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From: Michael S <already5chosen@yahoo.com>
Newsgroups: comp.arch
Subject: Re: Computer architects leaving Intel...
Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2024 11:49:03 +0300
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On Sun, 08 Sep 2024 15:36:39 GMT
anton@mips.complang.tuwien.ac.at (Anton Ertl) wrote:

> Tim Rentsch <tr.17687@z991.linuxsc.com> writes:
> >anton@mips.complang.tuwien.ac.at (Anton Ertl) writes:
> >  
> >> There was still no easy way to determine whether your software
> >> that calls memcpy() actually works as expected on all hardware,  
> >
> >There may not be a way to tell if memcpy()-calling code will work
> >on platforms one doesn't have, but there is a relatively simple
> >and portable way to tell if some memcpy() call crosses over into
> >the realm of undefined behavior.  
> 
> 1) At first I thought that yes, one could just check whether there is
> an overlap of the memory areas.  But then I remembered that you cannot
> write such a check in standard C without (in the general case)
> exercising undefined behaviour; and then the compiler could eliminate
> the check or do something else that's unexpected.  Do you have such a
> check in mind that does not exercise undefined behaviour in the
> general case?
> 

The check that reliably catches all overlaps seems easy. 
E.g. (src <= dst) == (src+len > dst)

In theory, on unusual hardware platform it can give false positives.
May be, for task in hand that's o.k.