You would use a T* const & as a parameter if the value of the pointer object might be changed by something external to your function and you wanted to be able to observe changes to the value of the pointer object or if you wanted to store a reference or pointer to the pointer object for later reading.
A T* parameter (equivalent to T* const as a function parameter) just gives you a copy of the pointer object, a snapshot of its value when it was passed to your function.
void foo( char* const& ptr )
{
char* p1 = ptr; // initial value
global_fn(); // ptr might be changed
char* p2 = ptr; // new value of ptr
}
vs
void foo2( char* ptr )
{
char* p1 = ptr; // initial value
global_fn(); // ptr can't be changed, it's local to this function
char* p2 = ptr; // will be the same as p1
}
Technically, even the function itself might change the value of the pointer to which it is passed a reference.
E.g.
char* p;
std::ptrdiff_t foo( char* const& ptr )
{
++p;
return p - ptr; // returns 0, would return 1 if the parameter was by value
}
int main()
{
char test[] = "Hello, world!";
p = test;
foo( p );
}