Обсуждение: [PATCH] gcc warning 'expression which evaluates to zero treated as anull pointer'
Hi,
Trivial patch:
- remove a gcc warning (since commit 7a0574b5)
expression which evaluates to zero treated as a null pointer constant of
type 'HeapTuple' (aka 'struct HeapTupleData *')
- always use "if (newtuple == NULL)" rather than mixing !newtuple and
newtuple == NULL
Regards
Didier
Вложения
didier <did447@gmail.com> writes:
> Trivial patch:
> - remove a gcc warning (since commit 7a0574b5)
> expression which evaluates to zero treated as a null pointer constant of
> type 'HeapTuple' (aka 'struct HeapTupleData *')
Hmm, the initializations "HeapTuple newtuple = false" are certainly
bogus-looking and not per project style; I wonder who's to blame for
those? (I do not see what 7a0574b5 would have had to do with it;
that didn't affect any backend code.)
> - always use "if (newtuple == NULL)" rather than mixing !newtuple and
> newtuple == NULL
Don't particularly agree with these changes though. "if (!ptr)" is
a very common C idiom, and no programmer would tolerate a compiler
that warned about it.
regards, tom lane
Hi, On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 8:52 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > > didier <did447@gmail.com> writes: > > Trivial patch: > > - remove a gcc warning (since commit 7a0574b5) > > expression which evaluates to zero treated as a null pointer constant of > > type 'HeapTuple' (aka 'struct HeapTupleData *') > > Hmm, the initializations "HeapTuple newtuple = false" are certainly > bogus-looking and not per project style; I wonder who's to blame for > those? (I do not see what 7a0574b5 would have had to do with it; > that didn't affect any backend code.) My mistake it's not gcc but clang for JIT, maybe because it could change false definition? clang version: 6.0.0-1ubuntu2 clang -E output before 7a0574b5 HeapTuple newtuple = 0; with 7a0574b5 HeapTuple newtuple = ((bool) 0); > > > - always use "if (newtuple == NULL)" rather than mixing !newtuple and > > newtuple == NULL > > Don't particularly agree with these changes though. "if (!ptr)" is > a very common C idiom, and no programmer would tolerate a compiler > that warned about it. There's no warning, it's stylistic. In the same function there's both forms a couple of lines apart: "if (!ptr)" follow by "if (ptr == NULL)", using only one form is smother on the brain, at least mine. Regards Didier
didier <did447@gmail.com> writes:
> clang -E output before 7a0574b5
> HeapTuple newtuple = 0;
> with 7a0574b5
> HeapTuple newtuple = ((bool) 0);
Hm, did you re-run configure after 7a0574b5? If you didn't, it would
have gone through the not-stdbool.h path in c.h, which might account
for this. It's a good catch though, even if by accident :-)
regards, tom lane
Hi, On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 10:01 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote: > > didier <did447@gmail.com> writes: > > clang -E output before 7a0574b5 > > HeapTuple newtuple = 0; > > with 7a0574b5 > > HeapTuple newtuple = ((bool) 0); > > Hm, did you re-run configure after 7a0574b5? If you didn't, it would > have gone through the not-stdbool.h path in c.h, which might account > for this. It's a good catch though, even if by accident :-) Yes, that's it. I should have known better, it's no the first time I made this mistake, thanks. Didier