Considering this code, VC9 doesn't detect aliasing :

typedef struct { int x, y; } vec_t;

void rotate_cw(vec_t const *from,
               vec_t       *to)
{
        /* Notice x depends on y and vice versa */
        to->x = from->y;
        to->y = -from->x;
}

/* ... */
vec_t a, b;
rotate_cw(&a, &b); /* OK, no aliasing */
rotate_cw(&a, &a); /* FAIL, aliasing is not detected */

The obvious fix is to use a temporary :

void rotate_cw(vec_t const *from,
               vec_t       *to)
{
        int temp = from->x;
        to->x = from->y;
        to->y = -temp;
}

Is this standard behavior ? I was expecting that the compiler, unless told so, would assume both pointers to be possibly aliased.

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4  
Yep, this is not standard behavior - looks like a compiler bug, at least in C99 and C++. They are explicitly allowed to alias each other. I don't know how the matter was in C89, which seems to be what you are for :( But i think i read in C89, things were even more permissible – Johannes Schaub - litb Jun 7 '09 at 20:04
You're expecting c to take care of a corner case for you? It doesn't do that: you're expect to worry about these kind of details for yourself. That might be a reason to consider a higher level language, but it is not a bug in c: the compiler does exactly what you tell it to. – dmckee Jun 7 '09 at 20:24
2  
The compiler does assume the pointers to be possibly aliases. However that just means that it won't do things like re-order the assignments, if the possible aliasing could cause that to fail. It is not going to second-guess your code and try to figure out what you meant to do. – mark4o Jun 7 '09 at 20:52
1  
the compiler doesn't have to guess. it just has to issue a real load from memory. and it has to do that, since the pointers may alias. Doing a real load hasn't got much to do with being a high level or a low level language. Of course that is not a bug in C - but in his compiler, if the compiler optimizes stuff the wrong way (too aggressively). Try adding "volatile" in addition to "const" and see what happens – Johannes Schaub - litb Jun 7 '09 at 21:26
1  
Hmm i think i see now. He seems to think "aliasing" means that two pointers do not point to the same object. But aliasing means the opposite, of course. That may explain the confusion among us :) – Johannes Schaub - litb Jun 7 '09 at 21:45
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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

Check out this answer.

Try putting __restrict before the parameters, seems to be the only way anybody found of getting MSVC to give any warnings.

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Thanks for the link. I'd rather need a __norestrict keyword so the compiler doesn't assume restrict-edness. – diapir Jun 7 '09 at 20:27
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The code as written is perfectly valid, in C89 or C99. It is obscure, but there is nothing for the compiler to diagnose, so it doesn't diagnose.

If you used C99 and 'restrict' on both parameters of the function, then you would get an error - if your compiler supports C99. AFAIK, no current version of MSVC yet supports C99 fully.

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