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This guideline is an instance of 17. Minimize privileged code.
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example uses a UserLookupCallBack
class that implements the CallBack
interface to look up a user's name given the user's ID. This lookup code assumes that this information lives in the /etc/passwd
file, which requires elevated privileges to open. Consequently, the Client
class invokes all callbacks with elevated privileges (within a doPrivileged
block).
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class MaliciousCallBack implements CallBack { public void callMethod() { // Code here gets executed with elevated privileges } } public static void main(String[] args) { CallBack callBack = new MaliciousCallBack(); CallBackAction action = new CallBackAction(callBack); action.perform(); // Executes malicious code } |
Compliant Solution
According to Oracle's secure coding guidelines [SCG 2010]:
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Code Block | ||||
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public interface CallBack { void callMethod(); } class UserLookupCallBack implements CallBack { private int uid; private String name; public UserLookupCallBack(int uid) { this.uid = uid; } public String getName() { return name; } public void callMethod() { AccessController.doPrivileged(new PrivilegedAction<Void>() { public Void run() { try (InputStream fis = new FileInputStream("/etc/passwd")) { // Look up userid & assign to UserLookupCallBack.this.name } catch (IOException x) { UserLookupCallBack.this.name = null; } return null; } }); } } class CallBackAction { private CallBack callback; public CallBackAction(CallBack callback) { this.callback = callback; } public void perform() { callback.callMethod(); } } |
Applicability
Exposing sensitive methods through callbacks can result in misuse of privileges and arbitrary code execution.
Bibliography
[API 2011] | |
[SCG 2010] | Guideline 9-3: Safely invoke |
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