Java input classes, for example Scanner
and BufferedInputStream
, often buffer the underlying input stream to facilitate fast, non-blocking I/O.
Since As the InputStream
class is abstract
, a wrapper such as BufferedInputStream
is required to provide a concrete implementation that overrides its methods. It is permissible to create multiple wrappers on an InputStream
. Programs that encourage multiple wrappers around the same stream, however, behave significantly different depending on whether the InputStream
allows look-ahead or not. An adversary can exploit this difference in behavior by, for example, redirecting System.in
(from a file). This is also possible when a program uses the System.setIn()
method to redirect System.in
. That said, redirecting input from the console is a standard practice in *nix UNIX based platforms but finds limited application in others such as Windows, where console programs are largely considered outmoded. In general, any input stream that supports non-blocking buffered I/O is susceptible to misuse.
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Despite just one declaration, this noncompliant code example creates multiple BufferedInputStream
wrappers on System.in
because each time getChar()
is called, it conceives a new BufferedInputStream
. Due to Because of the inherent channeling and buffering mechanism, the data that is read from the underlying stream once, cannot be replaced so that a second call can read the same data again. While this code uses a BufferedInputStream
to illustrate that any buffered wrapper is unsafe, this condition is also exploitable if a Scanner
is used instead.
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import java.io.BufferedInputStream; import java.io.EOFException; public final class InputLibrary { public static char getChar() throws EOFException { BufferedInputStream in = new BufferedInputStream(System.in); // wrapper int input = in.read(); if (input == -1) { throw new EOFException(); } return (char)input; //okay// down casting is permitted because InputStream guarantees read() in range // 0..255 if it is not -1 return (char)input; } public static void main(String[] args) { try { // Either redirect input from the console or use // System.setIn(new FileInputStream("input.dat")); System.out.print("Enter first initial: "); char first = getChar(); System.out.println("Your first initial is " + first); System.out.print("Enter last initial: "); char last = getChar(); System.out.println("Your last initial is " + last); } catch(EOFException e) { System.out.println("ERROR"); } } } |
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This program was compiled with the command javac InputLibrary.java
on a system with Java 1.56.0. When run from the command line with java InputLibrary
, the program will successfully take takes two characters as input and print prints them out. However, when run with java InputLibrary < input
, where input
is a file that contains the exact same input, the program prints "ERROR" because the second call to getChar()
finds no characters to read upon encountering the end of the stream.
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Create and use only a single BufferedInputStream
on System.in
. This compliant code example solution declares the BufferedInputStream
as a class variable so that all methods can access it. However, if a program were to use this library in conjunction with other input from a user that also needs some another buffered wrapper on System.in
, the library would need to must be modified so that all code uses the same buffered wrapper instead of creating additional ones that are created.
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import java.io.BufferedInputStream; import java.io.EOFException; public final class InputLibrary { private static BufferedInputStream in = new BufferedInputStream(System.in); public static char getChar() throws EOFException { int input = in.read(); if (input == -1) { throw new EOFException(); } in.skip(1); // This statement is now necessary to go to the next line // theThe Noncompliant code example deceptively worked without it return (char)input; // InputStream guarantees read() will return an unsigned byte in the range 0..255 on success } public static void main(String[] args) { try { System.out.print("Enter first initial: "); char first = getChar(); System.out.println("Your first initial is " + first); System.out.print("Enter last initial: "); char last = getChar(); System.out.println("Your last initial is " + last); } catch(EOFException e) { System.out.println("ERROR"); } } } |
It may appear that the mark()
and reset()
methods of BufferedInputStream
would "replace" the read bytes but this idea is deceptive since , for, these methods provide look-ahead by operating on the internal buffers and not directly on the underlying stream.
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This program was compiled with the command javac InputLibrary.java
on a system with Java 1.56.0. When run from the command line with java InputLibrary
, the program will successfully take takes two characters as input and print prints them out. Also, when run with java InputLibrary < input
, where input
is a file that contains the exact same input, the program will successfully take takes two characters as input and print them out.
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Creating multiple buffered wrappers on around an InputStream
can cause unexpected program behavior when the InputStream
is re-directed.
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