The C standard library facilities setjmp()
and longjmp()
can be used to simulate throwing and catching exceptions. However, these facilities bypass automatic resource management and can result in undefined behavior, commonly including resource leaks, and denial-of-service attacks.
The C++ Standard, [support.runtime], paragraph 4, states [ ISO/IEC 14882-2014 ]:
The function signature
longjmp(jmp_buf jbuf, int val)
has more restricted behavior in this International Standard. Asetjmp
/longjmp
call pair has undefined behavior if replacing thesetjmp
andlongjmp
bycatch
andthrow
would invoke any non-trivial destructors for any automatic objects.
Do not call setjmp()
or longjmp()
; their usage can be replaced by more standard idioms such as throw
expressions and catch
statements.
Noncompliant Code Example
Calling longjmp()
such that it would invoke a nontrivial destructor were the call replaced with a throw
expression results in undefined behavior, as demonstrated in this noncompliant code example:
#include <csetjmp> #include <iostream> static jmp_buf env; struct Counter { static int Instances; Counter() { ++Instances; } ~Counter() { --Instances; } }; int Counter::Instances = 0; void f() { Counter c; std::cout << "f(): Instances: " << Counter::Instances << std::endl; std::longjmp(env, 1); } int main() { std::cout << "Before setjmp(): Instances: " << Counter::Instances << std::endl; if (setjmp(env) == 0) { f(); } else { std::cout << "From longjmp(): Instances: " << Counter::Instances << std::endl; } std::cout << "After longjmp(): Instances: " << Counter::Instances << std::endl; }
Implementation Details
The above code produces the following results when compiled with Clang 3.5 for Linux, demonstrating that the undefined behavior in this instance is to fail to destroy the local Counter
instance when the execution of f()
is terminated:
Before setjmp(): Instances: 0 f(): Instances: 1 From longjmp(): Instances: 1 After longjmp(): Instances: 1
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution replaces the calls to setjmp()
and longjmp()
with a throw
expression and a catch
statement:
#include <iostream> struct Counter { static int Instances; Counter() { ++Instances; } ~Counter() { --Instances; } }; int Counter::Instances = 0; void f() { Counter c; std::cout << "f(): Instances: " << Counter::Instances << std::endl; throw "Exception"; } int main() { std::cout << "Before throw: Instances: " << Counter::Instances << std::endl; try { f(); } catch (const char *E) { std::cout << "From catch: Instances: " << Counter::Instances << std::endl; } std::cout << "After catch: Instances: " << Counter::Instances << std::endl; }
which produces the following output:
Before throw: Instances: 0 f(): Instances: 1 From catch: Instances: 0 After catch: Instances: 0
Risk Assessment
Using setjmp()
and longjmp()
could lead to a denial-of-service attack due to resources not being properly destroyed.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ERR52-CPP | Low | Probable | Medium | P4 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
---|---|---|---|
4.4 | Secondary Analysis |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for other vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Related Guidelines
|
Bibliography
[ISO/IEC 14882-2014] | 18.10, "Other Runtime Support" |
[Henricson 97] | Rule 13.3, "Do not use setjmp() and longjmp()" |