On Sat, Nov 24, 2018 at 4:34 PM Liu Hao via cfe-dev <cfe-dev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > 在 2018/11/24 5:36, Marc Glisse 写道: > > On Fri, 23 Nov 2018, Helmut Eller wrote: > > > >> On Fri, Nov 23 2018, Marc Glisse wrote: > >> > >>> On Fri, 23 Nov 2018, Helmut Eller wrote: > >>> > >>>> when compiling this example with gcc -O2 -ftrapv: > >>>> [...] > >>> Try with "-fsanitize=undefined > >>> -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error". -ftrapv is quite broken and not > >>> really maintained. I think fixing it would mean making it an alias for > >>> the sanitizer version. > >> > >> Thanks for the quick reply. That does indeed produce exactly the code I > >> want. > >> > >> It doesn't seem so detect overflow for short or char types, though: > > > > That's because there is no overflow. Read about integer promotion. > > I think I had better say something about this. > > You are right; there is no overflow. But who needs such apparently > deficient (if not incomplete at all) behavior? People could start > arguing that integer promotion is mandated by the C standard and is what > 'portable' code might rely on. Yes you are right, totally right about a > _very_ poor excuse: The so-called 'portable' code should not rely on the `int` > -> `short` conversion either, which is implementation-defined and not so > portable after all. It is a shame for C to have integer promotion. > It is a flaw for UBSan to discriminate overflows on `short`. It is not an ubsan flaw. There is no overflow happening, therefore it has nothing to report. First, the sub-int types are promoted to int-sized types, then those promoted values are added (and this addition is what the ubsan sanitizes), and then the result is implicitly cast back to the original type. Naturally, sometimes that is lossy. That is indeed an issue. There are several bugs about this: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21530 https://github.com/google/sanitizers/issues/940 If you look at the release notes, you may see that clang-7 has gained -fsanitize=implicit-conversion (https://reviews.llvm.org/D48958), which *does* detect just *this* kind of issues. Yay. TBN, the version in clang-7 is *very* partial (only detects lossy truncations), so if you want to use that, you should use trunk, in which more cases are now detected - sign changes (https://reviews.llvm.org/D50250) compound assignment operations (https://reviews.llvm.org/D53949). Though trunk still does not catch everything - i still need to look into unary inc/dec, bitfields; atomics. > -- > Best regards, > LH_Mouse Roman. > _______________________________________________ > cfe-dev mailing list > cfe-dev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/cfe-dev