Non-compliant - 'S1' is never the same as
        }                               //   the specialized type of 'S2' (size_t)
        

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