On 20/02/2023 10:37, Jonathan Wakely wrote: > On Mon, 20 Feb 2023 at 10:26, Xi Ruoyao <xry111@xxxxxxxxxxx> 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. > > Right, it's defined behaviour in libstdc++, as an extension. > >> >> 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. > > And turned defined behaviour back into UB. The warning isn't reliable > (only if the compiler can see the point is null, which isn't the case > without optimization, or if the pointer comes from some non-inline > function), the exception is. You're trading guaranteed exception for a > not guaranteed warning and unbounded misoptimization due to undefined > behaviour. > > Even if this was a robust solution, is it really a problem that needs > to be solved? Feels useful to get build warnings if compiler knows nullptr is going to be dereferenced, as clang does. Personally I feel runtime should equally handle possible nullptr by constructing strings in a try catch block so any exceptions are handled or logged at least... Personally I would be pleased if GCC had a warning I could enable to report any logic_error exceptions it knew would execute. Regards, Jonny