A mutable input has the characteristic that its value may change between different accesses. This opens a window of opportunity for exploiting race conditions. A vary; that is, multiple accesses may see differing values. This characteristic enables potential attacks that exploit race conditions. For example, a time-of-check, time-of-use (TOCTOU) inconsistency results vulnerability may result when a field contains a value that passes the initial validation and security checks but mutates to a different value during actual changes before use.
Additionally, Returning references to an object's state may get corrupted if it returns references to internal mutable components . Accessors must consequently provides an attacker with the opportunity to corrupt the state of the object. Consequently, accessor methods must return defensive copies of internal mutable objects . (OBJ11see OBJ05-J. Defensively copy Do not return references to private mutable class members before returning their references) for more information).
Noncompliant Code Example
A TOCTOU inconsistency exists in this This noncompliant code example contains a TOCTOU vulnerability. As Because cookie
is a mutable input, an attacker may can cause the cookie it to expire between the initial check (the hasExpired()
call) and the actual use (the doLogic()
call).
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
public final class MutableDemo { // java.net.HttpCookie is mutable public void useMutableInput(HttpCookie cookie) { if (cookie == null) { throw new NullPointerException(); } // Check ifwhether cookie has expired if (cookie.hasExpired()) { // Cookie is no longer valid,; handle condition by throwing an exception } // Cookie may have expired since time of check resulting in // an exception doLogic(cookie); } } |
Compliant Solution
The problem is alleviated by creating a copy of This compliant solution avoids the TOCTOU vulnerability by copying the mutable input and using it to perform operations so that the original object is left unscathed. This can be realized by performing all operations on the copy. Consequently, an attacker's changes to the mutable input cannot affect the copy. Acceptable techniques include using a copy constructor or implementing the java.lang.Cloneable
interface and declaring a public
public clone
method when the class is final
or by using a copy constructor. Performing a manual copy of object state within the caller becomes necessary if the ()
method (for classes not declared final). In cases such as HttpCookie
where the mutable class is declared final
(that final—that is, it cannot provide an accessible copy method). See the guideline OBJ10method—perform a manual copy of the object state within the caller (see OBJ04-J. Provide mutable classes with a clone method copy functionality to safely allow passing instances to untrusted code safely for more information). Note that any input validation must be performed on the copy and not rather than on the original object.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
public final class MutableDemo { // java.net.HttpCookie is mutable public void useMutableInput(HttpCookie cookie) { if (cookie == null) { throw new NullPointerException(); } // Create copy cookie = (HttpCookie)cookie.clone(); // Check ifwhether cookie has expired if (cookie.hasExpired()) { // Cookie is no longer valid,; handle condition by throwing an exception } doLogic(cookie); } } |
Compliant Solution
Sometimes, the copy constructor or the Some copy constructors and clone()
method returns methods perform a shallow copy of the original instance. For example, invocation of clone()
on an array results in creation of an array instance that shares references to whose elements have the same elements values as the original instance. However, a deep copy that involves element duplication is required when the input consists of mutable componentsThis shallow copy is sufficient for arrays of primitive types but fails to protect against TOCTOU vulnerabilities when the elements are references to mutable objects, such as an array of cookies. Such cases require a deep copy that also duplicates the reference objects.
This compliant solution exemplifies this condition.demonstrates correct use both of a shallow copy (for the array of int
) and of a deep copy (for the array of cookies):
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
public void deepCopy(int[] ints, HttpCookie[] cookies) { if (ints == null || cookies == null) { throw new NullPointerException(); } // Shallow copy int[] intsCopy = ints.clone(); // Deep copy HttpCookie[] cookiesCopy = new HttpCookie[cookies.length]; for (int i = 0; i < cookies.length; i++) { // Manually create copy of each element in array cookiesCopy[i] = (HttpCookie)cookies[i].clone(); } doLogic(intsCopy, cookiesCopy); } |
Noncompliant Code Example
When the class of a mutable input type is non-final, a malicious subclass may override the is nonfinal or is an interface, an attacker can write a subclass that maliciously overrides the parent class's clone()
method. This is a serious issue unless the non-final input defends against itThe attacker's clone()
method can subsequently subvert defensive copying. This noncompliant code example demonstrates this weakness.:
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
// java.util.ArrayListCollection is mutable and non-finalan interface public void copyNonFinalInputcopyInterfaceInput(ArrayListCollection<String> listcollection) { doLogic(listcollection.clone()); } |
Compliant Solution
To copy mutable inputs having a non-final type, create This compliant solution protects against potential malicious overriding by creating a new instance of the ArrayList
. This nonfinal mutable input, using the expected class rather than the class of the potentially malicious argument. The newly created instance can be forwarded to any code capable of modifying it.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
// java.util.ArrayList is mutable and non-final
public void copyNonFinalInput(ArrayList list) {
// Create new instance of declared input type
list = new ArrayList(list);
doLogic(list);
}
|
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example uses the Collection
interface as an input parameter and directly passes it to doLogic()
.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
// java.util.Collection is an interface
public void copyInterfaceInput(Collection<String> collection) {
doLogic(collection);
}
|
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution instantiates a new ArrayList
and forwards it to the doLogic()
method.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
public void copyInterfaceInput(Collection<String> collection) {
// Convert input to trusted implementation
collection = new ArrayList(collection);
doLogic(collection);
}
|
Some objects appear to be immutable because they have no mutator methods. For example, the java.lang.CharacterSequenceCharSequence
interface describes an immutable sequence of characters. It should be noted that if the underlying implementation on which the CharacterSequence
is based changes, the value of the CharacterSequence
also changesNote, however, that a variable of type CharSequence
is a reference to an underlying object of some other class that implements the CharSequence
interface; that other class may be mutable. When the underlying object changes, the CharSequence
changes. Essentially, the java.lang.CharSequence
interface omits methods that would permit object mutation through that interface but lacks any guarantee of true immutability. Such objects must still be defensively copied before use. It is also permissible to use For the case of the java.lang.CharSequence
interface, one permissible approach is to obtain an immutable copy of the characters by using the toString()
method to make them immutable before passing them as parameters. Mutable fields must always never should not be stored in static variables. To avoid exposing mutable fields by storing them in static
variables, creating When there is no other alternative, create defensive copies of the fields is highly recommendedto avoid exposing them to untrusted code.
Risk Assessment
Failing to create a copy of a mutable input may enable an attacker to exploit a TOCTOU vulnerability and at other times, result in a TOCTOU vulnerability or expose internal mutable components to untrusted code.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|
OBJ06-J |
Medium |
Probable |
High | P4 | L3 |
Automated Detection
...
Tool | Version | Checker | Description | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Parasoft Jtest |
| CERT.OBJ06.CPCL CERT.OBJ06..MPT CERT.OBJ06.SMO CERT.OBJ06.MUCOP | Enforce returning a defensive copy in 'clone()' methods Do not pass user-given mutable objects directly to certain types Do not store user-given mutable objects directly into variables Provide mutable classes with copy functionality | ||||||
SonarQube |
| S2384 | Mutable members should not be stored or returned directly Implemented for Arrays, Collections and Dates. |
Related Vulnerabilities
CVE-2012-0507 describes an exploit that managed to bypass Java's applet security sandbox and run malicious code on a remote user's machine. The exploit created a data structure that is normally impossible to create in Java but was built using deserialization, and the deserialization process did not perform defensive copies of the deserialized data. See the code examples in SER07-J. Do not use the default serialized form for classes with implementation-defined invariants for more information.
Related Guidelines
Guideline 6-2 / MUTABLE-2: Create copies of mutable output values |
Bibliography
Item 39, "Make Defensive Copies When Needed" | |
"Returning References to Internal Mutable State" |
...
TODO
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
References
Wiki Markup |
---|
\[[SCG 07|AA. Java References#SCG 07]\] Guideline 2-1 Create a copy of mutable inputs and outputs
\[[Bloch 08|AA. Java References#Bloch 08]\] Item 39: Make defensive copies when needed
\[[Pugh 09|AA. Java References#Pugh 09]\] Returning references to internal mutable state |
FIO30-J. Do not log sensitive information 09. Input Output (FIO) FIO06-J. Ensure all resources are properly closed when they are no longer needed