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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: 41 rules found
unpredictable
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Globals should not depend on possibly not yet initialized variables

           Code Smell
        2. Coroutine should have co_return on each execution path or provide return_void

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

           Code Smell
        4. Arguments evaluation order should not be relied on

           Bug
        5. A single statement should not have more than one resource allocation

           Code Smell
        6. Functions that throw exceptions should not be used as hash functions

           Code Smell
        7. A call to "wait()" on a "std::condition_variable" should have a condition

           Bug
        8. Keywords shall not be used as macros identifiers

           Code Smell
        9. Incomplete types should not be deleted

           Code Smell
        10. Dereferenced null pointers should not be bound to references

           Code Smell
        11. Header guards should be followed by a matching "#define" macro

           Code Smell
        12. "memcmp" should only be called with pointers to trivially copyable types with no padding

           Bug
        13. Stack allocated memory and non-owned memory should not be freed

           Bug
        14. Destructors should not be called explicitly

           Code Smell
        15. Floating-point arithmetic should be used appropriately

           Bug
        16. There shall be no occurrence of "undefined" or "critical unspecified behaviour"

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

           Code Smell
        18. The pointers returned by the C++ Standard Library functions "localeconv", "getenv", "setlocale" or "strerror" must only be used as if they have pointer to const-qualified type

           Bug
        19. An object shall not be accessed outside of its lifetime

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

           Bug
        21. A pointer to an incomplete "class" type shall not be deleted

           Bug
        22. An object shall not be used while in a "potentially moved-from state"

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

           Bug
        24. Local variables shall not have static storage duration

           Code Smell
        25. The pointer returned by the C++ Standard Library functions "asctime", "ctime", "gmtime", "localtime", "localeconv", "getenv", "setlocale" or "strerror" must not be used following a subsequent call to the same function

           Bug
        26. The library functions "atof", "atoi", "atol" and "atoll" from "<cstdlib>" shall not be used

           Bug
        27. The "defined" preprocessor operator shall be used appropriately

           Bug
        28. There should be at least one exception handler to catch all otherwise unhandled exceptions

           Bug
        29. The value of an object must not be read before it has been set

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

           Bug
        31. 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
        32. Subtraction between pointers shall only be applied to pointers that address elements of the same array

           Bug
        33. Pointer arithmetic shall not form an invalid pointer

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

           Bug
        35. The numeric value of an "unscoped enumeration" with no fixed "underlying type" shall not be used

           Code Smell
        36. A function or object with external linkage should be "introduced" in a "header file"

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

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

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

           Bug
        40. A line whose first token is "#" shall be a valid preprocessing directive

           Bug
        41. An object or subobject must not be copied to an overlapping object

           Bug

        Operations on a memory location shall be sequenced appropriately

        intentionality - logical
        reliability
        Bug
        • unpredictable
        • 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 4.6.1 - Operations on a memory location shall be sequenced appropriately

        [intro.execution] Undefined 17

        Category: Required

        Analysis: Undecidable,System

        Amplification

        A side effect on a memory location shall not be unsequenced or indeterminately sequenced with respect to any other side effect on the same memory location, or any value computation using the value of any object in the same memory location.

        For the purposes of this rule, all volatile accesses are considered to access a single, unique memory location.

        Rationale

        Unsequenced accesses to a memory location when one of the accesses has side effects results in undefined behaviour.

        Additionally, indeterminately sequenced accesses could result in an expression yielding a different value for differing program states. This rule ensures that a program’s behaviour is independent of the evaluation order (such as the evaluation of function arguments) chosen by the compiler.

        An access to a volatile v1 may have an effect on another, seemingly unrelated, volatile v2. For this reason, this rule considers all volatile accesses as if they were to a single, unique memory location.

        Note: C++17 changed the evaluation order of several expressions from indeterminately sequenced to sequenced before, which means that code that is compliant with this rule may not work correctly with earlier versions of C++.

        Example

        char f( char & c, char a )
        {
          c = a;
        
          return c;
        }
        
        void h( char a, char b );
        
        char a;
        
        h( f( a, 'a' ), f( a, 'b' ) );   // Non-compliant - value of a could be 'a' or 'b'
        

        In the following example, i is read twice and modified twice. However, since C++17, the evaluation of the right-hand side of an assignment is sequenced before the evaluation of the left-hand side (see [expr.ass]), so all accesses to i occur in a defined order:

        a[ i++ ] = b[ i++ ];             // Compliant in C++17
        

        Even though there is no undefined behaviour in the following examples, they are non-compliant as the uses of i are indeterminately sequenced with respect to their increments:

        x = b[ i ] + i++;                // Non-compliant
        x = func( i++, i );              // Non-compliant
        

        In the following example, all accesses to volatile variables are considered to have side effects on the same memory location:

        extern volatile uint16_t v1;
        extern volatile uint16_t v2;
        
        uint16_t t = v1 + v2;            // Non-compliant - indeterminately sequenced
        
        v1 = v1 & 0x80u;                 // Compliant
        

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