According to the C Standard, 7.4.1 paragraph 1 [ISO/IEC 9899:2024],
The header
<ctype.h>
declares several functions useful for classifying and mapping characters. In all cases the argument is anint
, the value of which shall be representable as anunsigned char
or shall equal the value of the macroEOF
. If the argument has any other value, the behavior is undefined.
See also undefined behavior 113.
This rule is applicable only to code that runs on platforms where the char
data type is defined to have the same range, representation, and behavior as signed char
.
Following are the character classification functions that this rule addresses:
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XSI denotes an X/Open System Interfaces Extension to ISO/IEC 9945—POSIX. These functions are not defined by the C Standard.
This rule is a specific instance of STR34-C. Cast characters to unsigned char before converting to larger integer sizes.
Noncompliant Code Example
On implementations where plain char
is signed, this code example is noncompliant because the parameter to isspace()
, *t
, is defined as a const char *
, and this value might not be representable as an unsigned char
:
#include <ctype.h> #include <string.h> size_t count_preceding_whitespace(const char *s) { const char *t = s; size_t length = strlen(s) + 1; while (isspace(*t) && (t - s < length)) { ++t; } return t - s; }
The argument to isspace()
must be EOF
or representable as an unsigned char
; otherwise, the result is undefined.
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution casts the character to unsigned char
before passing it as an argument to the isspace()
function:
#include <ctype.h> #include <string.h> size_t count_preceding_whitespace(const char *s) { const char *t = s; size_t length = strlen(s) + 1; while (isspace((unsigned char)*t) && (t - s < length)) { ++t; } return t - s; }
Risk Assessment
Passing values to character handling functions that cannot be represented as an unsigned char
to character handling functions is undefined behavior.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
STR37-C | Low | Unlikely | Low | P3 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Astrée | 24.04 | ctype-limits | Partially checked |
Axivion Bauhaus Suite | 7.2.0 | CertC-STR37 | Fully implemented |
CodeSonar | 8.1p0 | MISC.NEGCHAR | Negative character value |
Compass/ROSE | Could detect violations of this rule by seeing if the argument to a character handling function (listed above) is not an | ||
1.2 | CC2.STR37 | Fully implemented | |
Helix QAC | 2024.3 | C4413, C4414 C++3051 | |
Klocwork | 2024.3 | AUTOSAR.STDLIB.CCTYPE.UCHAR MISRA.ETYPE.ASSIGN.2012 | |
LDRA tool suite | 9.7.1 | 663 S | Fully implemented |
Parasoft C/C++test | 2023.1 | CERT_C-STR37-a | Do not pass incorrect values to ctype.h library functions |
Polyspace Bug Finder | R2024a | Checks for invalid use of standard library integer routine (rule fully covered) | |
RuleChecker | 24.04 | ctype-limits | Partially checked |
TrustInSoft Analyzer | 1.38 | valid_char | Partially verified. |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Related Guidelines
Key here (explains table format and definitions)
Taxonomy | Taxonomy item | Relationship |
---|---|---|
CERT C Secure Coding Standard | STR34-C. Cast characters to unsigned char before converting to larger integer sizes | Prior to 2018-01-12: CERT: Unspecified Relationship |
ISO/IEC TS 17961 | Passing arguments to character-handling functions that are not representable as unsigned char [chrsgnext] | Prior to 2018-01-12: CERT: Unspecified Relationship |
CWE 2.11 | CWE-704, Incorrect Type Conversion or Cast | 2017-06-14: CERT: Rule subset of CWE |
CERT-CWE Mapping Notes
Key here for mapping notes
CWE-686 and STR37-C
Intersection( CWE-686, STR37-C) = Ø
STR37-C is not about the type of the argument passed (which is signed int), but about the restrictions placed on the value in this type (must be 0-UCHAR_MAX or EOF). I interpret ‘argument type’ to be specific to the C language, so CWE-686 does not apply to incorrect argument values, just incorrect types (which is relatively rare in C, but still possible).
CWE-704 and STR37-C
STR37-C = Subset( STR34-C)
CWE-683 and STR37-C
Intersection( CWE-683, STR37-C) = Ø
STR37-C excludes mis-ordered function arguments (assuming they pass type-checking), because there is no easy way to reliably detect violations of CWE-683.
Bibliography
[ISO/IEC 9899:2024] | 7.4.1, "Character Handling <ctype.h >" |
[Kettlewell 2002] | Section 1.1, "<ctype.h > and Characters Types" |
5 Comments
David Svoboda
The Cast compliant solution seems to violate three other secure coding rules
Alex Volkovitsky
Not sure about EXP11, but it is probably related to some cast due to
t-s
EXP05 is "violated" because
t
isconst
butt-s
is not, we need a better way to catch this exception in the checkerINT01 is "violated" because
t-s
does not have typesize_t
butlength
doesMartin Sebor
Note EXP05-C. Do not cast away a const qualification was never violated in the compliant solution since the cast to
unsigned char
is not applied to the pointer but rather to the character resulting from dereferencing the pointer. The cast yields an rvalue (an unnamed temporary copy of the array element) that, unlike a pointer, cannot be used to modify the array element. I've removed the cast. Perhaps EXP05-C needs clarifying?Robert Seacord (Manager)
Do we want to include POSIX functions here?
David Svoboda
The principle is simple. This should apply to all functions that take an argument which can be EOF or an unsigned char, and which promise undefined behavior if the argument is something else (such as a signed char with value < -1).