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Java's file-manipulation methods often indicate failure with a return value instead of throwing an exception. Consequently, programs that ignore the return values from file operations often fail to detect that those operations have failed. Java programs must check the return values of methods that perform file I/O. This is a specific instance of rule EXP00-J. Do not ignore values returned by methods.

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This noncompliant code example attempts to delete a specified file but gives no indication of its success. The Java Platform, Standard Edition 6 API Specification [API 2006] platform requires File.delete() to throw a SecurityException only when the program lacks authorization to delete the file [API 2014]. No other exceptions are thrown, so the deletion can silently fail.

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This compliant solution checks the return value of delete().:

Code Block
bgColor#ccccFF
File file = new File("file");
if (!file.delete()) {
  System.out.println("// Deletion failed");, handle error
}

Compliant Solution

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This compliant solution uses the java.nio.file.Files.delete() method from Java SE 7 to delete the file.:

Code Block
bgColor#ccccFF
Path file = new File(args[0]).toPath();
try {
  Files.delete(file);
} catch (IOException x) {
  System.out.println("// Deletion failed");
  // , handle error
}

The Java SE 7 Documentation [J2SE 2011] defines Files.delete() to throw the following exceptions:

Exception

Reason

NoSuchFileException

File does not exist

DirectoryNotEmptyException

File is a directory and could not otherwise be deleted because the directory is not empty

IOException

An I/O error occurs

SecurityException

In the case of the default provider and a security manager is installed, the SecurityManager.checkDelete(String) method is invoked to check delete access to the file

Since Because SecurityException is a runtime exception, it need not be declared. And Because NoSuchFileException and DirectoryNotExmptyException both inherit from IOException, they will be caught by the compliant solution's catch clause.

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Failure to check the return values of methods that perform file I/O can result in unexpected behavior.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

FIO02-J

Medium

Probable

Medium

P8

L2

Related Guidelines

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SEI CERT C Coding Standard

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Automated Detection

ToolVersionChecker

Description

CodeSonar
Include Page
CodeSonar_V
CodeSonar_V

JAVA.FUNCS.IRV

Ignored Return Value (Java)

SonarQube
Include Page
SonarQube_V
SonarQube_V
S899


Related Guidelines

Bibliography

[API

2006

2014]

File.delete()

[J2SE 2011]

Files.delete()

[Seacord

2005

2013]

Chapter

7

8, "File I/O"

 


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