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* [gcc r14-10046] c-family: Allow arguments with NULLPTR_TYPE as sentinels [PR114780]
@ 2024-04-19 22:13 Jakub Jelinek
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From: Jakub Jelinek @ 2024-04-19 22:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: gcc-cvs
https://gcc.gnu.org/g:2afdecccbaf5c5b1c7a235509b37092540906c02
commit r14-10046-g2afdecccbaf5c5b1c7a235509b37092540906c02
Author: Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
Date: Sat Apr 20 00:12:36 2024 +0200
c-family: Allow arguments with NULLPTR_TYPE as sentinels [PR114780]
While in C++ the ellipsis argument conversions include
"An argument that has type cv std::nullptr_t is converted to type void*"
in C23 a nullptr_t argument is not promoted in any way, but va_arg
description says:
"the type of the next argument is nullptr_t and type is a pointer type that has the same
representation and alignment requirements as a pointer to a character type."
So, while in C++ check_function_sentinel will never see NULLPTR_TYPE, for
C23 it can see that and currently we incorrectly warn about those.
The only question is whether we should warn on any argument with
nullptr_t type or just about nullptr (nullptr_t argument with integer_zerop
value). Through undefined behavior guess one could pass non-NULL pointer
that way, say by union { void *p; nullptr_t q; } u; u.p = &whatever;
and pass u.q to ..., but valid code should always pass something that will
read as (char *) 0 when read using va_arg (ap, char *), so I think it is
better not to warn rather than warn in those cases.
Note, clang seems to pass (void *)0 rather than expression of nullptr_t
type to ellipsis in C23 mode as if it did the C++ ellipsis argument
conversions, in that case guess not warning about that would be even safer,
but what GCC does I think follows the spec more closely, even when in a
valid program one shouldn't be able to observe the difference.
2024-04-20 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR c/114780
* c-common.cc (check_function_sentinel): Allow as sentinel any
argument of NULLPTR_TYPE.
* gcc.dg/format/sentinel-2.c: New test.
Diff:
---
gcc/c-family/c-common.cc | 1 +
gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/format/sentinel-2.c | 21 +++++++++++++++++++++
2 files changed, 22 insertions(+)
diff --git a/gcc/c-family/c-common.cc b/gcc/c-family/c-common.cc
index 6fa8243b02b..01e3d247fc2 100644
--- a/gcc/c-family/c-common.cc
+++ b/gcc/c-family/c-common.cc
@@ -5783,6 +5783,7 @@ check_function_sentinel (const_tree fntype, int nargs, tree *argarray)
sentinel = fold_for_warn (argarray[nargs - 1 - pos]);
if ((!POINTER_TYPE_P (TREE_TYPE (sentinel))
|| !integer_zerop (sentinel))
+ && TREE_CODE (TREE_TYPE (sentinel)) != NULLPTR_TYPE
/* Although __null (in C++) is only an integer we allow it
nevertheless, as we are guaranteed that it's exactly
as wide as a pointer, and we don't want to force
diff --git a/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/format/sentinel-2.c b/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/format/sentinel-2.c
new file mode 100644
index 00000000000..4c29f6fb818
--- /dev/null
+++ b/gcc/testsuite/gcc.dg/format/sentinel-2.c
@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
+/* PR c/114780 */
+/* { dg-do compile } */
+/* { dg-options "-std=c23 -Wformat" } */
+
+#include <stddef.h>
+
+[[gnu::sentinel]] void foo (int, ...);
+[[gnu::sentinel]] void bar (...);
+
+void
+baz (nullptr_t p)
+{
+ foo (1, 2, nullptr);
+ foo (3, 4, 5, p);
+ bar (nullptr);
+ bar (p);
+ foo (6, 7, 0); // { dg-warning "missing sentinel in function call" }
+ bar (0); // { dg-warning "missing sentinel in function call" }
+ foo (8, 9, NULL);
+ bar (NULL);
+}
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