Integer operations must result in an integer value within the range of the integer type (that is, the resulting value is the same as the result produced by unlimited-range integers). Frequently the range is more restrictive based on the use of the integer value, for example, as an index. Integer values can be verified by code review or by static analysis.
Integer overflow is undefined behavior, so a compiled program can do anything, including going off to play the Game of Life. Furthermore, a compiler may perform optimizations that assume an overflow will never occur, which could easily yield unexpected results. Compilers can optimize away if
statements that check if an overflow occured. See MSC15-A. Do not depend on undefined behavior for an example.
Verifiably in range operations are often preferable to treating out of range values as an error condition because the handling of these errors has been repeatedly shown to cause denial-of-service problems in actual applications. The quintessential example of this is the failure of the Ariane 5 launcher, which occurred due to an improperly handled conversion error that resulted in the processor being shut down [[Lions 96]].
A program that detects an integer overflow to be imminent may do one of two things: (1) signal some sort of error condition, or (2) produce an integer result that is within the range of representable integers on that system. Some situations can be handled by an error condition, where an overflow causes a change in control flow (such as the system complaining about bad input and requesting alternate input from the user). Others are better handled by the latter option, in that it allows the computation to proceed and generate an integer result, thus avoiding a denial-of-service attack. However, when continuing to produce an integer result in the face of overflow, one must consider the question of what integer result to return to the user.
The saturation and modwrap algorithms, and the technique of restricted range usage, defined in the following subsections, produce integer results that are always within a defined range. This range is between the integer values MIN
and MAX
(inclusive), where MIN
and MAX
are two representable integers with MIN < MAX
.
Saturation Semantics
For saturation semantics, assume that the mathematical result of the computation is result
. The value actually returned to the user is set out in the following table:
range of mathematical result |
result returned |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Modwrap Semantics
In modwrap semantics (also called modulo arithmetic), integer values "wrap round." That is, adding one to MAX
produces MIN
. This is the defined behavior for unsigned integers in the C Standard [[ISO/IEC 9899-1999]] (see Section 6.2.5, "Types," paragraph 9) and is frequently the behavior of signed integers as well. However, it is more sensible in many applications to use saturation semantics instead of modwrap semantics. For example, in the computation of a size (using unsigned integers), it is often better for the size to stay at the maximum value in the event of overflow rather than suddenly becoming a very small value.
Restricted Range Usage
Another tool for avoiding integer overflow is to use only half the range of signed integers. For example, when using an int
, use only the range [INT_MIN
/2, INT_MAX
/2]. This has been a trick of the trade in Fortran for some time, and now that optimizing C compilers are becoming more sophisticated, it can be valuable in C.
Consider subtraction. If the user types the expression a - b
where both a and b are in the range [INT_MIN/2, INT_MAX/2]
, then the answer will be in the range (INT_MIN, INT_MAX]
for a typical two's complement machine.
Now, if the user types a < b
there is often an implicit subtraction happening. On a machine without condition codes, the compiler may simply issue a subtract instruction and check whether the result is negative. This is allowed, since the compiler is allowed to assume there is no overflow. If all explicitly user-generated values are kept in the range [INT_MIN/2, INT_MAX/2
, then comparisons will always work even if the compiler performs this optimization on such hardware.
Non-Compliant Code Example
In the following non-compliant example, i + 1
will overflow on a 16-bit machine. The C standard allows signed integers to overflow and produce incorrect results. Compilers can take advantage of this to produce faster code by assuming an overflow will not occur. As a result, the if
statement that is intended to catch an overflow might be optimized away.
int i = /* some expression that evaluates to the value 32767 */; /* ... */ if (i + 1 <= i) { /* handle overflow */ } /* expression involving i + 1 */
Compliant Solution
Using a long
instead of an int
is guaranteed to accommodate the computed value.
long i = /* some expression that evaluates to the value 32767 */; /* ... */ /* No test is necessary; i is known not to overflow. */ /* expression involving i + 1 */
Risk Assessment
Out of range integer values can result in fetches or stores from arbitrary memory locations and the execution of arbitrary code.
Recommendation |
Severity |
Likelihood |
Remediation Cost |
Priority |
Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
INT08-A |
medium |
probable |
high |
P4 |
L3 |
Automated Detection
The LDRA tool suite V 7.6.0 is able to detect violations of this recommendation.
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
References
[[Lions 96]]
INT07-A. Use only explicitly signed or unsigned char type for numeric values 04. Integers (INT) INT09-A. Ensure enumeration constants map to unique values