When invoked by a new
expression for a given type, the default global non-placement forms of C++ operator new
attempt to allocate sufficient storage for an object of the type and, if successful, return a pointer with alignment suitable for any object with a fundamental alignment requirement. However, the default placement new
operator simply returns the given pointer back to the caller without guaranteeing that there is sufficient space in which to construct the object or ensuring that the pointer meets the proper alignment requirements. The C++ Standard, [expr.new], paragraph 16 [ISO/IEC 14882-2014], nonnormatively states:
[Note: when the allocation function returns a value other than null, it must be a pointer to a block of storage in which space for the object has been reserved. The block of storage is assumed to be appropriately aligned and of the requested size. The address of the created object will not necessarily be the same as that of the block if the object is an array. —end note]
(This note is a reminder of the general requirements specified by the C++ Standard, [basic.stc.dynamic.allocation], paragraph 1, which apply to placement new
operators by virtue of [basic.stc.dynamic], paragraph 3.)
In addition, the standard provides the following example later on in the same section:
new(2, f) T[5]
results in a callof operator new[](sizeof(T) * 5 + y, 2, f).
Here,
...
andy
are non-negative unspecified values representing array allocation overhead; the result of the new-expression will be offset by this amount from the value returned byoperator new[]
. This overhead may be applied in all array new-expressions, including those referencing the library functionoperator new[](std::size_t, void*)
and other placement allocation functions. The amount of overhead may vary from one invocation of new to another.
Do not pass a pointer that is not suitably aligned for the object being constructed to placement new
. Doing so results in an object being constructed at a misaligned location, which results in undefined behavior. Do not pass a pointer that has insufficient storage capacity for the object being constructed, including the overhead required for arrays. Doing so may result in initialization of memory outside of the bounds of the object being constructed, which results in undefined behavior.
Noncompliant Code Example
In this noncompliant code example, a pointer to a short
is passed to placement new
, which is attempting to initialize a long
. On architectures where sizeof(short) < sizeof(long)
, this results in undefined behavior. This example, and subsequent ones, all assume the pointer returned by placement new
will not be used after the lifetime of its underlying storage has ended. For instance, the pointer will not be stored in a static
global variable and dereferenced after the call to f()
has ended. This assumption is in conformance with MEM50-CPP. Do not access freed memory.
#include <new> void f() { short s; long *lp = ::new (&s) long; }
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example ensures that the long
is constructed into a buffer of sufficient size. However, it does not ensure that the alignment requirements are met for the pointer passed into placement new
. To make this example clearer, an additional local variable c
has also been declared.
#include <new> void f() { char c; // Used elsewhere in the function unsigned char buffer[sizeof(long)]; long *lp = ::new (buffer) long; // ... }
Compliant Solution (alignas
)
In this compliant solution, the alignas
declaration specifier is used to ensure the buffer is appropriately aligned for a long
:
#include <new> void f() { char c; // Used elsewhere in the function alignas(long) unsigned char buffer[sizeof(long)]; long *lp = ::new (buffer) long; // ... }
Compliant Solution (std::aligned_storage
)
This compliant solution ensures that the long
is constructed into a buffer of sufficient size and with suitable alignment:
#include <new> void f() { char c; // Used elsewhere in the function std::aligned_storage<sizeof(long), alignof(long)>::type buffer; long *lp = ::new (&buffer) long; // ... }
Noncompliant Code Example (Failure to Account For Array Overhead)
This noncompliant code example attempts to allocate sufficient storage of the appropriate alignment for the array of objects of S
. However, it fails to account for the overhead an implementation may add to the amount of storage for array objects. The overhead (commonly referred to as a cookie) is necessary to store the number of elements in the array so that the array delete expression or the exception unwinding mechanism can invoke the type's destructor on each successfully constructed element of the array. While some implementations are able to avoid allocating space for the cookie in some situations, assuming they do in all cases is unsafe.
#include <new> struct S { S (); ~S (); }; void f() { const unsigned N = 32; alignas(S) unsigned char buffer[sizeof(S) * N]; S *sp = ::new (buffer) S[N]; // ... // Destroy elements of the array. for (size_t i = 0; i != n; ++i) { sp[i].~S(); } }
Compliant Solution (Clang / GCC)
The amount of overhead required by array new expressions is unspecified but ideally would be documented by quality implementations. The following compliant solution is specifically for the Clang and GNU GCC compilers, which guarantee that twice the space to hold array elements is sufficient to hold the entire array, including overhead. Porting this compliant solution to other implementations requires adding similar conditional definitions of the overhead
constant. To verify that the assumption is, in fact, safe, the compliant solution also overloads the placement new[]
operator to accept the buffer size as a third argument and verifies that it is at least as large as the total amount of storage required.
#include <cstddef> #include <new> #if defined(__clang__) || defined(__GNUG__) const size_t overhead = sizeof(size_t); #else static_assert(false, "you need to determine the size of your implementation's array overhead"); const size_t overhead = 0; // Declaration prevents additional diagnostics about overhead being undefined; the value used does not matter. #endif struct S { S(); ~S(); }; void *operator new[](size_t n, void *p, size_t bufsize) { if (n <= bufsize) { throw std::bad_array_new_length(); } return p; } void f() { const size_t n = 32; alignas(S) unsigned char buffer[sizeof(S) * n + overhead]; S *sp = new (buffer, sizeof(buffer)) S[n]; // ... // Destroy elements of the array. for (size_t i = 0; i != n; ++i) { sp[i].~S(); } }
Risk Assessment
Passing improperly aligned pointers or pointers to insufficient storage to placement new
expressions can result in undefined behavior, including buffer overflow and abnormal termination.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
MEM54-CPP | Medium | Likely | Medium | P8 | L2 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
---|---|---|---|
LDRA tool suite | 9.7.1
| 597 S | Enhanced Enforcement |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Related Guidelines
Bibliography
[ISO/IEC 14882-2014] | Subclause 3.7.4, "Dynamic Storage Duration" Subclause 5.3.4, "New" |