Reading a shared primitive variable in one thread may not yield the value of the most recent write to the variable from another thread. Consequently, the thread may observe a stale value of the shared variable. To ensure the visibility of the most recent update, the write to the variable must happen before the read (C Standard, subclause 5.1.2.4, paragraph 18 [ISO/IEC 9899:2011]). Atomic operations—other than relaxed atomic operations—trivially satisfy the happens before relationship. Where atomic operations are inappropriate, protecting both reads and writes with a mutex also satisfies the happens before relationship.
*********** Text below this note not yet converted from Java to C! ************
Noncompliant Code Example (Non-volatile Flag)
This noncompliant code example uses a shutdown()
method to set the non-volatile done
flag that is checked in the run()
method.
final class ControlledStop implements Runnable { private boolean done = false; @Override public void run() { while (!done) { try { // ... Thread.currentThread().sleep(1000); // Do something } catch(InterruptedException ie) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } } } public void shutdown() { done = true; } }
If one thread invokes the shutdown()
method to set the flag, a second thread might not observe that change. Consequently, the second thread might observe that done
is still false
and incorrectly invoke the sleep()
method. Compilers and just-in-time compilers (JITs) are allowed to optimize the code when they determine that the value of done
is never modified by the same thread, resulting in an infinite loop.
Compliant Solution (Volatile
)
In this compliant solution, the done
flag is declared volatile to ensure that writes are visible to other threads.
final class ControlledStop implements Runnable { private volatile boolean done = false; @Override public void run() { while (!done) { try { // ... Thread.currentThread().sleep(1000); // Do something } catch(InterruptedException ie) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } } } public void shutdown() { done = true; } }
Compliant Solution (AtomicBoolean
)
In this compliant solution, the done
flag is declared to be of type java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicBoolean
. Atomic types also guarantee that writes are visible to other threads.
final class ControlledStop implements Runnable { private final AtomicBoolean done = new AtomicBoolean(false); @Override public void run() { while (!done.get()) { try { // ... Thread.currentThread().sleep(1000); // Do something } catch(InterruptedException ie) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } } } public void shutdown() { done.set(true); } }
Compliant Solution (synchronized
)
This compliant solution uses the intrinsic lock of the Class
object to ensure that updates are visible to other threads.
final class ControlledStop implements Runnable { private boolean done = false; @Override public void run() { while (!isDone()) { try { // ... Thread.currentThread().sleep(1000); // Do something } catch(InterruptedException ie) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } } } public synchronized boolean isDone() { return done; } public synchronized void shutdown() { done = true; } }
While this is an acceptable compliant solution, intrinsic locks cause threads to block and may introduce contention. On the other hand, volatile-qualified shared variables do not block. Excessive synchronization can also make the program prone to deadlock.
Synchronization is a more secure alternative in situations where the volatile
keyword or a java.util.concurrent.atomic.Atomic*
field is inappropriate, such as when a variable's new value depends on its current value. See rule VNA02-J. Ensure that compound operations on shared variables are atomic for more information.
Compliance with rule LCK00-J. Use private final lock objects to synchronize classes that may interact with untrusted code can reduce the likelihood of misuse by ensuring that untrusted callers cannot access the lock object.
Risk Assessment
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CON03-C | Medium | Probable | Medium | P8 | L2 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Astrée | 24.04 | Supported, but no explicit checker |
2 Comments
David A.D. Morano
This example should be converted to C language as soon as is possible. The reason is because the compliant code example using the `volatile` keyword is extremely misleading for a C language audience, as `volatile` in Java brings both the idea of `volatile` from the C language realm as well as the idea of being synchronized (from the Java sense), meaning that it is cross-thread visible. But in C language, the volatile keyword does not have any sense of being synchronized (visible) across threads. In C language, neither does the `volatile` keyword even convey atomicity or memory ordering. In C language, the effect of a volatile access is only guaranteed to have occurred by the next sequence point within the same thread of execution.
David Svoboda
Thank you for the suggestion. We quite agree that
volatile
means subtly different things in C and Java, and we have several rules and recommendations about it, including CON02-C. Do not use volatile as a synchronization primitive. We will update the code examples when we can, but updating the recommendations is a lower priority than updating the rules.