You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 47 Next »

The sizeof operator yields the size (in bytes) of its operand, which may be an expression or the parenthesized name of a type. When the type of the operand is a variable-length array type (VLA) the expression is evaluated; otherwise, the operand is not evaluated.

When part of the operand of the sizeof operator is a VLA type and when changing the value of the VLA's size expression would not affect the result of the operator, it is unspecified whether or not the size expression is evaluated. See unspecified behavior 21 in section J.1 of C99.

Providing an expression that appears to produce side effects may be misleading to programmers who are not aware that these expressions are not evaluated in the non-VLA case and has unspecified results otherwise. As a result, programmers may make invalid assumptions about program state, leading to errors and possible software vulnerabilities.

Noncompliant Code Example

In this noncompliant code example, the expression a++ is not evaluated and the side effects in the expression are not executed.

int a = 14;
int b = sizeof(a++);

Consequently, the value of a after b has been initialized is 14.

Implementation-Specific Details

This example compiles cleanly under Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 Version 8.0, with the /W4 option.

Compliant Solution

In this compliant solution, the variable a is incremented.

int a = 14;
int b = sizeof(a);
a++;

Noncompliant Code Example (Variable Length Array)

In the following noncompliant code example, the expression ++n in the initialization expression of a must be evaluated since its value affects the size of the variable length array operand of the sizeof operator. However, since the expression ++n % 1 evaluates to 0, regardless of the value of n, its value does not affect the result of the sizeof operator, and, thus, it is unspecified whether n is incremented or not.

void f(size_t n) {
  size_t a = sizeof(int [++n]);           /* n must be incremented */
  size_t b = sizeof(int [++n % 1 + 1]);   /* n need not be incremented */
  /* ... */
}

Compliant Solution (Variable Length Array)

The compliant solution below avoids changing the value of the variable n used in the sizeof expression and instead increments it safely outside of it.

void f(size_t n) {
  size_t a = sizeof(int [n + 1]);
  ++n;

  size_t b = sizeof(int [n % 1 + 1]);
  ++n;
  /* ... */
}

Risk Assessment

If expressions that appear to produce side effects are supplied to the sizeof operator, the returned result may be different than expected. Depending on how this result is used, this can lead to unintended program behavior.

Recommendation

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

EXP06-C

low

unlikely

low

P3

L3

Automated Detection

Tool

Version

Checker

Description

9.7.1

54 S

Fully Implemented

Compass/ROSE

 

 

 

Related Vulnerabilities

Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.

Related Guidelines

CERT C++ Secure Coding Standard: EXP06-CPP. Operands to the sizeof operator should not contain side effects

ISO/IEC 9899:1999 Section 6.5.3.4, "The sizeof operator"

Bibliography


  • No labels