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The Java Language Specification (JLS), §15.17.3, "Remainder Operator %" [JLS 2013], states,

The remainder operation for operands that are integers after binary numeric promotion (§5.6.2) produces a result value such that (a/b)*b+(a%b) is equal to a. This identity holds even in the special case that the dividend is the negative integer of largest possible magnitude for its type and the divisor is -1 (the remainder is 0). It follows from this rule that the result of the remainder operation can be negative only if the dividend is negative, and can be positive only if the dividend is positive; moreover, the magnitude of the result is always less than the magnitude of the divisor.

The result of the remainder operator has the same sign as the dividend (the first operand in the expression).:

Code Block

5 % 3 produces 2
5 % (-3) produces 2
(-5) % 3 produces -2
(-5) % (-3) produces -2

As a result, code that depends upon on the remainder operation to always return a positive result is erroneous.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example uses the integer hashKey as an index into the hash array. A negative hash key produces a negative result from the remainder operator causing the lookup() method to throw java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException. 

Code Block
bgColor#FFcccc

private int SIZE = 16;	
public int[] hash = new int[SIZE];
	
public int lookup(int hashKey) {
  return hash[hashKey % SIZE];
}

A negative hash key produces a negative result from the remainder operator, causing the lookup() method to throw java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution calls the imod() method that , which always returns a positive remainder.:

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff

// methodMethod imod() gives non-negativenonnegative result
private int SIZE = 16;
public int[] hash = new int[SIZE];

private int imod(int i, int j) {
  int temp = i % j;
  return (temp < 0) ? -temp : temp; 
  // unaryUnary -minus will succeed without overflow  
                                    // because temp cannot be Integer.MIN_VALUE
}
	
public int lookup(int hashKey) {
  return hash[imod(hashKey, SIZE)];
}

...

Applicability

Incorrectly assuming a positive remainder from a remainder operation can result in erroneous code.

...

Automated Detection

Severity Tool Likelihood Version Remediation Cost Checker Priority Description Level
SonarQube

NUM01-J

low

unlikely

high

P1

L3

Automated Detection

Automated detection of uses of the % operator is straightforward. Sound determination of whether those uses correctly reflect the intent of the programmer is infeasible in the general case. Heuristic warnings could be useful.

Related Guidelines

C Secure Coding Standard: "INT10-C. Do not assume a positive remainder when using the % operator"

C++ Secure Coding Standard: "INT10-CPP. Do not assume a positive remainder when using the % operator"

Bibliography

Include Page
SonarQube_V
SonarQube_V
S2197 

 

Bibliography

[JLS 2013]

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[[JLS 2005

AA. Bibliography#JLS 05]]

[§15.17.3, "Remainder Operators"

http://java.sun.com/docs/books/jls/third_edition/html/expressions.html#15.17.3]

]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro>

Operator %"

 

...

Image Added Image Added Image Added03. Numeric Types and Operations (NUM)      03. Numeric Types and Operations (NUM)      NUM02-J. Avoid performing bitwise and arithmetic operations on the same data