Polyspace-bug-finder raises issue due to Rule A3-1-5 if inline function is declared in source file
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Hello,
I declared a function in the header file and implemented it in the source file using the "inline" keyword. Polyspace-bug-finder still raises an issue because of Autosar rule A3-1-5.
Is this intended so that the function definition shall be placed in the header file?
Thanks!
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Accepted Answer
Anirban
on 27 Jul 2023
Can you show a small reproduction example? Also, which release are you using?
For instance, there is no violation of A3-1-5 in this example on the inline definition of A::Bar() :
classDefs.h:
class A
{
private:
std::uint32_t val = 5;
public:
inline std::uint32_t Foo() //Compliant
{
return val;
}
std::uint32_t Bar();
};
C++ file:
#include <cstdint>
#include <iostream>
#include "classDefs.h"
inline std::uint32_t A::Bar()
{
int updatedVal = val + 5;
return (updatedVal);
}
std::uint32_t main()
{
A a;
std::cout << a.Foo() << std::endl;
std::cout << a.Bar() << std::endl;
return 0;
}
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More Answers (1)
Viktoria
on 28 Jul 2023
2 Comments
Anirban
on 7 Aug 2023
Thanks for the reproduction! Yes, the checker is intended to work this way. The specs for AUTOSAR C++14 A3-1-5 suggest placing the definitions of small methods inside the class definition to save time and space (and the checker treats one-line functions as "small methods"). So, in the above example, placing the method definition inside the class definition would be the fix for the coding rule violation.
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