Making defensive copies of mutable method parameters mitigates against a variety of security vulnerabilities; see OBJ06-J. Defensively copy mutable inputs and mutable internal components for additional information. However, inappropriate use of the clone method can allow an attacker to exploit vulnerabilities by providing arguments that pass initial validation but subsequently return unexpected values. Such objects may consequently bypass validation and security checks. Never use the clone method to make defensive copies of objects that are instances of classes that both are nonfinal and provide a clone()
method. So never use the clone method for defensive copying of untrusted method parameters.
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example defines a validateValue()
method that validates a time value:
private Boolean validateValue(long time) { // Perform validation return true; // If the time is valid } private void storeDateinDB(java.util.Date date) throws SQLException { final java.util.Date copy = (java.util.Date)date.clone(); if (validateValue(copy.getTime())) { Connection con = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:microsoft:sqlserver://<HOST>:1433","<UID>","<PWD>"); PreparedStatement pstmt = con.prepareStatement("UPDATE ACCESSDB SET TIME = ?"); pstmt.setLong(1, copy.getTime()); // ... } }
The storeDateinDB()
method accepts an untrusted date
argument and attempts to make a defensive copy using the clone()
method. The attacker can override the getTime()
method so that it returns a time that passes validation when getTime()
is called for the first time but returns an unexpected value when it is called a second time.
public class MaliciousDate extends java.util.Date { private static int count = 0; @Override public long getTime() { java.util.Date d = new java.util.Date(); return (count++ == 1) ? d.getTime() : d.getTime() - 1000; } }
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution avoids using the clone method. Instead, it creates a new java.util.Date
object that is subsequently used for access control checks and for insertion into the database:
private void storeDateinDB(java.util.Date date) throws SQLException { final java.util.Date copy = new java.util.Date(date.getTime()); if (validateValue(copy.getTime())) { Connection con = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:microsoft:sqlserver://<HOST>:1433","<UID>","<PWD>"); PreparedStatement pstmt = con.prepareStatement("UPDATE ACCESSDB SET TIME = ?"); pstmt.setLong(1, copy.getTime()); // ... } }
Applicability
Using the clone()
method to copy untrusted arguments affords attackers the opportunity to bypass validation and security checks.
Bibliography