Platform dependencies may be introduced to improve performance on a particular platform. This can be a dangerous practice, particularly if these dependencies are not appropriately documented during development and addressed during porting. Platform dependencies that have no performance or other benefits should consequently be avoided because they may introduce errors during porting.
The C Standard identifies four different kinds of nonportable behavior. Each section of Annex J of the C Standard enumerates distinct instances of behaviors of each kind.
Nonportable Behavior | Definition | Annex J Section |
---|---|---|
Behavior for which the standard provides two or more possibilities and imposes no further requirements on which is chosen in any instance. | J.1 | |
Behavior, upon use of a nonportable or erroneous program construct or of erroneous data, for which the standard imposes no requirements. An example of undefined behavior is the behavior on integer overflow. | ||
Unspecified behavior whereby each implementation documents how the choice is made. | J.3 | |
Behavior that depends on local conventions of nationality, culture, and language that each implementation documents. | J.4 |
An example of undefined behavior is passing a null char*
pointer as an argument to the printf
function corresponding to the %s
format specification. Although some implementations (such as the GNU C Library) provide well-defined semantics for this case, others do not, causing programs that rely on this behavior to fail abnormally.
An example of unspecified behavior is the order in which the arguments to a function are evaluated.
An example of implementation-defined behavior is the propagation of the high-order bit when a signed integer is shifted right.
Most legitimate platform dependencies can and should be isolated in separate modules that expose portable, platform-agnostic interfaces to platform-specific implementations. Portable applications that cannot avoid relying on platform-specific details should always provide a generic, portable, standards-based solution as a fallback mechanism for the platform-specific alternative. That way, such an application can be more easily ported to new platforms without an excessive risk of security flaws caused by assumptions that do not hold in the new environment.
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example uses the complement operator in the test for unsigned integer overflow:
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unsigned int ui; unsigned int ui2; unsigned int sum; if (~ui < ui2) { /* Handle error condition */ } sum = ui + ui2; |
This code assumes that the implementation uses two's complement representation. This assumption is commonly true but is not guaranteed by the standard.
This code sample also violates INT14-C. Avoid performing bitwise and arithmetic operations on the same data.
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution implements a strictly conforming test for unsigned overflow:
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unsigned int ui; unsigned int ui2; unsigned int sum; if (UINT_MAX - ui < ui2) { /* Handle error condition */ } sum = ui + ui2; |
If the noncompliant form of this test is truly faster, talk to your compiler vendor because, if these tests are equivalent, optimization should occur. If both forms have the same performance, prefer the portable form.
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Noncompliant Code Example (strerror_r
)
The GNU libc implementation of strerror_r declares the function to return char*
, in conflict with the POSIX specification. The following noncompliant code example relies on this return type to pass the return value as an argument to the %s
formatting directive to fprintf
. The behavior of the example will be undefined on a platform that declares the return type of strerror_r()
to be int
, in accordance with POSIX.
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void f() { char buf[BUFSIZ]; fprintf(stderr, "Error: %s\n", strerror_r(errno, buf, sizeof buf)); } |
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Compliant Solution (strerror_r
)
The compliant solution disables the nonconforming declaration of strerror_r
by explicitly requesting POSIX conformance before including the <string.h>
header that declares the function and handles the function's failure by copying the "Unknown error"
string into the buffer.
Note that the function assigns the result of the call to strerror_r()
to a variable of type int
. This assignment is a defense-in-depth strategy guarding against inadvertently invoking strerror_r()
that returns char*
: a conforming compiler is required to issue a diagnostic for the ill-formed conversion from char*
to int
.
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#define _XOPEN_SOURCE 600 #include <string.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <errno.h> void f() { char buf[BUFSIZ]; int result; result = strerror_r(errno, buf, sizeof buf); if (0 != result) { strcpy(buf, "Unknown error"); } fprintf(stderr, "Error: %s\n", buf); } |
Risk Assessment
Unnecessary platform dependencies are, by definition, unnecessary. Avoiding these dependencies can eliminate porting errors resulting from invalidated assumptions.
Recommendation | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
MSC14-C | Low | Unlikely | Medium | P2 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PRQA QA-C |
| 0202 | Partially implemented |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Related Guidelines
CERT C++ Secure Coding Standard | MSC14-CPP. Do not introduce unnecessary platform dependencies |
ISO/IEC TR 24772 | Unspecified Behaviour [BQF] |
Bibliography
[Dowd 2006] | Chapter 6, "C Language Issues" ("Arithmetic Boundary Conditions," pp. 211–223) |
[Seacord 2013] | Chapter 5, "Integer Security" |