On Fri, Mar 14, 2014 at 7:05 PM, Richard Trieu <rtr...@google.com> wrote: > Quentin, > > Clang does not have a warning for uninitialized fields in class methods. > I've looked before to add a warning to flag any unused fields at the end of > the a constructor. However, there were good reasons to have uninitialized > fields, such as having an Init() method later that initializes the fields, > or a guard variable to protect against uninitialized use. Also, > -Wuninitialized typically warns on the use of an uninitialized variable, not > the mere presence of one. > > The other idea is to do cross method analysis, either using the control flow > of a program to determine which methods are used in which order, or testing > methods against constructors. Such an analysis would likely be too > expensive, and would be more suited for static analysis.
We already have at least one cross-method analysis which could actually be used as the basis for the warning under discussion here: -Wunused-member-variable. This warning only fires if there are no friends and a private member in a situation where all member functions are defined in one translation unit. So we could use this to show that there's no initialization of the variable anywhere, but there are uses of it. (essentially the same as -Wunused-member-variable, except allow reads as well) > > So there's no warning for this yet, and probably won't be unless we find a > better way to detect it. > > Richard > > > On Fri, Mar 14, 2014 at 5:15 PM, Eric Christopher <echri...@gmail.com> > wrote: >> >> Adding Richard explicitly here. :) >> >> On Mar 14, 2014 4:32 PM, "Quentin Colombet" <qcolom...@apple.com> wrote: >>> >>> Hi, >>> >>> I recently found a non-deterministic behavior in my application that was >>> due to a missing field initialization. >>> Here is a snippet of the actual problem: >>> >>> struct foo { >>> foo() {}; // <-- bar is not initialized here. >>> int getBar() const { >>> return bar; // <-- this returns an uninitialized value. >>> } >>> private: >>> int bar; >>> }; >>> >>> I've compiled the attached cpp file that contains this snippet with -Wall >>> -Wextra -Wuninitialized, but no warning is issued (trunk 203678). >>> Is there an option to make clang warn about that? >>> >>> If not, should I file a PR? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> -Quentin >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> cfe-users mailing list >>> cfe-users@cs.uiuc.edu >>> http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/cfe-users >>> > > > _______________________________________________ > cfe-users mailing list > cfe-users@cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/cfe-users > _______________________________________________ cfe-users mailing list cfe-users@cs.uiuc.edu http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/cfe-users