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The order of evaluation of subexpressions and the order in which side effects take place are frequently defined as unspecified behavior by the C standard. Counterintuitively, unspecified behavior is where the standard provides two or more possibilities and imposes no further requirements on which is chosen in any instance. Consequently, unspecified behavior can be a portability issue because different implementations can make different choices. If dynamic scheduling is used, however, there may not be a fixed-code execution sequence over the life of a process. Operations that can be executed in different sequences may in fact be executed in a different order.

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Tool

Version

Checker

Description

Compass/ROSE

 

 

Could detect violations of this recommendation by searching for the following pattern:

  • Any expression that calls two functions between the same sequence points
  • Those two functions both modify the value of a static variable
  • That static variable's value is referenced by code following the expression

Coverity Prevent

Include Page
Coverity_V
Coverity_V

EVALUATION_ORDER

Can detect the specific instance where a statement contains multiple side effects on the same value with an undefined evaluation order because the statement may behave differently with different compiler flags or different compilers or platforms.

LDRA tool suite

Include Page
LDRA_V
LDRA_V

35 D
72 D
74 D
1 Q
134 S

Fully implemented.

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ISO/IEC 9899:2011 Section 6.5, "Expressions," Section 6.5.16, "Assignment operators," Section 6.5.2.2, "Function calls," and Section 6.7.9, "Initialization"

ISO/IEC PDTR 24772 "JCW Operator precedence/order of evaluation" and "SAM Side-effects and order of evaluation"

MISRA Rule 12.2

Bibliography

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