You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 56 Next »

According to MISRA 2008, concatenation of wide and narrow string literals leads to undefined behavior. This was once considered implicitly undefined behavior until C90 [ISO/IEC 9899:1990]. However, C99 defined this behavior [ISO/IEC 9899:1999], and C11 further explains in subclause 6.4.5, paragraph 5 [ISO/IEC 9899:2011]:

In translation phase 6, the multibyte character sequences specified by any sequence of adjacent character and identically-prefixed string literal tokens are concatenated into a single multibyte character sequence. If any of the tokens has an encoding prefix, the resulting multibyte character sequence is treated as having the same prefix; otherwise, it is treated as a character string literal. Whether differently-prefixed wide string literal tokens can be concatenated and, if so, the treatment of the resulting multibyte character sequence are implementation-defined.

Nonetheless, it is recommended that string literals that are concatenated should all be the same type so as not to rely on implementation-defined behavior or undefined behavior if compiled on a platform that supports only C90.

Noncompliant Code Example (C90)

This noncompliant code example concatenates wide and narrow string literals. Although the behavior is undefined in C90, the programmer probably intended to create a wide string literal.

wchar_t *msg = L"This message is very long, so I want to divide it "
                "into two parts.";

Compliant Solution (C90, Wide String Literals)

If the concatenated string needs to be a wide string literal, each element in the concatenation must be a wide string literal, as in this compliant solution:

wchar_t *msg = L"This message is very long, so I want to divide it "
               L"into two parts.";

Compliant Solution (C90, Narrow String Literals)

If wide string literals are unnecessary, it is better to use narrow string literals, as in this compliant solution:

char *msg = "This message is very long, so I want to divide it "
            "into two parts.";

Risk Assessment

The concatenation of wide and narrow string literals could lead to undefined behavior.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

STR10-C

Low

Probable

Medium

P4

L3

Automated Detection

Tool

Version

Checker

Description

Astrée
24.04
encoding-mismatchFully checked
Axivion Bauhaus Suite

7.2.0

CertC-STR10
ECLAIR
1.2

CC2.STR10

Fully implemented.

Helix QAC

2024.3



LDRA tool suite
9.7.1
450 SFully implemented
Parasoft C/C++test
2023.1

CERT_C-STR10-a

Narrow and wide string literals shall not be concatenated
PC-lint Plus

1.4

707

Fully supported

PRQA QA-C
Unable to render {include} The included page could not be found.
0874
SonarQube C/C++ Plugin
3.11
NarrowAndWideStringConcat
RuleChecker
24.04
encoding-mismatchFully checked

Related Vulnerabilities

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

Related Guidelines

MISRA C++:2008Rule 2-13-5

Bibliography

[ISO/IEC 9899:2011]Section 6.4.5, "String Literals"



  • No labels