Java requires that each method must address every checked exception that can be thrown during its execution either by handling the exception within a try-catch
block or by declaring that the exception can propagate out of the method (via the throws
clause). Unfortunately, there are a few techniques that permit undeclared checked exceptions can to be thrown at runtime. Consequently, callers cannot Such techniques defeat the ability of caller methods to use the throws
clause to determine the complete set of checked exceptions that could propagate from an invoked method. David: your paragraph about checked vs. unchecked exceptions goes here.Clients or callers need to know which exceptions the underlying code can throw. Consequently, developers should – and developers of security critical software must — sufficiently document all possible unchecked and undeclared checked exceptions that can be thrown by a methodConsequently, such techniques must not be used to throw undeclared checked exceptions.
Noncompliant Code Example (Class.newInstance()
)
This noncompliant code example is insecure both because it can throw throws undeclared checked exceptions and also because it uses the sun.misc.Unsafe
class. All sun.*
classes are unsupported and undocumented because their use can cause portability and backward compatibility issues.
Classes that are loaded by the bootstrap class loader have the permissions needed to call the static
factory method Unsafe.getUnsafe()
. Arranging to have an arbitrary class loaded by the bootstrap class loader without modifying the sun.boot.class.path
system property can be difficult. However, an alternative way to gain access is to change the accessibility of the field that holds an instance of Unsafe
through the use of reflection. This works only when permitted by the current security manager (which would violate guideline ENV04-J. Do not grant ReflectPermission with target suppressAccessChecks.) Given access to Unsafe
, a call can throw an undeclared checked exception by calling the Unsafe.throwException()
method.
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import java.io.IOException;
import java.lang.reflect.Field;
import sun.misc.Unsafe;
public class UnsafeCode {
public static void main( String[] args ) throws SecurityException, NoSuchFieldException,
IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException {
Field f = Unsafe.class.getDeclaredField("theUnsafe");
field.setAccessible(true);
Unsafe u = (Unsafe) field.get(null);
u.throwException(new IOException("No need to declare this checked exception"));
}
}
|
Noncompliant Code Example
. The undeclaredThrow()
method takes a Throwable
argument and invokes a function that will throw the argument without declaring it. Although undeclaredThrow()
catches any exceptions the function declares that it might throw, it nevertheless throws the argument it is given without regard to whether the argument is one of the declared exceptions. This noncompliant code example also violates ERR07-J. Do not throw RuntimeException, Exception, or Throwable. However, because of exception ERR08-J-EX0, it does not violate ERR08-J. Do not catch NullPointerException or any of its ancestors.
Any checked exception thrown by the default constructor of java.lang.Class.newInstance()
is propagated to the caller , even though Class.newInstance()
declares that it throws only InstantiationException
and IllegalAccessException
. This noncompliant code example demonstrates one way to use Class.newInstance()
to throw arbitrary exceptions, whether checked or and unchecked .exceptions:
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public class BadNewInstanceNewInstance { private static Throwable throwable; private BadNewInstanceNewInstance() throws Throwable { throw throwable; } public static synchronized void undeclaredThrow(Throwable throwable) { // These twoexceptions should not be passed if (throwable instanceof IllegalAccessException || throwable instanceof InstantiationException) { throw new IllegalArgumentException(); // Unchecked, no declaration required } throw new IllegalArgumentException(); } BadNewInstanceNewInstance.throwable = throwable; try { // nextNext line throws the Throwable argument passed in above, // even though the throws clause of class.newInstance fails // to declare that this may happen; see JavaDoc BadNewInstanceNewInstance.class.newInstance(); } catch (InstantiationException e) { /* unreachableUnreachable */ } } catch (IllegalAccessException e) { /* unreachableUnreachable */ } } finally { // Avoid memory leak BadNewInstanceNewInstance.throwable = null; } } } public class UndeclaredException { public static void main(String[] args) { // No declared checked exceptions BadNewInstanceNewInstance.undeclaredThrow( new Exception("Any checked exception")); } } |
Noncompliant Code Example (Class.newInstance()
Workarounds)
When the programmer wishes to catch and handle the possible undeclared checked exceptions, the compiler refuses to believe that any can be thrown in the particular context. A simple workaround is to catch This noncompliant code example attempts to catch undeclared checked exceptions thrown by Class.newInstance()
. It catches Exception
and dynamically check checks whether the caught exception is an instance of the possible checked exception (carefully re-throwing rethrowing all other exceptions, of course), as shown below. This approach is fragile, because any unanticipated checked exception bypasses the dynamic check.
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public static void main(String[] args) { try { BadNewInstanceNewInstance.undeclaredThrow( new IOException("Any checked exception")); } catch (ExceptionThrowable e) { if (e instanceof IOException) { System.out.println("IOException occurred"); } else if (e instanceof RuntimeException) { throw (RuntimeException) e; } else { //some otherForward unknownto checked exceptionhandler } } } |
Compliant Solution
...
(Constructor.newInstance()
)
This compliant solution uses java.lang.reflect.
Use method {{ Wiki Markup Constructor.newInstance()
}} rather than {{Class.newInstance()
}}. The {{java.lang.reflect.Constructor.newInstance()
}} method wraps any exceptions thrown from within the constructor into a checked exception called {{InvocationTargetException}}. Use of the builder interface recommended by Bloch \[[Bloch 2008|AA. Bibliography#Bloch 08]\] is an acceptable alternative.
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// Generic type for a builder used to build any object of type T
public interface Builder<T> {
public T build();
}
|
A client can pass a builder to a method and request the creation of an object. A bounded wildcard type should be used to constrain the builder's type parameter. In the code snippet that follows, a US Dollar (USD) is built from coins of different denomination.
Code Block |
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USD buildCurrency(Builder<? extends denomination> currencyBuilder) { /* ... */ }
|
For further details on implementing the builder pattern, refer to guideline OBJ05-J. Prevent access to partially initialized objects. In the example described in that guideline, the Currency.Builder
class must implement the Builder interface highlighted in this recommendation.
method wraps any exceptions thrown from within the constructor into a checked exception called InvocationTargetException
.
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public static synchronized void undeclaredThrow(Throwable throwable) {
// These exceptions should not be passed
if (throwable instanceof IllegalAccessException ||
throwable instanceof InstantiationException) {
// Unchecked, no declaration required
throw new IllegalArgumentException();
}
NewInstance.throwable = throwable;
try {
Constructor constructor =
NewInstance.class.getConstructor(new Class<?>[0]);
constructor.newInstance();
} catch (InstantiationException e) { /* Unreachable */
} catch (IllegalAccessException e) { /* Unreachable */
} catch (InvocationTargetException e) {
System.out.println("Exception thrown: "
+ e.getCause().toString());
} finally { // Avoid memory leak
NewInstance.throwable = null;
}
}
|
Noncompliant Code Example (sun.misc.Unsafe
)
This noncompliant code example is insecure both because it can throw undeclared checked exceptions and because it uses the sun.misc.Unsafe
class. All sun.*
classes are unsupported and undocumented because their use can cause portability and backward compatibility issues.
Classes loaded by the bootstrap class loader have the permissions needed to call the static factory method Unsafe.getUnsafe()
. Arranging to have an arbitrary class loaded by the bootstrap class loader without modifying the sun.boot.class.path
system property can be difficult. However, an alternative way to gain access is to change the accessibility of the field that holds an instance of Unsafe
through the use of reflection. This approach works only when permitted by the current security manager (which would violate ENV03-J. Do not grant dangerous combinations of permissions). Given access to Unsafe
, a program can throw an undeclared checked exception by calling the Unsafe.throwException()
method.
Code Block | ||
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import java.io.IOException;
import java.lang.reflect.Field;
import sun.misc.Unsafe;
public class UnsafeCode {
public static void main(String[] args)
throws SecurityException, NoSuchFieldException,
IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException {
Field f = Unsafe.class.getDeclaredField("theUnsafe");
f.setAccessible(true);
Unsafe u = (Unsafe) f.get(null);
u.throwException(new IOException("No need to declare this checked exception"));
}
}
|
Noncompliant Code Example (Generic Exception)
...
An unchecked cast of a generic type with parameterized exception declaration can also result in unexpected checked exceptions. The compiler complains All such casts are diagnosed by the compiler unless the warnings are suppressed.
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interface Thr<EXC extends Exception> { void fn() throws EXC; } public class UndeclaredGen { static void undeclaredThrow() throws RuntimeException { @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") // Suppresses warnings Thr<RuntimeException> thr = (Thr<RuntimeException>)(Thr) new Thr<IOException>() { public void fn() throws IOException { throw new IOException(); } }; thr.fn(); } public static void main(String[] args) { undeclaredThrow(); } } |
Noncompliant Code Example
...
Wiki Markup |
---|
According to the Java API \[[API 2006|AA. Bibliography#API 06]\], class {{Thread}} documentation |
(Thread.stop(Throwable)
)
According to the Java API [API 2014], class Thread
:
[
\[{{ Wiki Markup Thread.stop()
}}\] may be used to generate exceptions that its target thread is unprepared to handle (including checked exceptions that the thread could not possibly throw, were it not for this method). For example, the following method is behaviorally identical to Java's throw operation, but circumvents the compiler's attempts to guarantee that the calling method has declared all of the checked exceptions that it may ] This method was originally designed to force a thread to stop and throw a givenThrowable
as an exception. It was inherently unsafe (seeThread.stop()
for details), and furthermore could be used to generate exceptions that the target thread was not prepared to handle.
For example, the following method is behaviorally identical to Java's throw operation but circumvents the compiler's attempts to guarantee that the calling method has declared all of the checked exceptions that it may throw.
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static void sneakyThrow(Throwable t) {
Thread.currentThread().stop(t);
}
|
Wiki Markup |
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It is also possible to disassemble a class, remove any declared checked exceptions and reassemble the class so that checked exceptions are thrown at runtime when the class is used \[[Roubtsov 2003|AA. Bibliography#Roubtsov 03]\]. Compiling against a class that declares the checked exception and supplying at runtime a class that lacks the declaration also suffices. Similarly, a compiler other than {{javac}} might handle checked exceptions differently. Undeclared checked exceptions can also be produced through crafted use of the {{sun.corba.Bridge}} class. All these methods are strongly discouraged. |
Compliant Solution
Note that the Thread.stop()
methods are deprecated, so this code also violates MET02-J. Do not use deprecated or obsolete classes or methods.
Noncompliant Code Example (Bytecode Manipulation)
It is also possible to disassemble a class, remove any declared checked exceptions, and reassemble the class so that checked exceptions are thrown at runtime when the class is used [Roubtsov 2003]. Compiling against a class that declares the checked exception and supplying at runtime a class that lacks the declaration can also result in undeclared checked exceptions. Undeclared checked exceptions can also be produced through crafted use of the sun.corba.Bridge
class. All of these practices are violations of this rule.Refrain from employing code (whether legitimate or hostile) that can throw undeclared checked exceptions. When this is unavoidable, explicitly document the behavior. Finally, never use deprecated methods such as Thread.stop()
(as required by MET15-J. Do not use deprecated or obsolete classes or methods).
Risk Assessment
Failure to document undeclared checked exceptions can result in checked exceptions that the caller is unprepared to handle, consequently violating the safety property.
Guideline Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
EXC10ERR06-J | low Low | unlikely Unlikely | high High | P1 | L3 |
Related
...
Guidelines
Bibliography
[API 2014] | Thread.stop(Throwable) |
Item 2, "Consider a Builder When Faced with Many Constructor Parameters" | |
| |
[JLS 2015] | |
| |
| |
"Scalability of Checked Exceptions" |
...
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this guideline on the CERT website.
Bibliography
Wiki Markup |
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\[[Bloch 2008|AA. Bibliography#Bloch 08]\] Item 2: "Consider a builder when faced with many constructor parameters"
\[[Goetz 2004b|AA. Bibliography#Goetz 04b]\]
\[[JLS 2005|AA. Bibliography#JLS 05]\] Chapter 11: Exceptions
\[[MITRE 2009|AA. Bibliography#MITRE 09]\] [CWE ID 703|http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/703.html] "Failure to Handle Exceptional Conditions", [CWE ID 248|http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/248.html] "Uncaught Exception"
\[[Roubtsov 2003|AA. Bibliography#Roubtsov 03]\]
\[[Schwarz 2004|AA. Bibliography#Schwarz 04]\]
\[[Venners 2003|AA. Bibliography#Venners 03]\] "Scalability of Checked Exceptions" |
ERR09-J. Prevent inadvertent calls to System.exit() or forced shutdown 06. Exceptional Behavior (EXC) EXC11-J. Restore prior object state on method failure