Do not make any assumptions about the size of environment variables because an adversary might have full control over the environment. If the environment variable needs to be stored, the length of the associated string should be calculated and the storage dynamically allocated. (See STR31-C. Guarantee that storage for strings has sufficient space for character data and the null terminator.)
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example copies the string returned by getenv()
into a fixed-size buffer:
void f() { char path[PATH_MAX]; /* Requires PATH_MAX to be defined */ strcpy(path, getenv("PATH")); /* Use path */ }
Even if your platform assumes that $PATH
is defined, defines PATH_MAX
, and enforces that paths not have more than PATH_MAX
characters, the $PATH
environment variable still is not required to have less than PATH_MAX
chars. And if it has more than PATH_MAX
chars, a buffer overflow will result. Also, if $PATH
is not defined, then strcpy()
will attempt to dereference a null pointer.
Compliant Solution
In the following compliant solution, the strlen()
function is used to calculate the size of the string, and the required space is dynamically allocated:
void f() { char *path = NULL; /* Avoid assuming $PATH is defined or has limited length */ const char *temp = getenv("PATH"); if (temp != NULL) { path = (char*) malloc(strlen(temp) + 1); if (path == NULL) { /* Handle error condition */ } else { strcpy(path, temp); } /* Use path */ } }
Risk Assessment
Making assumptions about the size of an environmental variable can result in a buffer overflow.
Recommendation | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ENV01-C | High | Likely | Medium | P18 | L1 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
| Can detect violations of the rule by using the same method as STR31-C. Guarantee that storage for strings has sufficient space for character data and the null terminator |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Related Guidelines
CERT C++ Secure Coding Standard | ENV01-CPP. Do not make assumptions about the size of an environment variable |
MITRE CWE | CWE-119, Failure to constrain operations within the bounds of an allocated memory buffer |
Bibliography
[Open Group 2004] | Chapter 8, "Environment Variables" |
[Viega 2003] | Section 3.6, "Using Environment Variables Securely" |