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The type of a narrow string literal is an array of char and the type of a wide string literal is an array of wchar_t. However, string literals (of both types) are notionally constant and should consequently be protected by const qualification. This recommendation is a specialization of guideline DCL00-C. Const-qualify immutable objects and also supports rule STR30-C. Do not attempt to modify string literals.

Adding const qualification may propagate through a program; as you add const qualifiers, still more become necessary. This phenomenon is sometimes called "const-poisoning." Const-poisoning can frequently lead to violations of guideline EXP05-C. Do not cast away a const qualification. While const qualification is a good idea, the costs may outweigh the value in the remediation of existing code.

Noncompliant Code Example (

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Narrow String Literal)

In the following noncompliant code, the const keyword has been omitted.

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If a statement such as {{c\[0\] = 'C'}} were placed following the declaration in the Noncompliant Code Example, the code is likely to compile cleanly, but the result of the assignment is undefined asbecause string literals are considered constant.

Compliant Solution (

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Immutable Strings)

In this compliant solution, the characters referred to by the pointer c are const-qualified, meaning that any attempts to assign them to different values is an error.

Code Block
bgColor#ccccFF
const char *c = "Hello";

Compliant Solution (

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Mutable Strings)

In cases where the string is meant to be modified, use initialization instead of assignment. In this compliant solution, c is a modifiable char array which has been initialized using the contents of the corresponding string literal.

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Consequently, a statement such as {{c\[0\] = 'C'}} is valid and behaves as expected.

Noncompliant Code Example (

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Wide String Literal)

In the following noncompliant code, the const keyword has been omitted.

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If a statement such as {{c\[0\] = L'C'}} were placed following the above declaration, the code is likely to compile cleanly, but the result of the assignment is undefined as string literals are considered constant.

Compliant Solution (

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Immutable Strings)

In this compliant solution, the characters referred to by the pointer c are const-qualified, meaning that any attempts to assign them to different values is an error.

Code Block
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wchar_t const *c = L"Hello";

Compliant Solution (

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Mutable Strings)

In cases where the string is meant to be modified, use initialization instead of assignment. In this compliant solution, c is a modifiable wchar_t array which has been initialized using the contents of the corresponding string literal.

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Recommendation

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

STR05-C

low

unlikely

low

P3

L3

Automated Detection

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Tool

Version

Checker

Description

Section

LDRA tool suite

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Include Page
c:LDRA_V
c:LDRA_V

 

 

Section

Compass/ROSE

 

 

Section

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Related Vulnerabilities

Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.

Bibliography:

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\[[Corfield 931993|AA. Bibliography#Corfield 93]\]
\[[ISO/IEC 9899:1999|AA. Bibliography#ISO/IEC 9899-1999]\] Section 6.7.8, "Initialization"
\[[Lockheed Martin 2005|AA. Bibliography#Lockheed Martin 05]\] AV Rule 151.1

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