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The C standard Standard allows an array variable to be declared both with a dimension bound index and with an initialization literal. The initialization literal also implies an array size , in the number of elements specified. For strings, the size specified by a string literal is the number of characters in the literal plus one for the terminating null character.

It is common for an array variable to be initialized by a string literal and declared with an explicit dimension which bound that matches the number of characters in the string literal. Subclause 6.7.9, paragraph 14, of the C Standard [ISO/IEC 9899:2011], says:

An array of character type may be initialized by a character string literal or UTF−8 string literal, optionally enclosed in braces. Successive bytes of the string literal (including the terminating null character if there is room or if the array is of unknown size) initialize the elements of the array.

However, if the string is intended to be used as a null-terminated byte string, then the array will have . This is one too few characters to hold the string , because it does not account for the terminating null character. Such a sequence of characters has limited utility and has the potential to cause vulnerabilities if a null-terminated byte string is assumed.

A better approach is to not specify the dimension bound of a string initialized with a string literal , as because the compiler will automatically allocate sufficient space for the entire string literal, including the terminating null character. This rule is a specific exception to ARR02-AC. Explicitly specify array bounds, even if implicitly defined by an initializer.

Initializing a character array using a string literal to fit exactly without a null byte is not allowed in C++.

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Noncompliant Code Example

This non-compliant noncompliant code example initializes an array of characters using a string literal that defines one character more character (counting the terminating '\0') than the array can hold.:

Code Block
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langc
const 
char s[3] = "abc";

The size of the array s is three3, although the size of the string literal is four4. Any subsequent use of the array as a null-terminated byte string can result in a vulnerability, because s is not properly null-terminated. (see See STR32-C. Null-terminate byte strings as required). Do not pass a non-null-terminated character sequence to a library function that expects a string.)

Implementation Details

This code compiles with no warning with Visual Studio 2013 and GCC 4.8.1. It produces a three-character array with no terminating null character, as specified by the standard.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution does not specify the dimension bound of a character array in the array declaration. If the array dimension bound is omitted, the compiler will allocate allocates sufficient storage to store the entire string literal, including the terminating null character.

Code Block
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langc
const 
char s[] = "abc";

This is the approach is preferred approach, because the size of the array can always be derived even if the size of the string literal changes.

Exceptions

STR36STR11-C-EX1: If the intention is to create a character array and not a null-terminated byte string, initializing to fit exactly without a null byte is allowed but not recommended. The preferred approach to create an array containing just the three characters , 'a', 'b', and 'c', for example, is to declare each character literal as a separate element as follows:

Code Block
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langc

char s[3] = { 'a', 'b', 'c' }; /* NOT a string */

...

Also, one you should make clear in comments or documentation if a character array is, in fact, not a null-terminated byte string.

STR11-C-EX2: If the character array must be larger than the string literal it is initialized with, you may explicitly specify an array bounds. This is particularly important if the array's contents might change during program execution.

Code Block
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langc
#include <string.h>
 
void func(void) {
  char s[10] = "abc";
  strcpy(&s[3], "def");
}

Risk Assessment

Recommendation

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

STR36

STR11-C

high

Low

probable

Probable

low

Low

P18

P6

L1

L2

Automated Detection

Tool

Splint Version 3.1.1 can detect violations of this rule.

Version

Checker

Description

Astrée
Include Page
Astrée_V
Astrée_V

Supported: Astrée can detect subsequent code defects that this rule aims to prevent.
Axivion Bauhaus Suite

Include Page
Axivion Bauhaus Suite_V
Axivion Bauhaus Suite_V

CertC-STR11
Compass/ROSE




ECLAIR

Include Page
ECLAIR_V
ECLAIR_V

CC2.STR36

Fully implemented

Helix QAC

Include Page
Helix QAC_V
Helix QAC_V

C1312
LDRA tool suite
Include Page
LDRA_V
LDRA_V
404 SPartially implemented
Parasoft C/C++test
Include Page
Parasoft_V
Parasoft_V

CERT_C-STR11-a

Do not specify the bound of a character array initialized with a string literal

PC-lint Plus

Include Page
PC-lint Plus_V
PC-lint Plus_V

784

Partially supported

Polyspace Bug Finder

Include Page
Polyspace Bug Finder_V
Polyspace Bug Finder_V

CERT C: Rec. STR11-C

Checks for missing null in string array (rec. partially covered)

Splint
Include Page
Splint_V
Splint_V



Related Vulnerabilities

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

References

Wiki Markup
\[[ECTC 98|AA. C References#ECTC 98]\] A.8, "Character array initialization"
\[[ISO/IEC 9899:1999|AA. C References#ISO/IEC 9899-1999]\] Section 6.7.8, "Initialization"
\[[ISO/IEC PDTR 24772|AA. C References#ISO/IEC PDTR 24772]\] "CJM String Termination"
\[[Seacord 05a|AA. C References#Seacord 05a]\] Chapter 2, "Strings"

Related Guidelines

Bibliography

[ECTC 1998]Section A.8, "Character Array Initialization"
[ISO/IEC 9899:2011]Subclause 6.7.9, "Initialization"
[Seacord 2013]Chapter 2, "Strings"


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Image Added Image Added Image AddedSTR35-C. Do not copy data from an unbounded source to a fixed-length array      07. Characters and Strings (STR)       STR37-C. Arguments to character handling functions must be representable as an unsigned char