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Immutability offers several benefits such as thread-safety, prevention against inadvertent modification of fields, and malicious tampering. Class invariants and state of immutable objects are always consistent with their requirements, so defensive copying while accepting input or returning values is unnecessary. However, it is sometimes impossible to make sensitive classes immutable. Fortunately, there is a mechanism that allows code to expose mutable classes to untrusted code by granting read-only access. This is largely achieved through unmodifiable wrappers. For example, the Collection classes include a set of wrappers that allow clients to observe an unmodifiable view of a Collection object.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example consists of class Mutable, which allows the internal array object to be modified. 

class Mutable {
    private int[] array = new int[10];

    public int[] getArray() {
        return array;
    }

    public void setArray(int[] i) {
        array = i;
    }
}

// ...
private Mutable mutable = new Mutable();
public Mutable getMutable() {return mutable;}

An untrusted invoker may call the mutator method setArray() and violate the object's immutability property. Invoking the getter method getArray() also allows modification of the private internal state of the class. This class also violates OBJ05-J. Defensively copy private mutable class members before returning their references.

Compliant Solution

In general, sensitive classes can be transformed into safe-view objects by providing appropriate wrappers for all methods defined by the core interface, including the mutator methods. The wrappers for the mutator methods must throw an UnsupportedOperationException so that clients cannot perform operations that affect the immutability property of the object.

This compliant solution constructs a MutableProtector object by extending the Mutable class. 

class MutableProtector extends Mutable {
	@Override
    public int[] getArray() {
        return super.getArray().clone();
    }
 
	@Override
    public void setArray(int[] i) {
        throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
    }
}

// ...
private Mutable mutable = new MutableProtector();
public Mutable getMutable() {return mutable;} // may be safely invoked by untrusted caller having read ability

The MutableProtector wrapper class overrides the getArray() method, and clones the array. Although calling code gets a copy of the mutable object's array, the original array remains unchanged and inaccessible. The setArray() method is also overridden to throw an exception if the caller attempts to use this method on the returned object. This object can be passed to untrusted code when read-access to the data is permissible.

Applicability

Failure to provide an unmodifiable safe-view of a sensitive mutable object to untrusted code can lead to malicious tampering and corruption of the object.

Bibliography

[Tutorials 2008] Unmodifiable Wrappers


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