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Comment: Parasoft Jtest 2021.1

Returning references to internal mutable members of a class can compromise an application's security, both by breaking encapsulation and by providing the opportunity to corrupt the internal state of the class (whether accidentally or maliciously). As a result, programs must not return references to internal private mutable classes.Returning a reference to a defensive copy of a mutable internal state ensures that the caller cannot modify the original internal state, although the copy remains mutable

See rule OBJ13-J. Ensure that references to mutable objects are not exposed for details about leaking references to non-private objects.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example shows a getDate() accessor method that returns the sole instance of the private Date object:

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An untrusted caller can manipulate a private Date object because returning the reference exposes the internal mutable component beyond the trust boundaries of MutableClass.

Compliant Solution (clone())

Returning a reference to a defensive copy of a mutable internal state ensures that the caller cannot modify the original internal state, although the copy remains mutable. This compliant solution returns a clone of the Date object from the getDate() accessor method. Although Date can be extended by an attacker, this approach is safe because the Date object returned by getDate() is controlled by MutableClass and is known to be a nonmalicious subclass.

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Classes that have public setter methods, that is, methods whose purpose is to change class fields, must follow the related advice found in OBJ06-J. Defensively copy mutable inputs and mutable internal components. Note that setter methods can (and usually should) perform input validation and sanitization before setting internal fields.

Noncompliant Code Example (Mutable Member Array)

In this noncompliant code example, the getDate() accessor method returns an array of Date objects. The method fails to make a defensive copy of the array before returning it. Because the array contains references to Date objects that are mutable, a shallow copy of the array is insufficient because an attacker can modify the Date objects in the array.

Code Block
bgColor#FFcccc
class MutableClass {
  private Date[] date;

  public MutableClass() {
    date = new Date[20];
    for (int i = 0; i < date.length; i++) {
      date[i] = new Date();
    }
  }

  public Date[] getDate() {
    return date; // Or return date.clone()
  }
}

Compliant Solution (Deep Copy)

This compliant solution creates a deep copy of the date array and returns the copy, thereby protecting both the date array and the individual Date objects:

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff
class MutableClass {
  private Date[] date;

  public MutableClass() {
    date = new Date[20];
    for(int i = 0; i < date.length; i++) {
      date[i] = new Date();
    }
  }

  public Date[] getDate() {
    Date[] dates = new Date[date.length];
    for (int i = 0; i < date.length; i++) {
      dates[i] = (Date) date[i].clone();
    }
    return dates;
  }
}

Noncompliant Code Example (Mutable Member Containing Immutable Objects)

In this noncompliant code example, class ReturnRef contains a private Hashtable instance field. The hash table stores immutable but sensitive data (for example, social security numbers [SSNs]). The getValues() method gives the caller access to the hash table by returning a reference to it. An untrusted caller can use this method to gain access to the hash table; as a result, hash table entries can be maliciously added, removed, or replaced. Furthermore, multiple threads can perform these modifications, providing ample opportunities for race conditions.

...

In returning a reference to the ht hash table, this example also hinders efficient garbage collection.

Compliant Solution (Shallow Copy)

Make defensive copies of private internal mutable object state. For mutable fields that contain immutable data, a shallow copy is sufficient. Fields that refer to mutable data generally require a deep copy.

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Note that making deep copies of the keys of a hash table is unnecessary; shallow copying of the references suffices because a hash table's contract dictates that its keys must produce consistent results to the equals() and hashCode() methods. Mutable objects whose equals() or hashCode() method results may be modified are not suitable keys.

Exceptions

OBJ05-J-EX0: When a method is called with only an unmodifiable immutable view of an object, that method may freely use the unmodifiable immutable view without defensive copying. This decision should be made early in the design of the API. Note that new callers of such methods must also expose only unmodifiable immutable views.

Risk Assessment

Returning references to internal object state (mutable or immutable) can render an application susceptible to information leaks and corruption of its objects' states, which consequently violates class invariants. Control flow can also be affected in some cases.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

OBJ05-J

High

Probable

Medium

P12

L1

Automated Detection

Sound automated detection is infeasible; heuristic checks could be useful.

ToolVersionCheckerDescription
Parasoft Jtest
Include Page
Parasoft_V
Parasoft_V
CERT.OBJ05.CPCL
CERT.OBJ05.MPT
CERT.OBJ05.SMO
CERT.OBJ05.MUCOP
Enforce returning a defensive copy in 'clone()' methods
Do not pass user-given mutable objects directly to certain types
Do not store user-given mutable objects directly into variables
Provide mutable classes with copy functionality
SonarQube
Include Page
SonarQube_V
SonarQube_V
S2384

Mutable members should not be stored or returned directly

Implemented for Arrays, Collections and Dates.

Related Vulnerabilities

Pugh [Pugh 2009] cites a vulnerability discovered by the Findbugs static analysis tool in the early betas of JDK 1.7 in which the sun.security.x509.InvalidityDateExtension class returned a Date instance through a public accessor without creating defensive copies.

Related Guidelines

SEI CERT C++ Coding Standard

VOID OOP08-CPP. Do not return references to private data.

MITRE CWE

CWE-375, Returning a

mutable object

Mutable Object to an

untrusted caller

Untrusted Caller

Bibliography

[API

2006

2014]

Method clone()

[Bloch 2008]

Item 39, "Make Defensive Copies When Needed"

[Goetz 2006]

Section 3.2, "Publication and Escape: Allowing Internal Mutable State to Escape"

[Gong 2003]

Section 9.4, "Private Object State and Object Immutability"

[Haggar 2000]

Practical Java Praxis 64. Use clone for immutable objects when passing or receiving object references to mutable objects

[Pugh 2009]

[Security 2006]

 

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