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Interpretation of Java format strings is stricter than that in languages such as C. The implementations in the standard libraries throw appropriate exceptions The java.io package includes a PrintStream class that has two equivalent formatting methods: format() and printf(). System.out and System.err are PrintStream objects, allowing PrintStream methods to be invoked on the standard output and error streams. The risks from using these methods are not as high as from using similar functions in C or C++  [Seacord 2013]. The standard library implementations throw an exception when any conversion argument fails to match the corresponding flag. This approach reduces opportunities for malicious exploits. Nevertheless, malicious user input can exploit format strings and can cause information leaks or denial of service. Therefore strings from an untrusted source shall not format specifier. Although throwing an exception helps mitigate against exploits, if untrusted data is incorporated into a format string, it can result in an information leak or allow a denial-of-service attack. Consequently, unsanitized input from an untrusted source must never be incorporated into format strings.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example demonstrates an information leak issue. It accepts a credit card expiration date as an input argument and uses it within the leaks information about a user's credit card. It incorporates untrusted data in a format string.

Code Block
bgColor#FFcccc

class Format {
  static Calendar c = new GregorianCalendar(1995, GregorianCalendar.MAY, 23);
  public static void main(String[] args) {  
    // args[0] should iscontain the credit card expiration date
    // args[0] canbut might contain either %1$tm, %1$te or %1$tY asformat malicious argumentsspecifiers
    // First argument prints 05 (May), second prints 23 (day) and third prints 1995 (year)
    // Perform comparison with c, if it doesn't match print the following line
    System.out.printf(System.out.format(
      args[0] + " did not match! HINT: It was issued on %1$terd of some month", c
    );
  }
}

In the absence of proper input validation, an attacker can determine the date against which the input is being verified , perhaps by supplying an input string that includes one of the format string arguments %1$tm, %1$te, or %1$tY format specifiers. In this example, these format specifiers print 05 (May), 23 (day), and 1995 (year), respectively.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution ensures that excludes untrusted user generated input is excluded from format strings.the format string. Although arg[0] still may contain one or more format specifiers, they are now rendered inert. 

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff

class Format {
  static Calendar c = 
    new GregorianCalendar(1995, GregorianCalendar.MAY, 23);
  public static void main(String[] args) {  
    // args[0] is the credit card expiration date
    // Perform comparison with c, 
    // if it doesn't match, print the following line
    System.out.printf("The inputformat(
      "%s did not match! HINT: It was issued on %1$terd%terd of some month", 
      args[0], c
    );
  }
}

Risk Assessment

Allowing user input to taint Incorporating untrusted data in a format string may cause result in information leaks or allow a denial-of-service attack.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

IDS20

IDS06-J

medium

Medium

unlikely

Unlikely

medium

Medium

P4

L3

Automated Detection

Static analysis tools that perform taint analysis can diagnose some violations of this rule.

Related Vulnerabilities

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

Other Languages

ToolVersionCheckerDescription
The Checker Framework

Include Page
The Checker Framework_V
The Checker Framework_V

Tainting CheckerTrust and security errors (see Chapter 8)
Parasoft Jtest
Include Page
Parasoft_V
Parasoft_V
CERT.IDS06.VAFSEnsure the correct number of arguments for varargs methods with format strings
Klocwork

Include Page
Klocwork_V
Klocwork_V

SV.EXEC
SV.EXEC.DIR
SV.EXEC.ENV
SV.EXEC.LOCAL
SV.EXEC.PATH
Implemented

Related Guidelines

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ISO/IEC TR 24772:2013

Injection [RST]

MITRE CWE

CWE-134, Uncontrolled Format String

Bibliography


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Bibliography

Wiki Markup
\[[API 2006|AA. Bibliography#API 06]\] [Class Formatter|http://java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/Formatter.html]
\[[MITRE 2009|AA. Bibliography#MITRE 09]\] [CWE-134|http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/134.html] "Uncontrolled Format String"
\[[Seacord 2005|AA. Bibliography#Seacord 05]\] Chapter 6, Formatted Output

IDS19-J. Sanitize untrusted data passed to a regex      Image Removed      IDS21-J. Canonicalize path names before validating them