The C Standard provides three functions that cause an application to terminate normally: _Exit()
, exit()
, and quick_exit()
. These are collectively called exit functions. When the exit()
function is called, or control transfers out of the main()
entry point function, functions registered with atexit()
are called (but not at_quick_exit()
). When the quick_exit()
function is called, functions registered with at_quick_exit()
(but not atexit()
) are called. These functions are collectively called exit handlers. When the _Exit()
function is called, no exit handlers or signal handlers are called.
Exit handlers must terminate by returning. It is important and potentially safety-critical for all exit handlers to be allowed to perform their cleanup actions. This is particularly true because the application programmer does not always know about handlers that may have been installed by support libraries. Two specific issues include nested calls to an exit function and terminating a call to an exit handler by invoking longjmp
.
A nested call to an exit function is undefined behavior (see undefined behavior 182). This behavior can occur only when an exit function is invoked from an exit handler or when an exit function is called from within a signal handler (see SIG30-C. Call only asynchronous-safe functions within signal handlers).
If a call to the longjmp()
function is made that would terminate the call to a function registered with atexit()
, the behavior is undefined.
Noncompliant Code Example
In this noncompliant code example, the exit1()
and exit2()
functions are registered by atexit()
to perform required cleanup upon program termination. However, if some_condition
evaluates to true, exit()
is called a second time, resulting in undefined behavior.
#include <stdlib.h> void exit1(void) { /* ... Cleanup code ... */ return; } void exit2(void) { extern int some_condition; if (some_condition) { /* ... More cleanup code ... */ exit(0); } return; } int main(void) { if (atexit(exit1) != 0) { /* Handle error */ } if (atexit(exit2) != 0) { /* Handle error */ } /* ... Program code ... */ return 0; }
Functions registered by the atexit()
function are called in the reverse order from which they were registered. Consequently, if exit2()
exits in any way other than by returning, exit1()
will not be executed. The same may also be true for atexit()
handlers installed by support libraries.
Compliant Solution
A function that is registered as an exit handler by atexit()
must exit by returning, as in this compliant solution:
#include <stdlib.h> void exit1(void) { /* ... Cleanup code ... */ return; } void exit2(void) { extern int some_condition; if (some_condition) { /* ... More cleanup code ... */ } return; } int main(void) { if (atexit(exit1) != 0) { /* Handle error */ } if (atexit(exit2) != 0) { /* Handle error */ } /* ... Program code ... */ return 0; }
Noncompliant Code Example
In this noncompliant code example, exit1()
is registered by atexit()
so that upon program termination, exit1()
is called. The exit1()
function jumps back to main()
to return, with undefined results.
#include <stdlib.h> #include <setjmp.h> jmp_buf env; int val; void exit1(void) { longjmp(env, 1); } int main(void) { if (atexit(exit1) != 0) { /* Handle error */ } if (setjmp(env) == 0) { exit(0); } else { return 0; } }
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution does not call longjmp()
but instead returns from the exit handler normally:
#include <stdlib.h> void exit1(void) { return; } int main(void) { if (atexit(exit1) != 0) { /* Handle error */ } return 0; }
Risk Assessment
Terminating a call to an exit handler in any way other than by returning is undefined behavior and may result in abnormal program termination or other unpredictable behavior. It may also prevent other registered handlers from being invoked.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ENV32-C | Medium | Likely | Medium | P12 | L1 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
| Can detect violations of this rule. In particular, it ensures that all functions registered with | |
LDRA tool suite | 9.7.1 | 122 S, 7 S | Enhanced Enforcement |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Related Guidelines
CERT C Secure Coding Standard | SIG30-C. Call only asynchronous-safe functions within signal handlers |
SEI CERT C++ Coding Standard | VOID ENV32-CPP. All atexit handlers must return normally |
ISO/IEC TR 24772:2013 | Structured Programming [EWD] Termination Strategy [REU] |
MITRE CWE | CWE-705, Incorrect Control Flow Scoping |