Programmers often suppress checked exceptions by catching exceptions with an empty or trivial catch
block. Each catch
block must ensure that the program continues only with valid invariants. Consequently, the catch
block must either recover from the exceptional condition, re-throw rethrow the exception to allow the next nearest dynamically- enclosing catch
clause of a try
statement to recover, or throw an exception that is appropriate to the context of the catch
block.
Exceptions disrupt the expected control flow of the application. For example, no part of any expressions expression or statement that occurs in the try
block after the point from which the exception is thrown may appear to have been is evaluated. Consequently, exceptions must be handled appropriately. There are few valid Many reasons for suppressing exceptions ; the most common are cases where are invalid. For example, when the client cannot be expected to recover from the underlying problem. In these cases, it is good practice to allow the exception to propagate outwards rather than to catch and suppress the exception.
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This noncompliant code example catches IOException
but fails to handle simply prints the exception. 's stack trace:
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try { //... } catch (IOException ioe) { // Ignore ioe.printStackTrace(); } |
Noncompliant Code Example
Printing the exception's stack trace can be useful for debugging purposes, but results in the resulting program execution that is equivalent to suppressing the exception. Printing the stack trace can also result in unintentionally leaking leak information about the structure and state of the process to an attacker .
Code Block | ||
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try {
//...
} catch (IOException ioe) {
ioe.printStacktrace();
}
|
Note that even though the application reacts to the (see ERR01-J. Do not allow exceptions to expose sensitive information for more information). Note that even though this noncompliant code example reacts to the exception by printing out a stack trace, it then proceeds as though the exception were not thrown. That is, the behavior of the application is unaffected by the throwing of the exception , being thrown except that any expressions or statement that occurs statements that occur in the try
block after the point from which the exception is thrown are not evaluated.
Compliant Solution (Interactive)
This compliant solution attempts to recover from a handles a FileNotFoundException
by requesting that the user specify another file name.:
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boolean volatile validFlag = false; do { try { // ... // If requested file does not exist, throws FileNotFoundException // If requested file exists, sets a Boolean flag validFlag to true validFlag = true; } catch (FileNotFoundException e) { // Ask the user for a different file name } } while (validFlag != true); // Use the file |
The user is To comply with ERR01-J. Do not allow exceptions to expose sensitive information, the user should only be allowed to access only files in a user-specific directory. This prevents any other IOException
that escapes the loop from leaking potentially sensitive file system information. See guideline ERR06-J. Do not allow exceptions to expose sensitive information for additional information.
...
Compliant Solution (Exception Reporter)
Proper reporting of exceptional conditions is context-dependent. For example, GUI applications should report the exception in a graphical waymanner, such as through in an error dialog boxes or status windows. To preserve modularity, most box. Most library classes should be able to objectively determine how an exception should be reported to preserve modularity; they cannot rely on System.err
, on any particular logger, or on the availability of the windowing environment. As a result, library classes that wish to report exceptions should specify the API they will use to report exceptions:. This compliant solution specifies both an interface for reporting exceptions, which exports the report()
method, and a default exception reporter class that the library can use. The exception reporter can be overridden by subclasses.
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public interface | ||
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public interface Reporter { public void report(Throwable t); } publicclass ExceptionReporterPermission classextends ExceptionReporterPermission { // Exception reporter ... } public class ExceptionReporter { // Exception reporter that prints the exception // to the console (used as default) private static final Reporter PrintException = new Reporter() { public void report(Throwable t) { System.err.println(t.toString()); } }; // Stores the default reporter. // The default reporter can be changed by the user. private static Reporter Default = PrintException; // Helps change the default reporter back to // PrintException in the future public static Reporter getPrintException() { return PrintException; } public static Reporter getExceptionReporter() { return Default; } // May publicthrow statica voidSecurityException setExceptionReporter(Reporterwhich reporter)is {unchecked) public static void setExceptionReporter(Reporter tryreporter) { // Custom permission ExceptionReporterPermission perm = new ExceptionReporterPermission("exc.reporter"); // Custom permission SecurityManager sm = System.getSecurityManager(); if (sm != null) { // Check whether the caller has appropriate permissions sm.checkPermission(perm); } // Default = reporter; // Change Change the default exception reporter }Default catch (SecurityException se) { System.out.println("Not allowed"); // or log } } } |
This compliant solution specifies both an interface for reporting exceptions which exports the report()
method, and also a default exception reporter class that the library can use. The exception reporter can be overridden by subclasses.
= reporter;
}
}
|
The setExceptionReporter()
The setExceptionReporter
method prevents hostile code from maliciously installing a more verbose reporter that leaks sensitive information or that directs exception reports to an inappropriate location, such as the attacker's computer, by limiting attempts to change the exception reporter to callers that have the custom permission ExceptionReporterPermission
with target exc.reporter
. Refer to guideline SEC10-J. Define custom security permissions for fine grained security for additional information regarding defining custom permissions. Note that it would be inappropriate to use a default permission such as java.util.logging.LoggingPermission
here because the logging permission's purpose is to control execution of specific logging methods (such as Logger.setLevel
), rather than to control setting the exception reporter itself.
The library may subsequently use the exception reporter in catch
clauses:
The library may subsequently use the exception reporter in catch
clauses:
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try {
// ...
} catch (IOException warning) {
ExceptionReporter.getExceptionReporter(). | ||
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try {
// ...
} catch (IOException warning) {
ExceptionReporter.getExceptionReporter().report(warning);
// Recover from the exception...
}
|
Any client code that possesses the required permissions can override the ExceptionReporter
with a handler that logs the error , or provides a dialog box, or both. For instance example, a GUI client using Swing may require exceptions to be reported using a dialog box:
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ExceptionReportersExceptionReporter.setExceptionReporter(new ExceptionReporter() { public void report(Throwable exception) { JOptionPane.showMessageDialog(frame, exception.toString, exception.getClass().getName(), JOptionPane.ERROR_MESSAGE); }}); } |
Compliant Solution (Subclass Exception Reporter and Filter-Sensitive Exceptions)
Sometimes exceptions must be hidden from the user for security reasons ; (see guideline ERR06 ERR01-J. Do not allow exceptions to expose sensitive information). In such cases, one acceptable approach is to subclass the ExceptionReporter
class and add a filter()
method in addition to overriding the default report()
method.
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class MyExceptionReporter extends ExceptionReporter { private static final Logger logger = Logger.getLogger("com.organization.Log"); public static void report(Throwable t) { t try {= filter(t); if final Throwable filteredException = (t instanceof NonSensitiveException_1) ? t : filter((t != null) { logger.log(Level.FINEST, "Loggable exception occurred", t); } finally {} public static Exception // Do any necessary user reporting (show dialog box or send to console) if (filteredException instanceof NonSensitiveCommonExceptionfilter(Throwable t) { if (t instanceof SensitiveException1) { // Too sensitive, return nothing (so that no logging happens) logger.log(Level.FINEST, "Loggable exception occurred", t); return null; } else } if (t public static Exception filter(Throwable tinstanceof SensitiveException2) { if (t instanceof SensitiveForLoggingException_1) { // DoReturn nota logdefault sensitiveinsensitive informationexception (blacklist)instead return new SensitiveCommonExceptionFilteredSensitiveException(t); } // ... return new NonSensitiveCommonException(); // Return for // Return for reporting to the user } } |
...
return t; } } // ...Definitions for SensitiveException1, SensitiveException2 // and FilteredSensitiveException... |
The report()
method accepts a Throwable
instance and consequently handles all errors, checked exceptions, and unchecked exceptions. The filtering mechanism is based on a whitelisting approach wherein only nonsensitive exceptions are propagated to the user. Exceptions that are forbidden to appear in a log file can be filtered in the same fashion (see FIO13-J. Do not log sensitive information outside a trust boundary). This approach provides the benefits of exception chaining by reporting exceptions tailored to the abstraction while also logging the low-level cause for future failure analysis [Bloch 2008].{{report()}} method accepts a {{Throwable}} instance and consequently handles all errors, checked exceptions, as well as unchecked exceptions. The filtering mechanism is based on a _white listing_ approach wherein only non-sensitive exceptions are propagated to the user. Exceptions that are forbidden to appear in a log file can be filtered in the same fashion; see guideline [FIO08-J. Do not log sensitive information outside a trust boundary]. This approach provides the benefits of exception chaining by reporting exceptions tailored to the abstraction, while also logging the low level cause for later failure analysis \[[Bloch 2008|AA. Bibliography#Bloch 08]\].
Noncompliant Code Example
If a thread is interrupted while sleeping or waiting, it causes a java.lang.InterruptedException
to be thrown. But However, the run()
method of interface Runnable
cannot throw a checked exception , and so it must handle InterruptedException
. This noncompliant code example catches and suppresses InterruptedException
. :
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class Foo implements Runnable { public void run() { try { Thread.sleep(1000); } catch (InterruptedException e) { // Ignore } } } |
This code prevents callers higher up the call stack from determining that an interrupted exception occurred; consequently, they are unable to act on the exception \[[Goetz 2006|AA. Bibliography#Goetz 06]\]. Likewise, if this code was called in its own thread, it prevents the calling thread from knowing that this thread was of the Wiki Markup run()
method from determining that an interrupted exception occurred. Consequently, caller methods such as Thread.start()
cannot act on the exception [Goetz 2006]. Likewise, if this code were called in its own thread, it would prevent the calling thread from knowing that the thread was interrupted.
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution catches the InterruptedException
and restores the interrupted status by calling the interrupt()
method on the current thread. :
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class Foo implements Runnable { public void run() { try { Thread.sleep(1000); } catch (InterruptedException e) { Thread.currentThread().interrupt(); // Reset interrupted status } } } |
Consequently, code that is higher up on the call stack (or code from a calling thread) can see that an interrupt was issued \[[Goetz 2006|AA. Bibliography#Goetz 06]\Consequently, calling methods (or code from a calling thread) can determine that an interrupt was issued [Goetz 2006]. Wiki Markup
Exceptions
ERR00-J-EX0: Exceptions that occur during the freeing of a resource may be suppressed in those cases where failure to free the resource cannot affect future program behavior. Examples of freeing resources include closing files, network sockets, shutting down threads, etcand so forth. Such resources are generally often freed in catch
or finally
blocks , and are never reused during subsequent execution. Consequently, the exception cannot influence future program behavior through any avenue other than resource exhaustion. When resource exhaustion is adequately handled, it is sufficient to sanitize and log the exception for future improvement; additional error handling is unnecessary in this case.
ERR00-J-EX1: When recovery from an exceptional condition is impossible at a particular abstraction level, code at that level should avoid handling must not handle that exceptional condition. In such cases, an appropriate exception must be thrown so that higher level code can catch the exceptional condition and can attempt recovery. The most common implementation for this case is to omit a catch
block and consequently allow the exception to propagate normally, as shown below.:
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// When recovery is possible at higher levels private void doSomething() throws FileNotFoundException { // Requested file does not exist; throws FileNotFoundException // Higher level code can handle it by displaying a dialog box and asking // the user for the file name } |
Some APIs may limit the permissible exceptions thrown by particular methods. In such cases, it may be necessary to catch an exception and either wrap it in a permitted exception or translate it to one of the permitted exceptions. :
Alternatively, when higher level code is also unable to recover from a particular exception, the checked exception may be wrapped in an unchecked exception and re-thrown.
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public void myMethod() throws MyProgramException {
// ...
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try { // Requested file does not exist // User is unable to supply the file name } catch (FileNotFoundException e) { throw new IOExceptionMyProgramException(e); } |
Wiki Markup |
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*ERR00-EX2:* "The only situation in which it is acceptable to swallow an interrupt is when you are extending Thread and therefore control all the code higher up on the call stack" \[[Goetz 2006|AA. Bibliography#Goetz 06]\]. In such cases {{InterruptedException}} may be caught and suppressed. A interruption request may also be suppressed by code that implements a thread's interruption policy \[[Goetz 2006, pg 143|AA. Bibliography#Goetz 06]\]. |
Risk Assessment
Ignoring or suppressing exceptions violates the fail-safe criteria of an application.
Guideline | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ERR00-J | low | probable | medium | P4 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Detection of suppressed exceptions is straightforward. Sound determination of which specific cases represent violations of this guideline, and which represent permitted exceptions to the guideline is infeasible. Heuristic approaches may be effective.
Related Vulnerabilities
Bibliography
Wiki Markup |
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\[[Bloch 2008|AA. Bibliography#Bloch 08]\] Item 65: "Don't ignore exceptions", Item 62: "Document all exceptions thrown by each method"
\[[Goetz 2006|AA. Bibliography#Goetz 06]\] 5.4 Blocking and interruptible methods
\[[JLS 2005|AA. Bibliography#JLS 05]\] [Chapter 11, Exceptions|http://java.sun.com/docs/books/jls/third_edition/html/exceptions.html]
\[[MITRE 2009|AA. Bibliography#MITRE 09]\] [CWE ID 390|http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/390.html] "Detection of Error Condition Without Action" |
// ...
}
|
Alternatively, when higher level code is also unable to recover from a particular exception, the checked exception may be wrapped in an unchecked exception and rethrown.
ERR00-J-EX2: An InterruptedException
may be caught and suppressed when extending class Thread
[Goetz 2006]. An interruption request may also be suppressed by code that implements a thread's interruption policy [Goetz 2006, p. 143].
Risk Assessment
Ignoring or suppressing exceptions can result in inconsistent program state.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ERR00-J | Low | Probable | Medium | P4 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Detection of suppressed exceptions is straightforward. Sound determination of which specific cases represent violations of this rule and which represent permitted exceptions to the rule is infeasible. Heuristic approaches may be effective.
Tool | Version | Checker | Description | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CodeSonar |
| JAVA.STRUCT.EXCP.EEH | Empty Exception Handler (Java) | ||||||
Coverity | 7.5 | MISSING_THROW | Implemented | ||||||
Parasoft Jtest |
| CERT.ERR00.LGE CERT.ERR00.UCATCH | Ensure all exceptions are either logged with a standard logger or rethrown Use a caught exception in the "catch" block | ||||||
PVS-Studio |
| V5301 | |||||||
SonarQube |
| S1166 | Exception handlers should preserve the original exceptions |
Related Vulnerabilities
AMQ-1272 describes a vulnerability in the ActiveMQ service. When ActiveMQ receives an invalid username and password from a Stomp client, a security exception is generated but is subsequently ignored, leaving the client connected with full and unrestricted access to ActiveMQ.
Related Guidelines
Bibliography
Item 62, "Document All Exceptions Thrown by Each Method" | |
Section 5.4, "Blocking and Interruptible Methods" | |
[JLS 2015] |
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06. Exceptional Behavior (ERR) 06. Exceptional Behavior (ERR) ERR02-J. Use exceptions only for exceptional conditions