Date: Sun, 10 Apr 2005 08:44:44 -0400 (EDT) From: Daniel Ellard <ellard@eecs.harvard.edu> To: Dimitry Andric <dimitry@andric.com> Cc: freebsd-current@freebsd.org Subject: Re: smbfs bug introduced at smbfs_vnops.c:1.58 Message-ID: <20050410082945.H66651@bowser.eecs.harvard.edu> In-Reply-To: <1892195662.20050410140423@andric.com> References: <200504100251.j3A2pLEH055107@sana.init-main.com> <20050410074009.N66651@bowser.eecs.harvard.edu> <1892195662.20050410140423@andric.com>
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On Sun, 10 Apr 2005, Dimitry Andric wrote: > > If you change the -O to -g, then the code for "a" is not > > removed -- but there's still no warning. I think this is > > a bug, because if the expression wasn't an innocuous a+=1 > > it could be a real problem if the variable wasn't removed. > > The idea here is that gcc sees that the value of a is never used, and > therefore it doesn't have to warn. (Whether you agree with this, or > not, is more of a political or philosophical question. ;) But as soon > as you actually *do* something with a's value afterwards, it will > start to complain. Well, I guess have to give an example... int main(void) { int a; int b[1]; a = b[a * 10000]; /* Uses the value of a. */ return (0); } If you compile this with -O, then the "a = " line is optimized away, and the deref of some random piece of memory goes away. If you compile this without the -O then now you have a deref to something whose address depends on an uninitialized variable. Sorry, that's bad. At least the gcc folk now do detect this old chestnut: { int a; a /= 0; } which was used to provoke arguments in compiler classes for many years. (Optimized, nothing happens. Unoptimized, a division-by-zero error happens...) My philosophy is that the compiler should warn you about things in the un-optimized, un-transformed code (because that's where I put my bugs -- if I've written code that has no effect, that's probably not what I meant). I'd rather get extraneous warnings than miss something. Of course, everyone is welcome to their own philosophy. (But how politics enter into this, I don't want to know.) -Dan
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