On 20/02/2023 10:26, Xi Ruoyao wrote: > On Sun, 2023-02-19 at 21:33 +0000, Jonny Grant wrote: > >> I noticed -Wanalyzer-null-dereference reports at build time a >> dereference. Also works if a function parameter. I wondered why >> std::string isn't detected by this static analyser option. > > Because the analyzer does not know the C++ standard disallows to use > NULL here. It just analyzes the code. The code in libstdc++ reads: > > basic_string(const _CharT* __s, const _Alloc& __a = _Alloc()) > : _M_dataplus(_M_local_data(), __a) > { > // NB: Not required, but considered best practice. > if (__s == 0) > std::__throw_logic_error(__N("basic_string: " > "construction from null is not valid")); > const _CharT* __end = __s + traits_type::length(__s); > _M_construct(__s, __end, forward_iterator_tag()); > } > > As you can see yourself, though the standard implies using NULL here is > a UB, libstdc++ does not really code a UB here. So the analyzer will > consider the code absolutely valid. Thank you for your reply. As you say, throwing logic_error seems rational if a NULL gets through to the constructor; if standard didn't imply creating an empty std::string when NULL was passed through. > Note that throwing a C++ exception is not a programming error. It's > perfectly legal to catch the exception elsewhere. It's also perfectly > legal not to catch it and treat it as an abort() (calling abort is also > not a programming error). > > >> It's not pretty, but this wrapper catches NULL passed at compile time: >> >> std::string make_std_string(const char * const str) >> { >> // This line ensures: warning: dereference of NULL '0' [CWE-476] >> [-Wanalyzer-null-dereference] >> char b = *str; > > You are invoking an undefined behavior here if str is NULL, so it's > essentially same as using a nonnull attribute for make_std_string. Thank you for the suggestion, I gave that nonnull attribute a try, but it doesn't appear to warn for this example. https://godbolt.org/z/boqTj6oWE It should give a warning, as -fanalyzer enables -Wanalyzer-null-argument https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Static-Analyzer-Options.html My preference would be to not have that char b = *str; maybe I would just do it within a macro enabled by a specific build Just to share my first example, with that char b = *str; inside a macro. https://godbolt.org/z/9Wo6zY3rT Kind regards Jonny