foo(foo &afoo): va(foo,va++){
}
What is the security issue or problem of this code snippet.
foo(foo &afoo): va(foo,va++){
}
What is the security issue or problem of this code snippet.
This with g++ compiles, and I don't think there's any UB
struct Va
{
Va(struct Foo&, int) {}
};
int operator++(const Va&, int) { return 42; }
struct Foo
{
Va va;
Foo(Foo &afoo) : va(afoo,va++) {}
};
to be specific operator++
is not doing anything with the not-yet-initialized va
data member. It's more or less like passing *this
(as reference) or this
(as pointer) to a base class or a function in the initialization list... it's correctly reported by some compilers as a dangerous operation but it's legal if the referenced object is not accessed (and it's actually sometimes useful if you only need the address).
va(afoo,va++)
and not va(foo,va++)
. The original IMO could only work using preprocessor tricks, but then clearly if we allow the preprocessor there's nothing for sure wrong in that code.
It is UB because it changes the value of va twice in a single command.
But isn't: foo(foo &afoo): va(afoo,va++) {}
?
++
is defined?
va
is uninitialised at this point, so any attempt to operate on it is undefined.
Feb 1, 2011 at 23:09
operator++
would be called on a not-yet-constructed object va
Feb 1, 2011 at 23:11
va
could be a function-like macro too: assuming there is a member variable m_
, we could have #define va(x, y) m_()
. That would not exhibit undefined behavior. Asking what is wrong with an ill-formed, two-line partial code snippet is almost always pointless.
Feb 1, 2011 at 23:22