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"It is undefined what will happen if a pointer of some type is converted to void*, and then the void* pointer is converted to a type with a stricter alignment requirement" -C99 rationaleV5.10.pdf

Non-compliant

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Code Example

Code Block
bgColor#FFCCCC
char *char_ptr = "example";
int *int_ptr;

int *FunctionvoidPtr2intPtr(void *v_pointer){
  return pointer;
}
P2 int_ptr= FunctionvoidPtr2intPtr(pointer);

Pointer might be aligned on even boundary, once it is cast to an int some architectures will require it to be on 4 byte boundaries. Pointers are often cast because a void* cannot be dereferenced. Careless coding can result in an arbitrary pointer type being used irregardless of its alignment.

Implementation Details

List of common alignments for Microsoft, Borland and GNU compilers to x86

Type

Alignment

char

...

1 byte aligned

short

...

2 byte aligned

int

...

4 byte aligned

float

...

4 byte aligned

double

...

8 byte on

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Windows, 4 byte on

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Linux

Compliant

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Solution

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff
-make specific functions (avoid use of void*)

-always use strictest alignment type for arbitaryarbitrary pointers

Risk Assessment

Programs can crash

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