format string is not a string literal
Pedro Alves
palves@redhat.com
Thu Feb 26 19:41:00 GMT 2015
On 02/26/2015 05:44 PM, Paul Smith wrote:
> On Thu, 2015-02-26 at 09:52 +0000, Pedro Alves wrote:
>> + /* Use FMT from here on instead of complaint->fmt, to avoid "format
>> + string is not a string literal" warnings. */
>> + gdb_assert (complaint->fmt == fmt);
>> +
>> if (complaint->file != NULL)
>> - internal_vwarning (complaint->file, complaint->line,
>> - complaint->fmt, args);
>> + internal_vwarning (complaint->file, complaint->line, fmt, args);
>
> Can someone quickly explain how using fmt instead of complaint->fmt here
> removes the warning? fmt is not a "string literal" either...?
>
> Just curious what the trick is...
Simon explained it, actually:
> If the function is vprintf-style, it's similar but the last argument
> should be 0. It will push the argument check a level higher, where
> eventually they are explicitely defined printf-style. The doc is
> somewhere here [2] in the middle.
That code is in this function:
> static void ATTRIBUTE_PRINTF (4, 0)
vcomplaint (struct complaints **c, const char *file,
int line, const char *fmt,
va_list args)
{
So here the compiler will check FMT in the caller.
Thanks,
Pedro Alves
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