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Comment: Updated UB references from C11->C23

Do not convert a pointer value to a pointer type that is more strictly aligned than the referenced type. Different alignments are possible for different types of objects. If the type-checking system is overridden by an explicit cast or the pointer is converted to a void pointer (void *) and then to a different type, the alignment of an object may be changed.

The C Standard, 6.3.2.3, paragraph 7 [ISO/IEC 9899:2024], states

A pointer to an object type may be converted to a pointer to a different object type. If the resulting pointer is not correctly aligned for the referenced type, the behavior is undefined.

See undefined behavior 24.

If the misaligned pointer is dereferenced, the program may terminate abnormally. On some architectures, the cast alone may cause a loss of information even if the value is not dereferenced if the types involved have differing alignment requirements.

Noncompliant Code Example

In this noncompliant example, the char pointer &c is converted to the more strictly aligned int pointer ip. On some implementations, cp will not match &c. As a result, if a pointer to one object type is converted to a pointer to a different object type, the second object type must not require stricter alignment than the first.

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langc
#include <assert.h>
 
void func(void) {
  char c = 'x';
  int *ip = (int *)&c; /* This can lose information */
  char *cp = (char *)ip;

  /* Will fail on some conforming implementations */
  assert(cp == &c);
}

Compliant Solution (Intermediate Object)

In this compliant solution, the char value is stored into an object of type int so that the pointer's value will be properly aligned:

Code Block
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langc
#include <assert.h>
 
void func(void) {
  char c = 'x';
  int i = c;
  int *ip = &i;

  assert(ip == &i);
}

Noncompliant Code Example

The C Standard allows any object pointer to be cast to and from void *. As a result, it is possible to silently convert from one pointer type to another without the compiler diagnosing the problem by storing or casting a pointer to void * and then storing or casting it to the final type. In this noncompliant code example, loop_function() is passed the char pointer char_ptr but returns an object of type int pointer:

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langc
int *loop_function

"It is undefined what will happen if a pointer of some type is converted to void*, and then the void* pointer is converted to a type with a stricter alignment requirement" -C99 rationaleV5.10.pdf

Non-compliant Code Example

Code Block
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char *loop_ptr;
int * int_ptr;

int *mkVoidPtr(void *v_pointer) {
  /* ... */
  return v_pointer;
}
 
void func(char *char_ptr) {
  int *int_ptr = mkVoidPtrloop_function(loopchar_ptr);

In this example the v_pointer might be aligned on a 1 byte boundary. Once it is cast to an int some architectures will require it to be on 4 byte boundaries. Pointers are often cast because a void* cannot be dereferenced. Careless coding can result in an arbitrary pointer type being used irregardless of its alignment.

Implementation Details

List of common alignments for Microsoft, Borland and GNU compilers to x86

Type

Alignment

char

1 byte aligned

short

2 byte aligned

int

4 byte aligned

float

4 byte aligned

double

8 byte on Windows, 4 byte on Linux

Compliant Solution

-Make specific functions (avoid use of void*)

-Always use strictest alignment type for arbitrary pointers.

...

int *loop_ptr;
int * int_ptr;

int *loopFunction(int *v_pointer){

return v_pointer;
}
int_ptr = loopFunction(loop_ptr);

...

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Risk Assessment

  /* ... */
}

This example compiles without warning using GCC 4.8 on Ubuntu Linux 14.04. However, int_pointer can be more strictly aligned than an object of type char *.

Compliant Solution

Because the input parameter directly influences the return value, and loop_function() returns an object of type int *, the formal parameter v_pointer is redeclared to accept only an object of type int *:

Code Block
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langc
int *loop_function(int *v_pointer) {
  /* ... */
  return v_pointer;
}
 
void func(int *loop_ptr) {
  int *int_ptr = loop_function(loop_ptr);

  /* ... */
}

Noncompliant Code Example

Some architectures require that pointers are correctly aligned when accessing objects larger than a byte. However, it is common in system code that unaligned data (for example, the network stacks) must be copied to a properly aligned memory location, such as in this noncompliant code example:

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langc
#include <string.h>
 
struct foo_header {
  int len;
  /* ... */
};
 
void func(char *data, size_t offset) {
  struct foo_header *tmp;
  struct foo_header header;

  tmp = (struct foo_header *)(data + offset);
  memcpy(&header, tmp, sizeof(header));

  /* ... */
}

Assigning an unaligned value to a pointer that references a type that needs to be aligned is undefined behavior. An implementation may notice, for example, that tmp and header must be aligned and use an inline memcpy() that uses instructions that assume aligned data.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution avoids the use of the foo_header pointer:

Code Block
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langc
#include <string.h>
 
struct foo_header {
  int len;
  /* ... */
};
  
void func(char *data, size_t offset) {
  struct foo_header header; 
  memcpy(&header, data + offset, sizeof(header));

  /* ... */
}

Exceptions

EXP36-C-EX1: Some hardware architectures have relaxed requirements with regard to pointer alignment. Using a pointer that is not properly aligned is correctly handled by the architecture, although there might be a performance penalty. On such an architecture, improper pointer alignment is permitted but remains an efficiency problem.

The x86 32- and 64-bit architectures usually impose only a performance penalty for violations of this rule, but under some circumstances, noncompliant code can still exhibit undefined behavior. Consider the following program:

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langc
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h>

#define READ_UINT16(ptr)       (*(uint16_t *)(ptr))
#define WRITE_UINT16(ptr, val) (*(uint16_t *)(ptr) = (val))

void compute(unsigned char *b1, unsigned char *b2,
             int value, int range) {
  int i;
  for (i = 0; i < range; i++) {
    int newval = (int)READ_UINT16(b1) + value;
    WRITE_UINT16(b2, newval);
    b1 += 2;
    b2 += 2;
  }
}

int main() {
  unsigned char buffer1[1024];
  unsigned char buffer2[1024];
  printf("Compute something\n");
  compute(buffer1 + 3, buffer2 + 1, 42, 500);
  return 0;
}

This code tries to read short ints (which are 16 bits long) from odd pairs in a character array, which violates this rule. On 32- and 64-bit x86 platforms, this program should run to completion without incident. However, the program aborts with a SIGSEGV due to the unaligned reads on a 64-bit platform running Debian Linux, when compiled with GCC 4.9.4 using the flags  -O3   or  -O2 -ftree-loop-vectorize -fvect-cost-model.

If a developer wishes to violate this rule and use undefined behavior, they must not only ensure that the hardware guarantees the behavior of the object code, but they must also ensure that their compiler, along with its optimizer, also respect these guarantees.


EXP36-C-EX2: If a pointer is known to be correctly aligned to the target type, then a cast to that type is permitted. There are several cases where a pointer is known to be correctly aligned to the target type. The pointer could point to an object declared with a suitable alignment specifier. It could point to an object returned by aligned_alloc(), calloc(), malloc(), or realloc(), as per the C standard, section 7.24.3, paragraph 1  [ISO/IEC 9899:2024].

This compliant solution uses the alignment specifier, which is new to C11, to declare the char object c with the same alignment as that of an object of type int. As a result, the two pointers reference equally aligned pointer types:

Code Block
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langc
#include <stdalign.h>
#include <assert.h>
 
void func(void) {
  /* Align c to the alignment of an int */
  alignas(int) char c = 'x';
  int *ip = (int *)&c; 
  char *cp = (char *)ip;
  /* Both cp and &c point to equally aligned objects */
  assert(cp == &c);
}

Risk Assessment

Accessing a pointer or an object that is not properly aligned can cause a program to crash or give erroneous information, or it can cause slow pointer accesses (if the architecture allows misaligned accessesAccessing a pointer that is no longer on the correct access boundary can cause a program to crash, give wrong information or have slow pointer accesses (if the architecture does not care about alignment).

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

DRAFT

1 (low)

2 (probable)

2 (medium)

P4

L3

References

EXP36-C

Low

Probable

Medium

P4

L3

Automated Detection

Tool

Version

Checker

Description

Astrée
Include Page
Astrée_V
Astrée_V
pointer-cast-alignmentFully checked
Axivion Bauhaus Suite

Include Page
Axivion Bauhaus Suite_V
Axivion Bauhaus Suite_V

CertC-EXP36
CodeSonar
Include Page
CodeSonar_V
CodeSonar_V

LANG.CAST.PC.OBJ

Cast: Object Pointers

Compass/ROSE

Can detect violations of this rule. However, it does not flag explicit casts to void * and then back to another pointer type

Coverity
Include Page
Coverity_V
Coverity_V

MISRA C 2004 Rule 11.4

MISRA C 2012 Rule 11.1

MISRA C 2012 Rule 11.2

MISRA C 2012 Rule 11.5

MISRA C 2012 Rule 11.7

Implemented
Cppcheck Premium

Include Page
Cppcheck Premium_V
Cppcheck Premium_V

premium-cert-exp36-cPartially implemented

ECLAIR

Include Page
ECLAIR_V
ECLAIR_V

CC2.EXP36

Fully implemented
EDG


GCC
Include Page
GCC_V
GCC_V

Can detect some violations of this rule when the -Wcast-align flag is used

Helix QAC

Include Page
Helix QAC_V
Helix QAC_V

C0326, C3305

C++3033, C++3038


Klocwork
 
Include Page
Klocwork_V
Klocwork_V
MISRA.CAST.OBJ_PTR_TO_OBJ_PTR.2012
LDRA tool suite
Include Page
LDRA_V
LDRA_V

94 S, 606 S

Partially implemented
Parasoft C/C++test
Include Page
Parasoft_V
Parasoft_V
CERT_C-EXP36-a

Do not cast pointers into more strictly aligned pointer types

PC-lint Plus

Include Page
PC-lint Plus_V
PC-lint Plus_V

2445

Partially supported: reports casts directly from a pointer to a less strictly aligned type to a pointer to a more strictly aligned type

Polyspace Bug Finder

Include Page
Polyspace Bug Finder_V
Polyspace Bug Finder_V

CERT C: Rule EXP36-C

Checks for source buffer misaligned with destination buffer (rule fully covered)

PVS-Studio

Include Page
PVS-Studio_V
PVS-Studio_V

V548, V641V1032

RuleChecker

Include Page
RuleChecker_V
RuleChecker_V

pointer-cast-alignmentFully checked

Related Vulnerabilities

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

Related Guidelines

Key here (explains table format and definitions)

Taxonomy

Taxonomy item

Relationship

CERT CVOID EXP56-CPP. Do not cast pointers into more strictly aligned pointer typesPrior to 2018-01-12: CERT: Unspecified Relationship
ISO/IEC TR 24772:2013Pointer Casting and Pointer Type Changes [HFC]Prior to 2018-01-12: CERT: Unspecified Relationship
ISO/IEC TS 17961Converting pointer values to more strictly aligned pointer types [alignconv]Prior to 2018-01-12: CERT: Unspecified Relationship
MISRA C:2012Rule 11.1 (required)Prior to 2018-01-12: CERT: Unspecified Relationship
MISRA C:2012Rule 11.2 (required)Prior to 2018-01-12: CERT: Unspecified Relationship
MISRA C:2012Rule 11.5 (advisory)Prior to 2018-01-12: CERT: Unspecified Relationship
MISRA C:2012Rule 11.7 (required)Prior to 2018-01-12: CERT: Unspecified Relationship

Bibliography


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Wiki Markup
Bryant, Randal and O'Hallaron, David. \[ 2003 \] 2001 Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-034074-X.

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