Note: this answer only applies to c++11 onward. There is no such thing as "C/C++", they are different languages.
No, there is no danger in returning a local object by value, and it is recommended to do so. However, I think there is an important point that is missing from all answers here. Many others have said that the struct is being either copied or directly placed using RVO. However, this is not completely correct. I will try to explain exactly which things can happen when returning a local object.
Move semantics
Since c++11, we have had rvalue references which are references to temporary objects which can be stolen from safely. As an example, std::vector has a move constructor as well as a move assignment operator. Both of these have constant complexity and simply copy the pointer to the data of the vector being moved from. I won't go into more detail about move semantics here.
Because an object created locally within a function is temporary and goes out of scope when the function returns, a returned object is never copied with c++11 onward. The move constructor is being called on the object being returned (or not, explained later). This means that if you were to return an object with an expensive copy constructor but inexpensive move constructor, like a big vector, only the ownership of the data is transferred from the local object to the returned object - which is cheap.
Note that in your specific example, there is no difference between copying and moving the object. The default move and copy constructors of your struct result in the same operations; copying two integers. However, this is at least as fast than any other solution because the whole struct fits in a 64-bit CPU register (correct me if I'm wrong, I don't know much CPU registers).
RVO and NRVO
RVO means Return Value Optimization and is one of the very few optimizations that compilers do which can have side effects. Since c++17, RVO is required. When returning an unnamed object, it is constructed directly in-place where the caller assigns the returned value. Neither the copy constructor nor the move constructor is called. Without RVO, the unnamed object would be first constructed locally, then move constructed in the returned address, then the local unnamed object is destructed.
Example where RVO is required (c++17) or likely (before c++17):
auto function(int a, int b) -> MyStruct {
// ...
return MyStruct{a, b};
}
NRVO means Named Return Value Optimization and is the same thing as RVO except it is done for a named object local to the called function. This is still not guaranteed by the standard (c++20) but many compilers still do it. Note that even with named local objects, they are at worst being moved when returned.
Conclusion
The only case where you should consider not returning by value is when you have a named, very large (as in its stack size) object. This is because NRVO is not yet guaranteed (as of c++20) and even moving the object would be slow. My recommendation, and the recommendation in the Cpp Core Guidelines is to always prefer returning objects by value (if multiple return values, use struct (or tuple)), where the only exception is when the object is expensive to move. In that case, use a non-const reference parameter.
It is NEVER a good idea to return a resource that has to be manually released from a function in c++. Never do that. At least use an std::unique_ptr, or make your own non-local or local struct with a destructor that releases its resource (RAII) and return an instance of that. It would then also be a good idea to define the move constructor and move assignment operator if the resource does not have its own move semantics (and delete copy constructor/assignment).