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An object that has volatile-qualified type may be modified in ways unknown to the implementation or have other unknown side effects. It is possible to reference a volatile object by using a non-volatile value but the resulting behavior is undefined. According to C99 Section 6.7.3 Type qualifiers Paragraph 5:

If an attempt is made to refer to an object defined with a volatile-qualified type through use of an lvalue with non-volatile-qualified type, the behavior is undefined.

This also applies to objects that behave as if they were defined with qualified types such as an object at a memory-mapped input/output address.

Non-Compliant Code Example

In this example, a volatile object is accessed through

int main(void) {
  static volatile int **ipp;
  static int *ip;
  static volatile int i = 0;;

  printf("i = %d.\n", i);

  ipp = &ip; // constraint violation
  *ipp = &i; // valid
  if (*ip != 0) { // valid
	// i had been changed
  }
}

The first assignment is unsafe because it would allow the following valid code to reference the
value of the volatile object i through a non-volatile qualified reference.

Implementation Specific Details

This example compiles without warning on Microsoft Visual C++ .NET (2003) and on MS Visual Studio 2005. Version 3.2.2 of the gcc compiler generates a warning but compiles.

Compliant Solution

In this compliant solution the int * ip is declared as volatile.

int main(void) {
  static volatile int **ipp;
  static volatile int *ip;
  static volatile int i = 0;;

  printf("i = %d.\n", i);

  ipp = &ip; // constraint violation
  *ipp = &i; // valid
  if (*ip != 0) { // valid
    /* i has changed */
  }

Priority: P2 Level: L3

Accessing a volatile object through a non-volatile reference results in undefined behavior.

Component

Value

Severity

1 (low)

Likelihood

1 (unlikely)

Remediation cost

2 (medium)

References

  • ISO/IEC 9899-1999 Section 6.7.3 Type qualifiers, Section 6.5.16.1 Simple assignment
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