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One of third party open-source libraries in my project raised a security concern when scanned with Veracode. However, when I checked the source code for the line numbers the issues were raised, they had totally different code without any vulnerability.

Do the line numbers inferred from PDB files include source code present in preprocessor directives even if the symbol is not defined?

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    One of C#'s blessings in a preprocessor that cannot change line numbers. So your guess is not close to accurate. Tag your question correctly and show the exact warnings and source code. Sep 14, 2015 at 12:09
  • @HansPassant Does that include even compiler optimization like another comment (now deleted) mentioned?
    – ganeshran
    Sep 14, 2015 at 12:11
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    @ganeshran it was my deleted comment but it's inaccurate, AFAIK C# compiler won't inline calls, only JIT does then static analysis won't be cheated by that. Sep 14, 2015 at 12:14
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    @HansPassant Can you post your comment as an answer so I can mark the question as answered?
    – ganeshran
    Sep 14, 2015 at 12:22
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    #line (C# Reference) - #line lets you modify the compiler's line number and (optionally) the file name output for errors and warnings. This example shows how to report two warnings associated with line numbers. The #line 200 directive forces the line number to be 200 (although the default is #7) and until the next #line directive, the filename will be reported as "Special". The #line default directive returns the line numbering to its default numbering, which counts the lines that were renumbered by the previous directive. Sep 14, 2015 at 15:27

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One of C#'s blessings is a preprocessor that cannot change line numbers.

P.S: This question was answered in the comments

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