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Macro replacement lists should be parenthesized to protect any lower precedence operators from the surrounding expression. See also PRE00-A. Prefer inline functions to macros and PRE01-A. Use parentheses within macros around parameter names.

Non-Compliant Code Example

This CUBE() macro definition is non-compliant because it fails to parenthesize the replacement list.

#define CUBE(X) (X) * (X) * (X)
int i = 3;
int a = 81 / CUBE(i);

As a result, the invocation

int a = 81 / CUBE(i);

expands to

int a = 81 / i * i * i;

which evaluates as

int a = ((81 / i) * i) * i);  /* evaluates to 243 */

which is not the desired behavior.

Compliant Solution

With its replacement list parenthesized, the CUBE() macro expands correctly for this type of invocation.

#define CUBE(X) ((X) * (X) * (X))
int i = 3;
int a = 81 / CUBE(i);

Non-Compliant Code Example

In this non-compliant coding example, EOF is defined as -1. The macro replacement list consists of a unary negation operator '-' followed by an integer literal '1'.

#define EOF -1
/* ... */
if (getchar() EOF) {
   /* ... */
}

In this example, the programmer has mistakenly omitted the comparison operator (see MSC02-A. Avoid errors of omission) from the conditional statement, which should be getchar() != EOF. After macro expansion, the conditional expression is incorrectly evaluated as a binary operation: getchar()-1. This is syntactically correct, even though it is certainly not what the programmer intended.

Parenthesizing the -1 in the declaration of EOF ensures that the macro expansion is evaluated correctly.

#define EOF (-1)

Once this modification is made, the non-compliant code example no longer compiles because the macro expansion results in the conditional expression getchar() (-1), which is no longer syntactically valid.

Compliant Solution

The following compliant solution uses parentheses around the macro replacement list and adds the (previously omitted) comparison operator.

#define EOF (-1)
/* ... */
if (getchar() != EOF) {
   /* ... */
}

Note that there must be a space after EOF because otherwise it becomes a function-like macro (and one that is incorrectly formed, since -1 cannot be a formal parameter).

Exceptions

PRE02-EX1. A macro that expands to a single identifier or function call is not affected by the precedence of any operators in the surrounding expression, so its replacement list need not be parenthesized.

#define MY_PID getpid()

Risk Assessment

Failing to parenthesize macro replacement lists can cause unexpected results.

Recommendation

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

PRE02-A

1 (low)

1 (unlikely)

3 (low)

P3

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

[[ISO/IEC 9899-1999]] Section 6.10, "Preprocessing directives," and Section 5.1.1, "Translation environment"
[[Plum 85]] Rule 1-1
[[Summit 05]] Question 10.1


PRE01-A. Use parentheses within macros around parameter names      01. Preprocessor (PRE)       PRE03-A. Prefer typedefs to defines for encoding types

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