When a package variable is declared local
, it is often assumed that the package variable's contents are duplicated and stored in the local variable. This is not so; the local variable is set to undef
, just like any other uninitialized variable. Consequently, local variables must be initialized. They may be initialized with the contents of the package variable. If they are meant to be uninitialized, they should be explicitly set to undef
.
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example authenticates the user to enter a password, but only if the $passwd_required
variable is defined.
$passwd_required = 1; # ... sub authenticate_user { local $passwd_required; if (defined $passwd_required) { print "Please enter a password\n"; # ... get and validate password } else { print "No password necessary\n"; } } authenticate_user();
The call to local temporarily sets $passwd_required
to the uninitialized value undef
; it does not maintain its previous value of 1
. Consequently, when the program executes, it incorrectly prints No password necessary
.
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution initializes the localized variable to the old value, so it correctly prompts the user for a password.
$passwd_required = 1; # ... sub authenticate_user { local $passwd_required = $passwd_required; if (defined $passwd_required) { print "Please enter a password\n"; # ... get and validate password } else { print "No password necessary\n"; } } authenticate_user();
Risk Assessment
Uninitialized variables can cause surprising program behavior.
Recommendation | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
DCL04-PL | Low | Probable | Medium | P4 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Diagnostic |
---|---|
Perl::Critic | Variables::RequireInitializationForLocalVars |
Bibliography
[Conway 05] | "Initialization," p. 78 |
[CPAN] | Elliot Shank, Perl-Critic-1.116 Variables::RequireInitializationForLocalVars |
[Wall 2011] | perlfunc, perlsyn |