Opening and closing braces for if
, for
, or while
statements should always be used even if the statement's body contains only a single statement.
If an if
, while
, or for
statement is used in a macro, the macro definition should not conclude with a semicolon. (See PRE11-C. Do not conclude macro definitions with a semicolon.)
Braces improve the uniformity and readability of code. More important, when inserting an additional statement into a body containing only a single statement, it is easy to forget to add braces because the indentation gives strong (but misleading) guidance to the structure.
Braces also help ensure that macros with multiple statements are properly expanded. Such a macro should be wrapped in a do-while loop. (See PRE10-C. Wrap multistatement macros in a do-while loop.) However, when the do-while loop is not present, braces can still ensure that the macro expands as intended.
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example uses an if
statement without braces to authenticate a user.
int login; if (invalid_login()) login = 0; else login = 1;
A developer might add a debugging statement to determine when the login is valid but forget to add opening and closing braces.
int login; if (invalid_login()) login = 0; else printf("Login is valid\n"); /* debugging line added here */ login = 1; /* this line always gets executed, regardless of a valid login! */
Because of the indentation of the code, it is difficult to tell that the code will not function as intended by the programmer, potentially leading to a security breach.
Compliant Solution
In the compliant solution, opening and closing braces are used even when the body is a single statement.
int login; if (invalid_login()) { login = 0; } else { login = 1; }
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example has an if
statement nested in another if
statement without braces around the if
and else
bodies.
int privileges; if (invalid_login()) if (allow_guests()) privileges = GUEST; else privileges = ADMINISTRATOR;
The indentation could lead the programmer to believe that a user is given administrator privileges only when the user's login is valid. However, the else
statement actually attaches to the inner if
statement:
int privileges; if (invalid_login()) if (allow_guests()) privileges = GUEST; else privileges = ADMINISTRATOR;
This is a security loophole: users with invalid logins can still obtain administrator privileges.
Compliant Solution
In the compliant solution, adding braces removes the ambiguity and ensures that privileges are correctly assigned.
int privileges; if (invalid_login()) { if (allow_guests()) { privileges = GUEST; } } else { privileges = ADMINISTRATOR; }
Risk Assessment
Recommendation | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
EXP19-C | medium | probable | medium | P8 | L2 |
Related Guidelines
MISRA-C | Rule 14.8 (required): The statement forming the body of a switch , while , do ... while or for statement shall be a compound statement |
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Bibliography
[GNU 2010] | Coding Standards, Section 5.3, "Clean Use of C Constructs" |
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[ISO/IEC 9899:2011] | Section 6.8.4, "Selection Statements" |