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The C++ Standard, [basic.life], paragraph 5 [ISO/IEC 14882-2014], describes the lifetime rules for pointers:
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Paragraph 6 describes the lifetime rules for nonpointersnon-pointers:
Similarly, before the lifetime of an object has started but after the storage which the object will occupy has been allocated or, after the lifetime of an object has ended and before the storage which the object occupied is reused or released, any glvalue that refers to the original object may be used but only in limited ways. For an object under construction or destruction, see 12.7. Otherwise, such a glvalue refers to allocated storage, and using the properties of the glvalue that do not depend on its value is well-defined. The program has undefined behavior if:
— an lvalue-to-rvalue conversion is applied to such a glvalue,
— the glvalue is used to access a non-static data member or call a non-static member function of the object, or
— the glvalue is bound to a reference to a virtual base class, or
— the glvalue is used as the operand of adynamic_cast
or as the operand oftypeid
.
Do not use an object outside of its lifetime, except in the ways described above as being well-defined.
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In this noncompliant code example, a pointer to an object is used to call a non-static member function of the object , prior to the beginning of the pointer's lifetime, resulting in undefined behavior:.
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struct S { void mem_fn(); }; void f() { S *s; s->mem_fn(); } |
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In this compliant solution, storage is obtained for the pointer prior to calling S::mem_fn()
:.
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struct S { void mem_fn(); }; void f() { S *s = new S; s->mem_fn(); delete s; } |
An improved compliant solution would not dynamically allocate memory directly but would instead use an automatic local variable to obtain the storage and perform initialization. If a pointer were required, use of a smart pointer, such as std::unique_ptr
, would be a marked improvement. However, these suggested compliant solutions would distract from the lifetime demonstration of this compliant solution and consequently are not shown.
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In this noncompliant code example, a pointer to an object is implicitly converted to a virtual base class after the object's lifetime has ended, resulting in undefined behavior:.
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struct B {}; struct D1 : virtual B {}; struct D2 : virtual B {}; struct S : D1, D2 {}; void f(const B *b) {} void g() { S *s = new S; // Use s delete s; f(s); } |
Despite that the fact that f()
never makes use of the object, its being passed as an argument to f()
is sufficient to trigger undefined behavior.
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In this compliant solution, the lifetime of s
is extended to cover the call to f()
:.
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struct B {}; struct D1 : virtual B {}; struct D2 : virtual B {}; struct S : D1, D2 {}; void f(const B *b) {} void g() { S *s = new S; // Use s f(s); delete s; } |
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In this noncompliant code example, the address of a local variable is returned from f()
. When the resulting pointer is passed to h()
, the lvalue-to-rvalue conversion applied to i
results in undefined behavior:.
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int *g() { int i = 12; return &i; } void h(int *i); void f() { int *i = g(); h(i); } |
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In this compliant solution, the local variable returned from g()
has static storage duration instead of automatic storage duration, extending its lifetime sufficiently for use within f()
:.
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int *g() { static int i = 12; return &i; } void h(int *i); void f() { int *i = g(); h(i); } |
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A std::initializer_list<>
object is constructed from an initializer list as though the implementation allocated a temporary array and passed it to the std::initializer_list<>
constructor. This temporary array has the same lifetime as other temporary objects except that initializing a std::initializer_list<>
object from the array extends the lifetime of the array exactly like binding a reference to a temporary [ISO/IEC 14882-2014].
In this noncompliant code example, a member variable of type std::initializer_list<int>
is list-initialized within the constructor's ctor-initializer. Under these circumstances, the conceptual temporary array's lifetime ends once the constructor exits, and so accessing any elements of the std::initializer_list<int>
member variable results in undefined behavior.
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In this compliant solution, the std::initializer_list<int>
member variable is replaced with a std::vector<int>
, which copies the elements of the initializer list to the container instead of relying on a dangling reference to the temporary array:.
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#include <iostream> #include <vector> class C { std::vector<int> l; public: C() : l{1, 2, 3} {} int first() const { return *l.begin(); } }; void f() { C c; std::cout << c.first(); } |
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class S { int v; public: S() : v(12) {} // Non-trivial constructor void f(); }; void f() { // ... goto bad_idea; // ... S s; // Control passes over the declaration, so initialization does not take place. bad_idea: s.f(); } |
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution ensures that s
is properly initialized prior to performing the local jump:.
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class S { int v; public: S() : v(12) {} // Non-trivial constructor void f(); }; void f() { S s; // ... goto bad_idea; // ... bad_idea: s.f(); } |
Noncompliant Code Example
In this noncompliant code example,
is called with an iterable range of objects of type f()
S
. These objects are copied into a temporary buffer using std::copy()
, and when processing of those objects is complete, the temporary buffer is deallocated. However, the buffer returned by std::get_temporary_buffer()
does not contain initialized objects of type S
, so when std::copy()
dereferences the destination iterator, it results in undefined behavior because the object being assigned into referenced by the destination iterator has yet to start its lifetime. This is because while space for the object has been allocated, no constructors or initializers have been invoked.
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#include <algorithm> #include <cstddef> #include <memory> #include <type_traits> class S { int i; public: S() : i(0) {} S(int i) : i(i) {} S(const S&) = default; S& operator=(const S&) = default; }; template <typename Iter> void f(Iter i, Iter e) { static_assert(std::is_same<typename std::iterator_traits<Iter>::value_type, S>::value, "Expecting iterators over type S"); ptrdiff_t count = std::distance(i, e); if (!count) { return; } // Get some temporary memory. auto p = std::get_temporary_buffer<S>(count); if (p.second < count) { // Handle error; memory wasn't allocated, or insufficient memory was allocated. return; } S *vals = p.first; // Copy the values into the memory. std::copy(i, e, vals); // ... // Return the temporary memory. std::return_temporary_buffer(vals); } |
Implementation Details
A reasonable implementation of std::get_temporary_buffer()
and std::copy()
can result in code that behaves like the following example (with error-checking elided):.
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unsigned char *buffer = new (std::nothrow) unsigned char[sizeof(S) * object_count]; S *result = reinterpret_cast<S *>(buffer); while (i != e) { *result = *i; // Undefined behavior ++result; ++i; } |
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In this compliant solution, std::uninitialized_copy()
is used to perform the copy, instead of std::copy()
, ensuring that the objects are initialized using placement new instead new
instead of dereferencing uninitialized memory. Identical code from the noncompliant code example has been elided for brevity.
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This compliant solution uses std::copy()
with a std::raw_storage_iterator
as the destination iterator , with the same well-defined results as using std::uninitialized_copy()
. As with the previous compliant solution, identical code from the noncompliant code example has been elided for brevity.
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Referencing an object outside of its lifetime can result in an attacker being able to run arbitrary code.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
EXP54-CPP | High | Probable | High | P6 | L2 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
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Astrée |
|
| return-reference-local dangling_pointer_use | Partially checked | |||||||
Clang |
| -Wdangling-initializer-list | Catches some lifetime issues related to incorrect use of std::initializer_list<> | ||||||
CodeSonar |
| IO.UAC | Use after close Use after free |
42 D, 53 D, 77 D, 1 J, 71 S, 565 S
Partially implemented
Helix QAC |
| C++4003, C++4026 DF2812, DF2813, DF2814, DF2930, DF2931, DF2932, DF2933, DF2934, | |||||||
Klocwork |
| CL.FFM.ASSIGN CL.FFM.COPY LOCRET.ARG LOCRET.GLOB LOCRET.RET UFM.DEREF.MIGHT UFM.DEREF.MUST UFM.FFM.MIGHT UFM.FFM.MUST UFM.RETURN.MIGHT UFM.RETURN.MUST UFM.USE.MIGHT UFM.USE.MUST UNINIT.HEAP.MIGHT UNINIT.HEAP.MUST UNINIT.STACK.ARRAY.MIGHT UNINIT.STACK.ARRAY.MUST UNINIT.STACK.ARRAY.PARTIAL.MUST UNINIT.STACK.MIGHT UNINIT.STACK.MUST | |||||||
LDRA tool suite |
| 42 D, 53 D, 77 D, 1 J, 71 S, 565 S | Partially implemented | ||||||
Parasoft C/C++test |
| CERT_CPP-EXP54-a | Do not use resources that have been freed | ||||||
Parasoft Insure++ | Runtime detection | ||||||||
Polyspace Bug Finder |
| CERT C++: EXP54-CPP | Checks for:
Rule partially covered. | ||||||
PVS-Studio |
| V758, V1041, V1099 | |||||||
RuleChecker |
| return-reference-local | Partially checked |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Related Guidelines
Bibliography
[Coverity 2007] |
[ISO/IEC 14882-2014] | Subclause 3.8, "Object Lifetime" Subclause 8.5.4, "List-Initialization" |
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