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A Java OutofMemoryError occurs if the program attempts to use more heap space than what is available. Among other causes, this error may result from

  • a memory leak
  • an infinite loop
  • limited amounts of default heap memory available
  • incorrect implementation of common data structures (hash tables, vectors and so on)
  • unbound deserialization
  • writing a large number of objects to an ObjectOutputStream
  • creating a large number of threads

Noncompliant Code Example (readLine())

This noncompliant code example places no upper bounds on the memory space required to execute the program. Consequently, the program can easily exhaust the available heap space.

public class ShowHeapError {
  Vector<String> names = new Vector<String>();
  InputStreamReader input = new InputStreamReader(System.in);
  BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(input);

  public void addNames() throws IOException {
    String newName;
    do {     
      // Adding unknown number of records to a list; user can exhaust the heap
      newName = reader.readLine();    
      names.addElement(newName);      
    } while(newName.equalsIgnoreCase("quit") == false); // Enter "quit" to quit the program
    // Close "reader" and "input"
  }

  public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
    ShowHeapError demo = new ShowHeapError();
    demo.addNames();
  }
}

According to the Java API [[API 2006]], BufferedReader.readLine() method documentation

[readLine()] Reads a line of text. A line is considered to be terminated by any one of a line feed ('\n'), a carriage return ('\r'), or a carriage return followed immediately by a linefeed.

Any code that uses this method is susceptible to abuse because the user can enter a string of any length. This does not require the noncompliant code example to read input using a loop.

Compliant Solution (Use Databases)

If the objects or data structures are large enough to potentially cause heap exhaustion, the programmer must consider using databases instead.

To remedy the noncompliant code example, the user can reuse a single long variable to store the input and write that value into a database containing a table User, with a field userID along with any other required fields. This prevents the heap from being exhausted.

Noncompliant Code Example

In a server-class machine using a parallel garbage collector, the default initial and maximum heap sizes are as follows for J2SE 6.0 [[Sun 2006]]:

  • initial heap size: larger of 1/64th of the machine's physical memory on the machine or some reasonable minimum
  • maximum heap size: smaller of 1/4th of the physical memory or 1GB

This noncompliant code example requires more memory on the heap than is available by default.

/** Assuming the heap size as 512 MB (calculated as 1/4th of 2 GB RAM = 512 MB)
 *  Considering long values being entered (64 bits each, the max number of elements
 *  would be 512 MB/64bits = 67108864)
 */
public class ShowHeapError {
   Vector<Long> names = new Vector<Long>(); // Accepts unknown number of records
   long newID = 0L;
   int count = 67108865;
   int i = 0;
   InputStreamReader input = new InputStreamReader(System.in);
   Scanner reader = new Scanner(input);

   public void addNames() {
     do {
       // Adding unknown number of records to a list
       // The user can enter more IDs than the heap can support and thus 
       // exhaust the heap. Assume that the record ID is a 64 bit long value
      
       System.out.print("Enter recordID (To quit, enter -1): ");
       newID = reader.nextLong();
       
       names.addElement(newID);
       i++;
     }while (i < count || newID != -1);
     // Close "reader" and "input"
   }

   public static void main(String[] args) {
     ShowHeapError demo = new ShowHeapError();
     demo.addNames();
   }
}

Compliant Solution

A simple compliant solution is to lower the number of names to read.

   // ...
   int count = 10000000;
   // ...

Compliant Solution

The OutOfMemoryError can be avoided by ensuring that the absence of infinite loops, memory leaks, and unnecessary object retention. When memory requirements are known ahead of time, the heap size can be tailored to fit the requirements using the following runtime parameters [[Java 2006]]:

java -Xms<initial heap size> -Xmx<maximum heap size>

For example,

java -Xms128m -Xmx512m ShowHeapError

Here the initial heap size is set to 128 MB and the maximum heap size to 512 MB.

This setting can be changed either using the Java Control Panel or from the command line. It cannot be adjusted through the application itself.

Risk Assessment

Assuming that infinite heap space is available can result in denial of service.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

MSC11-J

low

probable

medium

P4

L3

Related Vulnerabilities

Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website

Other Languages

This rule appears in the C Secure Coding Standard as MEM11-C. Do not assume infinite heap space.

This rule appears in the C++ Secure Coding Standard as MEM12-CPP. Do not assume infinite heap space.

Related Vulnerabilities

GERONIMO-4224

Bibliography

[[Sun 2006]] Garbage Collection Ergonomics, "Default values for the Initial and Maximum heap size"
[[Java 2006]] java - the Java application launcher, "Syntax for increasing the heap size"
[[Sun 2003]] Chapter 5: Tuning the Java Runtime System, Tuning the Java Heap
[[API 2006]] Class ObjectInputStream and ObjectOutputStream
[[SDN 2008]] Serialization FAQ
[[MITRE 2009]] CWE-400 "Uncontrolled Resource Consumption ('Resource Exhaustion')," CWE-770, "Allocation of Resources Without Limits or Throttling"


MSC10-J. Limit the lifetime of sensitive data      49. Miscellaneous (MSC)      MSC12-J. Prefer using Iterators over Enumerations

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