* Add valueFlowForwardExpression function to forward values of an expression
* Use token for expression
* Fix name in bailout message
* Handle expressions
* Add more tests for more expressions
* Add more tests
* Solve the expression if possible
* Formatting
For c++14, shifting a variable with a value larger than or equal to the
number of bits in the variable is undefined. Left-shifting with a value
equal to the number of bits of the variable is implementation defined.
See also trac ticket #9306.
* use range loops
* removed redundant string initializations
* use nullptr
* use proper boolean false
* removed unnecessary continue from end of loop
* removed unnecessary c_str() usage
* use emplace_back()
* removed redundant void arguments
TODO:
Somehow Cppcheck fails to print an ignoredReturnValue message when the
return value is not used (see ticket
https://trac.cppcheck.net/ticket/9369 )
* Fix memleak FP with return with parenthesis
Fix FPs pointed out by daca@home on the following form:
void* f(void) {
void* x = malloc(1);
return(x);
}
Fix it by only skipping tokens if there is an actual match with a
variable. This allows to remove the special casing of "return;".
* Add testcase with cast
This fixes crashes found by daca where valueType() is NULL. Also,
somewhat related, it removes warnings when casting to a type that is
unknown to cppcheck, for example, there is no longer a warning for the
following code:
void* f() {
void *x = malloc(1);
return (mytype)x;
}
* Fix false negatives in checkAssignBoolToFloat
Detect assignments to expressions involving pointer dereferences, array
element accesses, etc.
* Pass assignment token to assignBoolToFloatError
Pass assignment token rather than boolean token to make error reporting
consistent between checkAssignBoolToFloat and checkAssignBoolToPointer,
as well as with other assignment checks in the code base.
* Make checkAssignBoolToPointer check consistent with checkAssignBoolToFloat
This was most likely introduced when the checks were changed to run on
the full tokenlist instead of the simplified one.
Take care to warn about cases where casts destroy the pointer, such as
uint8_t f() {
void* x = malloc(1);
return (uint8_t)x;
}