Does the following code in C have defined behavior?
int main() {
const int i = 0;
return *(int*)(&i);
}
I ask because 6.5/7 lists "a qualified version of a type compatible with the effective type of the object" as a valid alias. But the effective type of the object is const int
, and I don't think int
is a qualified version of const int
(although the reverse is true). Neither are int
and const int
compatible (6.7.3/10).
Furthermore, 6.3.2.3/2 says that you can convert pointer types by adding qualifiers, and that the resulting pointer is equal. 6.3.2.3/7 says that you can convert any two pointer types (so the cast (int*)(&i)
itself is permitted). But doesn't say that the resulting pointer refers to the same object or even that it is equal. All it says is that it can be converted back to the original type (in this case const int*
). That is, even if the alias is legal it's not clear to me that the standard guarantees that my pointer conversion does indeed result in a pointer that refers to i
.
So, does the standard actually define the behavior of my code, and if so where is this defined?
I'm aware that the code works in practice. I have in mind a hypothetical (and bizarre) implementation on which it doesn't work. I could ask whether that implementation conforms to the standard (and if not, what part it violates), but I don't want to muddy the waters if there are other respects in which my imagined implementation fails to conform. I will describe the implementation if anyone thinks it will help them answer the question.
It is at least implied that it works, by §6.7.3 p5:
Note that for volatile-qualified types it says refer to, but for const-qualified types it just says modify, which implies that a non-modifying access is OK ("the exception that proves the rule").
It looks to me like you may have identified a defect in the standard, though.