On 11/07/2015 04:38 PM, Segher Boessenkool wrote:
On Tue, Oct 20, 2015 at 10:10:44PM +0000, Joseph Myers wrote:
typedef struct FA5_7 {
   int i;
   char a5_7 [5][7];
} FA5_7;

     __builtin_offsetof (FA5_7, a5_7 [0][7]),         // { dg-warning "index" }
     __builtin_offsetof (FA5_7, a5_7 [1][7]),         // { dg-warning "index" }
     __builtin_offsetof (FA5_7, a5_7 [5][0]),         // { dg-warning "index" }
     __builtin_offsetof (FA5_7, a5_7 [5][7]),         // { dg-warning "index" }

Here I think the last one of these is most likely invalid (being 8 bytes past
the end of the object, rather than just one) and the others valid. Can you
confirm this? (If the &a.v[2].a example is considered invalid, then I think
the a5_7[5][0] test would be the equivalent and ought to also be considered
invalid).

The last one is certainly invalid.  The one before is arguably invalid as
well (in the unary '&' equivalent, &a5_7[5][0] which is equivalent to
a5_7[5] + 0, the questionable operation is implicit conversion of a5_7[5]
from array to pointer - an array expression gets converted to an
expression "that points to the initial element of the array object", but
there is no array object a5_7[5] here).

C11, 6.5.2.1/3:
Successive subscript operators designate an element of a
multidimensional array object. If E is an n-dimensional array (n >= 2)
with dimensions i x j x . . . x k, then E (used as other than an lvalue)
is converted to a pointer to an (n - 1)-dimensional array with
dimensions j x . . . x k. If the unary * operator is applied to this
pointer explicitly, or implicitly as a result of subscripting, the
result is the referenced (n - 1)-dimensional array, which itself is
converted into a pointer if used as other than an lvalue. It follows
from this that arrays are stored in row-major order (last subscript
varies fastest).

As far as I see, a5_7[5] here is never treated as an array, just as a
pointer, and &a5_7[5][0] is valid.

Segher and I discussed this briefly on IRC over the weekend and
I agreed to try to get a confirmation of the interpretation the
warning is based on from WG14. I'll report back what I learn
(if anything). I defer to Bernd and Joseph as to whether to make
any changes in the meantime.

Martin

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