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According to C99, Section subclause 5.2.1 , "Character sets"of the C Standard [ISO/IEC 9899:2011],

Two sets of characters and their associated collating sequences shall be defined: the set in which source files are written (the source character set), and the set interpreted in the execution environment (the execution character set). Each set is further divided into a basic character set, whose contents are given by this subclause, and a set of zero or more locale-specific members (which are not members of the basic character set) called extended characters. The combined set is also called the extended character set. The values of the members of the execution character set are implementation-defined.

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]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>

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There are several national variants of ASCII. ThereforeAs a result, the original ASCII is often referred as *is often called US-ASCII*. The international standard _ISO 646_ defines a character set similar to ISO/IEC 646-1991 defines a character set, similar to US-ASCII, but with code positions corresponding to US-ASCII characters {{@\[\]\{\|\}}} as "national use positions". It also gives some liberties with characters {{#$^`~}}. In _ISO 646_, several "national variants of ASCII" have been defined, assigning different letters and symbols to the "national use" positions. Thus, the characters that appear in those positions - including those in *US-ASCII* are somewhat "unsafe" in international data transfer.Thus, due to the "national variants" discussed above, some characters are less "safe" than others, for example, positions [ISO/IEC 646-1991]. It also gives some liberties with particular characters (e.g., #$^`~).  In ISO/IEC 646-1991, several national variants of ASCII are defined, assigning different letters and symbols to the national use positions. Consequently, the characters that appear in those positions, including those in US-ASCII, are less portable in international data transfer. Because of the national variants, some characters are less portable than others: they might be transferred or interpreted incorrectly.

In Addition addition to the letters of the English alphabet ("A " to "through Z " and " a " to "through z"), the digits ("0 " to "through 9"), and the space, only the following characters can be regarded as really "safe" in data transmissionare portable:

No Format

! " % & ' ( ) * + , - . / : ; < = > ?_

When naming files, variables, data files etc., it is often best to use only the characters listed above.

Non-Compliant Coding Example

The characters in the file name should be avoided.

and other objects, only these characters should be considered for use. This recommendation is related to STR02-C. Sanitize data passed to complex subsystems.

File Names

File names containing particular characters can be troublesome and can cause unexpected behavior leading to potential vulnerabilities. If a program allows the user to specify a file name in the creation or renaming of a file, certain checks should be made to disallow the following characters and patterns:

  • Leading dashes—Leading dashes can cause problems when programs are called with the file name as a parameter because the first character or characters of the file name might be interpreted as an option switch.
  • Control characters, such as newlines, carriage returns, and escape—Control characters in a file name can cause unexpected results from shell scripts and in logging.
  • Spaces—Spaces can cause problems with scripts and when double quotes are not used to surround the file name.
  • Invalid character encodings—Character encodings can be a huge issue. (See MSC10-C. Character encoding: UTF8-related issues.)
  • Any characters other than letters, numbers, and punctuation designated here as portable—Other special characters are included in this recommendation because they are commonly used as separators, and having them in a file name can cause unexpected and potentially insecure behavior.

Also, many of the punctuation characters are not unconditionally safe for file names even of they are portably available.

Most of these characters or patterns are primarily a problem to scripts or automated parsing, but because they are not commonly used, it is best to disallow their use to reduce potential problems. Interoperability concerns also exist because different operating systems handle file names of this sort in different ways.

As a result of the influence of MS-DOS, file names of the form xxxxxxxx.xxx, where x denotes an alphanumeric character, are generally supported by modern systems. On some platforms, file names are case sensitive, and on other platforms, they are case insensitive. VU#439395 is an example of a vulnerability resulting from a failure to deal appropriately with case-sensitivity issues [VU#439395].

Noncompliant Code Example (File Name 1)

In this noncompliant code example, unsafe characters are used as part of a file name:

Code Block
bgColor#ffcccc
langc
#include <fcntl.h>
Code Block

#include <fcntl.h> 
#include <sys/stat.h> 
 
int main(void) { 
   char *file_name = "»£???«\xe5ngstr\xf6m"; 
   mode_t mode = S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR | S_IRGRP | S_IROTH; 
 
   int fd = open(file_name, O_CREAT | O_EXCL | O_WRONLY, mode); 
   if (fd == -1) { 
      /* Handle Errorerror */ 
   }  
} 
}

An implementation is free to define its own mapping of the "nonsafe" characters. For example, when run on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.5, this noncompliant code example resulted in the following file name being revealed by the ls command:

Code Block
?ngstr?m

Compliant Solution (File Name 1)

Use a descriptive file name , containing only the subset of ASCII previously described above.:

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff
langc

#include <fcntl.h> 
#include <sys/stat.h> 
 
int main(void) { 
   char *file_name = "name.ext"; 
   mode_t mode = S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR | S_IRGRP | S_IROTH; 
 
   int fd = open(file_name, O_CREAT | O_EXCL | O_WRONLY, mode); 
   if (fd == -1) { 
      /* Handle Errorerror */ 
   }  
} 

Risk Assessment

This could result in data being lost or misinterpreted during transmission.

Reference

Noncompliant Code Example (File Name 2)

This noncompliant code example is derived from FIO30-C. Exclude user input from format strings, except that a newline is removed on the assumption that fgets() will include it:

Code Block
bgColor#FFCCCC
langc
char myFilename[1000];
const char elimNewLn[] = "\n";

fgets(myFilename, sizeof(myFilename)-1, stdin);
myFilename[sizeof(myFilename)-1] = '\0';
myFilename[strcspn(myFilename, elimNewLn)] = '\0';

No checks are performed on the file name to prevent troublesome characters. If an attacker knew this code was in a program used to create or rename files that would later be used in a script or automated process of some sort, he or she could choose particular characters in the output file name to confuse the later process for malicious purposes.

Compliant Solution (File Name 2)

In this compliant solution, the program rejects file names that violate the guidelines for selecting safe characters:

Code Block
bgColor#ccccFF
langc
char myFilename[1000];
const char elimNewln[] = "\n";
const char badChars[] = "-\n\r ,;'\\<\"";
do {
  fgets(myFilename, sizeof(myFilename)-1, stdin);
  myFilename[sizeof(myFilename)-1] ='\0';
  myFilename[strcspn(myFilename, elimNewln)]='\0';
} while ( (strcspn(myFilename, badChars))
           < (strlen(myFilename)));

Similarly, you must validate all file names originating from untrusted sources to ensure they contain only safe characters.

Risk Assessment

Failing to use only the subset of ASCII that is guaranteed to work can result in misinterpreted data.

Recommendation

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

MSC09-C

Medium

Unlikely

Medium

P4

L3

Automated Detection

Tool

Version

Checker

Description

Astrée
Include Page
Astrée_V
Astrée_V

bitfield-name
character-constantenum-tag-spelling
enumeration-constant-name
function-like-macro-name
global-function-name
global-object-name
global-object-name-const
header-filename
implementation-filename
local-object-name
local-object-name-const
local-static-object-name
local-static-object-name-const
object-like-macro-name
static-function-name
static-object-name
static-object-name-const
string-literal
struct-member-name
struct-tag-spelling
typedef-name
union-member-name
union-tag-spelling

Partially checked
Helix QAC

Include Page
Helix QAC_V
Helix QAC_V

C0285, C0286, C0287, C0288, C0289, C0299


LDRA tool suite
Include Page
LDRA_V
LDRA_V

113 S

Partially implemented
Parasoft C/C++test
Include Page
Parasoft_V
Parasoft_V
CERT_C-MSC09-a
Only use characters defined in the ISO C standard
RuleChecker
Include Page
RuleChecker_V
RuleChecker_V

bitfield-name
character-constantenum-tag-spelling
enumeration-constant-name
function-like-macro-name
global-function-name
global-object-name
global-object-name-const
header-filename
implementation-filename
local-object-name
local-object-name-const
local-static-object-name
local-static-object-name-const
object-like-macro-name
static-function-name
static-object-name
static-object-name-const
string-literal
struct-member-name
struct-tag-spelling
typedef-name
union-member-name
union-tag-spelling

Partially checked
SonarQube C/C++ Plugin
Include Page
SonarQube C/C++ Plugin_V
SonarQube C/C++ Plugin_V
S1578

Related Vulnerabilities

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

Related Guidelines

Bibliography

[ISO/IEC 646-1991]"ISO 7-Bit Coded Character Set for Information Interchange"
[ISO/IEC 9899:2011]Subclause 5.2.1, "Character Sets"
[Kuhn 2006]"UTF-8 and Unicode FAQ for UNIX/Linux"
[VU#439395]
[Wheeler 2003Section 5.4, "File Names"


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Image Added Image Added Image Added Wiki Markup\[[Kuhn 06|AA. C References#Kuhn 06]\] UTF-8 and Unicode FAQ for Unix/Linux \[[ISO/IEC 646-1991|AA. C References#ISO/IEC 646-1991]\] ISO 7-bit coded character set for information interchange \[[ISO/IEC 9899-1999:TC2|AA. C References#ISO/IEC 9899-1999TC2]] Section 5.2.1, "Character sets"