Classes containing private, confidential, or otherwise sensitive data are best not copied. If a class is not meant to be copied, then failing to define copy mechanisms, such as a copy constructor, is insufficient to prevent copying.
Java's object cloning mechanism allows an attacker to manufacture new instances of a class , without executing its constructor. The new instances are made by copying the memory images of existing objects rather than by executing the class's constructor. Often, this is not an acceptable unacceptable way of creating new objects. By misusing An attacker can misuse the clone feature , an attacker can to manufacture multiple instances of a singleton class, create serious thread-safety issues by subclassing and cloning the subclass, bypass security checks within the constructor, and violate the invariants of critical data.
Classes that have security checks in their constructors must beware of finalization attacks, as explained in OBJ11-J. Be wary of letting constructors throw exceptions.
Classes that are not sensitive but maintain other invariants must be sensitive to the possibility of malicious subclasses accessing or manipulating their data and possibly invalidating their invariants (see OBJ04-J. Provide mutable classes with copy functionality to safely allow passing instances to untrusted code for more information).
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example derives some functional behavior from the implementation of the class java.lang.StringBuffer
, prior to JDK v1.5. A class SensitiveClass
is defined defines class SensitiveClass
, which contains a character array used to internally hold a filenamefile name, along with a Boolean
shared variable, initialized to false. This data is not meant to be copied; consequently, SensitiveClass
lacks a copy constructor.
Code Block | ||
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| ||
class SensitiveClass { private char[] filename; private Boolean shared = false; SensitiveClass(String filename) { this.filename = filename.toCharArray(); } final void replace() { if (!shared) { for(int i = 0; i < filename.length; i++) { filename[i]= 'x' ;} } } final String get() { if (!shared) { shared = true; return String.valueOf(filename); } else { throw new IllegalStateException("Failed to get instance"); } } final void printFilename() { System.out.println(String.valueOf(filename)); } } |
When a client requests a String
instance by invoking the get()
method, the shared
flag is set. Operations that can modify the array are subsequently prohibited, to To maintain the array's consistency with the returned String
object. Consequently, operations that can modify the array are subsequently prohibited. As a result, the replace()
method designed to replace all elements of the array with an 'x
', cannot execute normally when the flag is set. Java's cloning feature provides a way to illegally work around circumvent this constraint even though SensitiveClass
does not implement the Cloneable
interface.
This class can be exploited by a malicious class (shown below) , shown in the following noncompliant code example, that subclasses the non-final nonfinal SensitiveClass
and provides a public clone()
method. :
Code Block | ||
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class MaliciousSubclass extends SensitiveClass implements Cloneable { protected MaliciousSubclass(String filename) { super(filename); } @Override public MaliciousSubclass clone() { // Well-behaved clone() method MaliciousSubclass s = null; try { s = (MaliciousSubclass)super.clone(); } catch(Exception e) { System.out.println("not cloneable"); } return s; } public static void main(String[] args) { MaliciousSubclass ms1 = new MaliciousSubclass("file.txt"); MaliciousSubclass ms2 = ms1.clone(); // Creates a copy String s = ms1.get(); // Returns filename System.out.println(s); // Filename is "file.txt" ms2.replace(); // Replaces all characters with 'x' // Both ms1.get() and ms2.get() will subsequently return filename = 'xxxxxxxx' ms1.printFilename(); // Filename becomes 'xxxxxxxx' ms2.printFilename(); // Filename becomes 'xxxxxxxx' } } |
It proceeds to create its own instance (ms1
) The malicious class creates an instance ms1
and produces a second one (instance ms2
), by cloning the first. It then obtains a new String
filename
object by invoking the get()
method on the first instance. At this point, the shared
flag is set to true. As Because the second instance (ms2
) does not have its shared flag set to true, it is possible to alter the first instance ms1
using the replace()
method. This downplays approach obviates any security efforts and severely violates the class's invariants.
Compliant Solution (Final Class)
The easiest way to prevent malicious subclasses is to declare SensitiveClass
to be final.
Code Block | ||
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final class SensitiveClass { // ... } |
Compliant Solution (Final clone()
)
Sensitive classes should not neither implement the Cloneable
interface . If the class extends nor provide a copy constructor. Sensitive classes that extend from a superclass that implements Cloneable
(and is consequently are cloneable ), its as a result) must provide a clone()
method should throw that throws a CloneNotSupportedException
. This exception must be caught and handled by the client code. A sensitive class that does not implement Cloneable
must also follow this advice because it inherits the clone()
method from Object
. The class can prevent subclasses from being made cloneable by defining a final
clone()
method that always fails.
Code Block | ||
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final class SensitiveClass { // ... public final SensitiveClass Cloneclone() throws CloneNotSupportedException { throw new CloneNotSupportedException(); } } |
It is also required to declare SensitiveClass
final
to avoid malicious subclassing. This stops an attacker from subclassing the sensitive class and creating copies of the subclass.
An alternative is to declare the clone()
method final
so that it cannot be overridden. The implementation must still throw a CloneNotSupportedException
This class fails to prevent malicious subclasses but does protect the data in SensitiveClass
. Its methods are protected by being declared final. For more information on handling malicious subclasses, see OBJ04-J. Provide mutable classes with copy functionality to safely allow passing instances to untrusted code.
Risk Assessment
Failure to make sensitive classes noncloneable can severely violate noncopyable can permit violations of class invariants and provide malicious subclasses with the opportunity to to exploit the code to create new instances of objects, even in the presence of the default security manager (in the absence of custom security checks).
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|
OBJ07-J |
Medium |
Probable |
Medium | P8 | L2 |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Bibliography
Wiki Markup |
---|
\[[Mcgraw 1998|AA. Bibliography#Mcgraw 98]\]
\[[Wheeler 2003|AA. Bibliography#Wheeler 03]\] 10.6. Java
\[[MITRE 2009|AA. Bibliography#MITRE 09]\] [CWE ID 498|http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/498.html] "Information Leak through Class Cloning", [CWE ID 491|http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/491.html] "Public cloneable() Method Without Final (aka 'Object Hijack')" |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CodeSonar |
| JAVA.CLASS.CLONE.CNC | clone Non-cloneable (Java) | ||||||
Parasoft Jtest |
| CERT.OBJ07.MCNC | Make your classes noncloneable |
Related Guidelines
CWE-498, Cloneable Class Containing Sensitive Information |
Bibliography
"Twelve Rules for Developing More Secure Java Code" | |
Section 10.6, "Java" |
...
MSC04-J. Do not use Object.equals() to compare cryptographic keys 49. Miscellaneous (MSC) MSC06-J. Avoid memory leaks