Code that uses synchronization can sometimes be enigmatic and tricky to debug. Misuse of synchronization primitives is a common source of implementation errors. An analysis of the JDK 1.6.0 source code unveiled at least 31 bugs that fell into this category. \[[Pugh 08|AA. Java References#Pugh 08]\] Wiki Markup
There are several oversights and programming errors associated with the improper use of locks, for example:
...
of concurrency issues. Synchronizing on objects that may be reused can result in deadlock and nondeterministic behavior. Consequently, programs must never synchronize on objects that may be reused.
Noncompliant Code Example (
...
Boolean
Lock Object)
This noncompliant code example locks synchronizes on a public
nonfinal Boolean
lock object.
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public Object publicLockprivate final Boolean initialized = new Object()Boolean.FALSE; privatepublic void doSomething() { synchronized (publicLockinitialized) { // body... } } |
It The Boolean
type is possible for untrusted code to change the value of the lock object and foil all attempts to synchronizeunsuitable for locking purposes because it allows only two values: true and false. Boolean literals containing the same value share unique instances of the Boolean
class in the Java Virtual Machine (JVM). In this example, initialized
refers to the instance corresponding to the value Boolean.FALSE
. If any other code were to inadvertently synchronize on a Boolean
literal with this value, the lock instance would be reused and the system could become unresponsive or could deadlock.
Noncompliant Code Example (
...
Boxed Primitive)
This noncompliant code example synchronizes locks on a nonfinal field and demonstrates no mutual exclusion propertiesboxed Integer
object.
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private int count = 0; private final Integer lockLock = new Integer(0); private count; // Boxed primitive Lock is shared public void doSomething() { synchronized (lockLock) { /* ... */ } } public void setLock(Integer lockvalue) { lock = lockValue; } |
This is because the thread that holds a lock on the nonfinal field object can modify the field's value to reference some other object. This might cause two threads that lock on the same field to actually not lock on the same object, causing them to execute critical sections of code simultaneously.
Compliant Solution (private
and final
lock object)
count++;
// ...
}
}
|
Boxed types may use the same instance for a range of integer values; consequently, they suffer from the same reuse problem as Boolean
constants. The wrapper object are reused when the value can be represented as a byte; JVM implementations are also permitted to reuse wrapper objects for larger ranges of values. While use of the intrinsic lock associated with the boxed Integer
wrapper object is insecure; instances of the Integer
object constructed using the new
operator (new Integer(value)
) are unique and not reused. In general, locks on any data type that contains a boxed value are insecure.
Compliant Solution (Integer)
This compliant solution locks on a nonboxed Integer
, using a variant of the private lock object idiom. The doSomething()
method synchronizes using the intrinsic lock of the Integer
instance, Lock
This compliant solution synchronizes using a lock object that is declared as final
.
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private int count = 0; private final Integer lockLock = new Integer(0count); privatepublic void doSomething() { synchronized(lock) { /* ... */ } } // setValue() is disallowed |
Noncompliant Code Example (Boolean
lock object)
Wiki Markup |
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This noncompliant code example uses a {{Boolean}} field for synchronization. However, because the field is non-final, there can be two possible valid values ({{true}} and {{false}}, discounting {{null}}) that a {{Boolean}} can assume. Consequently, any other code that synchronizes on the same value can cause unresponsiveness and deadlocks \[[Findbugs 08|AA. Java References#Findbugs 08]\]. |
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private Boolean initialized = Boolean.FALSE; synchronized(initialized) { if (!initialized) { // Perform initialization initialized = Boolean.TRUE;(Lock) { count++; // ... } } |
Even if the field were final, the code would use the intrinsic lock of Boolean.FALSE
or Boolean.TRUE
, which are accessible throughout the program. Consequently any other code could lock these objects and cause deadlock.
Noncompliant Code Example (Boxed primitive)
This noncompliant code example locks on a boxed Integer
object.
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int lock = 0;
final Integer Lock = lock; // Boxed primitive Lock will be shared
synchronized(Lock) { /* ... */ }
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Boxed types are allowed to use the same instance for a range of integer values and consequently, suffer from the same problems as Boolean
constants. Note that the boxed Integer
primitive is shared and not the Integer
object (new Integer(value)
) itself. In general, holding a lock on any data structure that contains a boxed value is insecure.
When explicitly constructed, an Integer
object has a unique reference and its own intrinsic lock that is distinct not only from other Integer
objects, but also from boxed integers that have the same value. While this is an acceptable solution, it can cause maintenance problems because developers can incorrectly assume that boxed integers are also appropriate lock objects. A more appropriate solution is to synchronize on a private final lock object as described in the final compliant solution for this rule.
Noncompliant Code Example (Interned String
Object
...
)
This noncompliant code example locks on a final an interned String
literal object.
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// This bug was found in jetty-6.1.3 BoundedThreadPool private final String lock = new String("oneLOCK").intern(); public void doSomething() { synchronized (lock) { /*/ ... */ } } |
According to the Java API class java.lang.String
documentation [API 2006] A {{String}} literal is a constant and is interned. According to the Java API \[[API 06|AA. Java References#API 06]\], class {{String}} documentation: Wiki Markup
When the
intern()
method is invoked, if the pool already contains a string equal to thisString
object as determined by theequals(Object)
method, then the string from the pool is returned. Otherwise, thisString
object is added to the pool and a reference to thisString
object is returned.
Consequently, a an interned String
constant object behaves like a global variable in the JVM. As demonstrated in this noncompliant code example, even if each when every instance of an object maintains its own lock
field lock
, the field points fields all refer to a common String
constant in the JVM. Trusted code that locks on the same String
constant renders all synchronization attempts inadequate. Likewise. Locking on String
constants has the same reuse problem as locking on Boolean
constants.
Additionally, hostile code from any other package can exploit this vulnerability.
Noncompliant Code Example (getClass()
lock object)
Synchronizing on return values of the Object.getClass()
method, rather than a class literal can also be counterproductive. Whenever the implementing class is subclassed, the subclass locks on a completely different Class
object (subclass's type).
Code Block | ||
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synchronized(getClass()) { /* ... */ }
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Section 4.3.2 "The Class Object" of the Java Language specification \[[JLS 05|AA. Java References#JLS 05]\] describes how method synchronization works: |
A class method that is declared
synchronized
synchronizes on the lock associated with theClass
object of the class.
This does not mean that a subclass using getClass()
can only synchronize on the Class
object of the base class. In fact, it will lock on its own Class
object, which may or may not be want the programmer had in mind.
Compliant Solution (class name qualification)
Explicitly define the name of the class through name qualification (superclass in this example) in the synchronization block.
Code Block | ||
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synchronized(SuperclassName.class) {
// ...
}
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The class object being synchronized must not be accessible to hostile code. If the class is package-private, then external packages may not access the Class object, ensuring its trustworthiness as an intrinsic lock object. For more information, see CON04-J. Use the private lock object idiom instead of the Class object's intrinsic locking mechanism.
Compliant Solution (Class.forName()
)
This compliant solution uses the Class.forName()
method to synchronize on the superclass's Class
object.
Code Block | ||
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synchronized(Class.forName("SuperclassName")) {
// ...
}
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Again, the class object being synchronized must not be accessible to hostile code, as discussed in the previous example.
...
, if the class is accessible. See rule LCK00-J. Use private final lock objects to synchronize classes that may interact with untrusted code for more information.
Noncompliant Code Example (String
Literal)
This noncompliant code example uses a nonstatic lock object to guard access to a static
field. If two Runnable
tasks, each consisting of a thread are started, they will create two instances of the lock object and lock on each separately. This does not prevent either thread from observing an inconsistent value of counter
because the increment operation on volatile
fields is not atomic in the absence of proper synchronization. locks on a final String
literal.
Code Block | ||
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class// CountBoxesThis implementsbug Runnablewas { found static volatile int counter; // ... Objectin jetty-6.1.3 BoundedThreadPool private final String lock = new Object(); "LOCK"; public void rundoSomething() { synchronized synchronized(lock) { counter++; // ... } } public static void main(String[] args) { Runnable r1 = new CountBoxes(); Thread t1 = new Thread(r1); Runnable r2 = new CountBoxes(); Thread t2 = new Thread(r2); t1.start(); t2.start(); } } |
Noncompliant Code Example (method synchronization for static
data)
String
literals are constant and are automatically interned. Consequently, this example suffers from the same pitfalls as the preceding noncompliant code example.
Compliant Solution (String
Instance)
This compliant solution locks on a noninterned String
instanceThis noncompliant code example uses method synchronization to protect access to a static
class member.
Code Block | ||
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classprivate CountBoxesfinal implementsString Runnablelock { = static volatile int counter; // ... public synchronized void runnew String("LOCK"); public void doSomething() { synchronized counter++; (lock) { // ... } // ... } |
The problem is that this lock is associated with each instance of the class and not with the class object itself. Consequently, threads constructed using different Runnable
instances may observe inconsistent values of the counter
A String
instance differs from a String
literal. The instance has a unique reference and its own intrinsic lock that is distinct from other String
object instances or literals. Nevertheless, a better approach is to synchronize on a private final lock object, as shown in the following compliant solution.
Compliant Solution (
...
Private Final Lock Object
)
This compliant solution declares the lock object as static
and consequently, ensures the atomicity of the increment operationsynchronizes on a private final lock object. This is one of the few cases in which a java.lang.Object
instance is useful.
Code Block | ||
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class CountBoxes implements Runnable { static int counter; // ... private static final Object lock = new Object(); public void rundoSomething() { synchronized synchronized(lock) { counter++; // ... } // ... } |
There is no requirement of declaring the counter
variable as volatile
when synchronization is used.
Noncompliant Code Example (ReentrantLock
lock object)
This noncompliant code example incorrectly uses a ReentrantLock
as the lock object.
Code Block | ||
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final Lock lock = new ReentrantLock();
synchronized(lock) { /* ... */ }
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This problem usually comes up in practice when refactoring from intrinsic locking to the java.util.concurrent
utilities.
Compliant Solution (lock()
and unlock()
)
Instead of using the intrinsic locks of objects that implement the Lock
interface, including ReentrantLock
, use the lock()
and unlock()
methods provided by the Lock
interface.
Code Block | ||
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final Lock lock = new ReentrantLock();
lock.lock();
try {
// ...
} finally {
lock.unlock();
}
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Noncompliant Code Example (collection view)
Finally, it is more important to recognize the entities with whom synchronization is required rather than indiscreetly scavenging for variables or objects to synchronize on. This noncompliant code example synchronizes on the view of a synchronized map.
Code Block | ||
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Map<Integer, String> m = Collections.synchronizedMap(new HashMap<Integer, String>());
Set<Integer> s = m.keySet();
synchronized(s) { // Incorrectly synchronizes on s
for(Integer k : s) {
// Do something
}
}
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Wiki Markup |
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When using synchronization wrappers, the synchronization object must be the {{Collection}} object. The synchronization is necessary to enforce atomicity ([CON07-J. Do not assume that a grouping of calls to independently atomic methods is atomic]). This noncompliant code example demonstrates inappropriate synchronization resulting from locking on a Collection view instead of the Collection object itself \[[Tutorials 08|AA. Java References#Tutorials 08]\]. |
Wiki Markup |
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The Collections class documentation \[[API 06|AA. Java References#API 06]\] says: |
It is imperative that the user manually synchronize on the returned map when iterating over any of its collection views... Failure to follow this advice may result in non-deterministic behavior.
Compliant Solution (collection lock object)
This compliant solution correctly synchronizes on the Collection
object instead of the Collection
view.
Code Block | ||
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// ...
Map<Integer, String> m = Collections.synchronizedMap(new HashMap<Integer, String>());
synchronized(m) { // Synchronize on m, not s
for(Integer k : m) {
// Do something
}
}
|
Risk Assessment
Synchronizing on an incorrect variable can provide a false sense of thread safety and result in nondeterministic behavior.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CON02- J | medium | probable | medium | P8 | L2 |
Automated Detection
TODO
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
References
Wiki Markup |
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\[[API 06|AA. Java References#API 06]\] Class String, Collections
\[[Pugh 08|AA. Java References#Pugh 08]\] "Synchronization"
\[[Miller 09|AA. Java References#Miller 09]\] Locking
\[[Tutorials 08|AA. Java References#Tutorials 08]\] [Wrapper Implementations|http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/collections/implementations/wrapper.html] |
For more information on using an Object
as a lock, see rule LCK00-J. Use private final lock objects to synchronize classes that may interact with untrusted code.
Risk Assessment
A significant number of concurrency vulnerabilities arise from locking on the wrong kind of object. It is important to consider the properties of the lock object rather than simply scavenging for objects on which to synchronize.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
LCK01-J | medium | probable | medium | P8 | L2 |
Automated Detection
Some static analysis tools can detect violations of this rule.
Tool | Version | Checker | Description | ||||||
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The Checker Framework |
| Lock Checker | Concurrency and lock errors (see Chapter 6) | ||||||
Parasoft Jtest |
| CERT.LCK01.SCS | Do not synchronize on constant Strings | ||||||
PVS-Studio |
| V6070 | |||||||
SonarQube |
| S1860 | |||||||
ThreadSafe |
| CCE_CC_REUSEDOBJ_SYNC | Implemented |
Bibliography
[API 2006] | Class String, Collections |
Locking | |
Synchronization | |
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VOID CON00-J. Synchronize access to shared mutable variables 11. Concurrency (CON) CON03-J. Do not use background threads during class initialization