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Arrays do not override the In Java, arrays are objects and support object methods such as Object.equals() method; the implementation of the . However, arrays do not support any methods besides those provided by Object. Consequently, using Object.equals() method on any array compares only array references rather than , not their contents. Programmers who wish to compare the contents of two arrays must use the twothe static two-argument Arrays.equals() method.   Two arrays are considered equal This method considers two arrays equivalent if both arrays contain the same number of elements, and all corresponding pairs of elements in the two arrays are equal.  equivalent, according to Object.equals(). In other words, two arrays are equal if they contain the same equivalent elements in the same order.  To  To test for reference equality, programmers can use the reference equality operators, == and !=.  

  Because the effect of using Object.equals() to compare two arrays is often misunderstoodmisconstrued as content equality, and because a better alternative exists in the use of reference equality operators, the use of the Object.equals() method to compare two arrays is disallowed by this rule.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example uses the Object.equals() method to compare two arrays.:

Code Block
bgColor#FFCCCC
int[] arr1 = new int[20]; // initializedInitialized to 0
int[] arr2 = new int[20]; // initializedInitialized to 0
System.out.println(arr1.equals(arr2)); // printsPrints false

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution compares the content of two arrays using the two-argument Arrays.equals() method.:

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff
int[] arr1 = new int[20]; // initializedInitialized to 0
int[] arr2 = new int[20]; // initializedInitialized to 0
System.out.println(Arrays.equals(arr1, arr2)); // printsPrints true

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution compares the array references using the reference equality operators ==.:

Code Block
bgColor#ccccff
int[] arr1 = new int[20]; // initializedInitialized to 0
int[] arr2 = new int[20]; // initializedInitialized to 0
System.out.println(arr1 == arr2); // printsPrints false 

Risk Assessment

Using the equals() method or relational operators with the intention of comparing array contents produces incorrect results, which can lead to vulnerabilities.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

EXP02-J

Low

Likely

Low

P9

L2

Automated Detection

Static detection of calls to to Object.equals() is straightforward. However, it is not always possible to statically resolve the class of a method invocation's target. Consequently, it may not always be possible to determine when Object.equals() is invoked for an array type.

Tool
Version
Checker
Description
CodeSonar
Include Page
CodeSonar_V
CodeSonar_V

JAVA.COMPARE.EQ
JAVA.COMPARE.EQARRAY

Should Use equals() Instead of == (Java)
equals on Array (Java)

Coverity7.5

BAD_EQ
FB.EQ_ABSTRACT_SELF
FB.EQ_ALWAYS_FALSE
FB.EQ_ALWAYS_TRUE
FB.EQ_CHECK_FOR_OPERAND_NOT_ COMPATIBLE_WITH_THIS
FB.EQ_COMPARETO_USE_OBJECT_ EQUALS
FB.EQ_COMPARING_CLASS_NAMES
FB.EQ_DOESNT_OVERRIDE_EQUALS
FB.EQ_DONT_DEFINE_EQUALS_ FOR_ENUM
FB.EQ_GETCLASS_AND_CLASS_ CONSTANT
FB.EQ_OTHER_NO_OBJECT
FB.EQ_OTHER_USE_OBJECT
FB.EQ_OVERRIDING_EQUALS_ NOT_SYMMETRIC
FB.EQ_SELF_NO_OBJECT
FB.EQ_SELF_USE_OBJECT
FB.EQ_UNUSUAL

Implemented
Parasoft Jtest
Include Page
Parasoft_V
Parasoft_V
CERT.EXP02.UEICDo not use '==' or '!=' to compare objects
SonarQube
Include Page
SonarQube_V
SonarQube_V
S2159Silly equality checks should not be made

Related Guidelines

MITRE CWE

CWE-595

.

, Comparison of

object references instead of object contents

Object References Instead of Object Contents

Bibliography

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