I've read various posts on Stack Overflow RE: the derefercing type-punned pointer error. My understanding is that the error is essentially the compiler warning of the danger of accessing an object through a pointer of a different type (though an exception appears to be made for char*
), which is an understandable and reasonable warning.
My question is specific to the code below: why does casting the address of a pointer to a void**
qualify for this warning (promoted to error via -Werror
)?
Moreover, this code is compiled for multiple target architectures, only one of which generates the warning/error - might this imply that it is legitimately a compiler version-specific deficiency?
// main.c
#include <stdlib.h>
typedef struct Foo
{
int i;
} Foo;
void freeFunc( void** obj )
{
if ( obj && * obj )
{
free( *obj );
*obj = NULL;
}
}
int main( int argc, char* argv[] )
{
Foo* f = calloc( 1, sizeof( Foo ) );
freeFunc( (void**)(&f) );
return 0;
}
If my understanding, stated above, is correct, a void**
, being still just a pointer, this should be safe casting.
Is there a workaround not using lvalues that would pacify this compiler-specific warning/error? I.e. I understand that and why this will resolve the issue, but I would like to avoid this approach because I want to take advantage of freeFunc()
NULLing an intended out-arg:
void* tmp = f;
freeFunc( &tmp );
f = NULL;
Problem compiler (one of one):
user@8d63f499ed92:/build$ /usr/local/crosstool/x86-fc3/bin/i686-fc3-linux-gnu-gcc --version && /usr/local/crosstool/x86-fc3/bin/i686-fc3-linux-gnu-gcc -Wall -O2 -Werror ./main.c
i686-fc3-linux-gnu-gcc (GCC) 3.4.5
Copyright (C) 2004 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
./main.c: In function `main':
./main.c:21: warning: dereferencing type-punned pointer will break strict-aliasing rules
user@8d63f499ed92:/build$
Not-complaining compiler (one of many):
user@8d63f499ed92:/build$ /usr/local/crosstool/x86-rh73/bin/i686-rh73-linux-gnu-gcc --version && /usr/local/crosstool/x86-rh73/bin/i686-rh73-linux-gnu-gcc -Wall -O2 -Werror ./main.c
i686-rh73-linux-gnu-gcc (GCC) 3.2.3
Copyright (C) 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
user@8d63f499ed92:/build$
Update: I've further discovered the warning appears to be generated specifically when compiled with -O2
(still with the noted "problem compiler" only)
void**
, being still just a pointer, this should be safe casting." Woah there skippy! Sounds like you have some fundamental assumptions going on. Try to think less in terms of bytes and levers and more in terms of abstractions, because that's what you're actually programming with