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Top Forums Programming -Warray-bounds option to GCC compiler Post 303013090 by bakunin on Wednesday 14th of February 2018 05:46:52 PM
Old 02-14-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by milhan
What exactly is the -Warray-bounds option to the GCC compiler supposed to warn about?
I am not sure about how basic you need an explanation because the man page is pretty self-explanatory. So just give me some feedback if this doesn't make you get it:

Consider a "normal" variable first: a variable is of a certain data type and hence represents a certain amount of (allocated) memory somewhere in RAM. I.e. when you write a declaration like:

Code:
int myvar

then the compiler sets aside a certain amount of bytes (depends on how "int" is defined, but nowadays usually 4 bytes ^= 32 bits) and you can address this 4-byte space by using the name "myvar".

Now arrays: arrays are basically lists of elements where each element is a variable like above. If you i.e. create an array of 7 elements of the type int the compiler will set aside the same 4 bytes as above - not once but seven times. These seven 4-byte-spaces will be placed one after the other. If you now adress the third element with some operation the compiler "knows" that the elements are 4-byte-blocks and therefore will translate that to byte 9-12 following the base address.

So far so good, but what would happen if you would request the eighth element, hmm? If the compiler doesn't "remember" that your element only has seven elements it would eventually give you the content of byte 29-32 - which holds some other data! What would happen if you'd requested the -2nd element? You might get data which aren't even part of the program (but maybe some OS data!).

These method of accessing array elements which don't even exist have been used historically to get access to memory parts the program would normally not have access to. Modern OSes have all sorts of security measures to make this impossible, but you can still accidentally access (and hence modify) your own program in memory for some probably unwanted effects.

To avoid this there is bounds checking: basically it is the complier making sure whatever array elements you access are being defined before.

I hope this helps.

bakunin
This User Gave Thanks to bakunin For This Post:
 

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lreplace(n)						       Tcl Built-In Commands						       lreplace(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
lreplace - Replace elements in a list with new elements SYNOPSIS
lreplace list first last ?element element ...? _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
lreplace returns a new list formed by replacing one or more elements of list with the element arguments. first and last specify the first and last index of the range of elements to replace. 0 refers to the first element of the list, and end (or any abbreviation of it) may be used to refer to the last element of the list. If list is empty, then first and last are ignored. If first is less than zero, it is considered to refer to the first element of the list. For non-empty lists, the element indicated by first must exist. If last is less than zero but greater than first, then any specified elements will be prepended to the list. If last is less than first then no elements are deleted; the new elements are simply inserted before first. The element arguments specify zero or more new arguments to be added to the list in place of those that were deleted. Each element argu- ment will become a separate element of the list. If no element arguments are specified, then the elements between first and last are sim- ply deleted. If list is empty, any element arguments are added to the end of the list. SEE ALSO
lappend(n), lindex(n), linsert(n), list(n), llength(n), lrange(n), lsearch(n), lsort(n) KEYWORDS
element, list, replace Tcl 7.4 lreplace(n)
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