I am trying to create a simple program in C that checks for overflows. I need to keep some meta-data when pointers are declared such as the address of the pointer, the size of it (its bounds), etc... This is something I can do with the preprocessor and macros. Problem is I need to call a function when pointers are incremented or dereferenced in order to check if its going out of bounds, a small example:
//some code
pointer_name++;
//more code
needs to be translated into
//some code
pointer++;
checkBounds(pointer_name, starting_address, pointer_size);
//more code
In other words I need something that inserts a check at compile time so that it could prevent the overflow at run-time. I am intermediate with C but don't have much experience with compilers. What would be the best way to go about this? If someone could guide me in a certain direction I would really appreciate it.
pointer++
syntax and just use various macros/special functions instead for all your pointer operations. Actually detecting and translating++
syntax is a much more involved task, most of the effort going into the syntax rather than the meat of checking (although my guess is you could do it easily in C++). If you're writing a new program, is it really important to keep compatibility with classical syntax?