2

(A long story... you can directly jump to the question at the end...)

I need to use realpath(3) so I wrote a simple example to try it:

$> cat realpath.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

int main(int argc, char * argv[])
{
    char pathname[PATH_MAX];

    if (realpath(argv[1], pathname) < 0) {
        perror("realpath");
        return 1;
    }

    printf("%s\n", pathname);

    return 0;
}
$> gcc -Wall -o realpath realpath.c
$> ls /xxx
ls: cannot access '/xxx': No such file or directory
$> ./realpath /xxx/foo/bar
/xxx

The result of ./realpath /xxx/foo/bar surprised me. According to the manual it makes more sense to fail with ENOENT. I even referred to the POSIX and found no answer. After quite some time I reread the manual and found realpath(3) returns char * rather than int. I was really irritated by gcc.

Question

So why doesn't gcc (even with -Wall) warn about if (ptr < 0)?

13
  • Related: How to turn on (literally) ALL of GCC's warnings?
    – Martin R
    Feb 8, 2018 at 10:03
  • 2
    Because 0 is a perfectly legal null pointer constant. You are comparing the result of realpath, which is a pointer, with a null pointer. Not that it is legal, but this violation does not require a diagnostic. Feb 8, 2018 at 10:03
  • Because comparing a pointer to 0 is well defined. It pretty much only makes sense to do that comparison for equality, but it seems the compiler doesn't really have that special case to a special case to warn for that (at least mine doesn't, maybe some newer versions of gcc do).
    – Art
    Feb 8, 2018 at 10:06
  • 1
    for me it's ok for if (ptr == 0 /* NULL */) or if (ptr != 0). when does it make sense for > 0 or < 0? i believe gcc has a good reason not to warn this by default. no?
    – pynexj
    Feb 8, 2018 at 10:10
  • 1
    I personally use -std= together with -Wall -Wextra -Wpedantic -Wconversion.
    – Davislor
    Mar 10, 2018 at 2:47

2 Answers 2

11

gcc -Wall does not enable all of GCC's warnings! See this question for more information.

In your case, you need to add the -Wextra flag:

gcc -Wall -Wextra -o realpath realpath.c

According to GCC's documentation:

This enables some extra warning flags that are not enabled by -Wall.

The option -Wextra also prints warning messages for the following cases:

  • A pointer is compared against integer zero with <, <=, >, or >=.

  • [...]

5

So why doesn't gcc (even with -Wall) report a warning for if (ptr < 0)?

The name given to the -Wall flag is actually misleading, since it does not enable all compiler warnings.

You need to pass -Wextra. This way, you will get the following compiler warning:

warning: ordered comparison of pointer with integer zero [-Wextra]

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