Macros are often used to execute a sequence of multiple statements as a group.
Inline functions are, in general, more suitable for this task. (See PRE00-C. Prefer inline or static functions to function-like macros.) Occasionally, however, they are not feasible (when macros are expected to operate on variables of different types, for example).
When multiple statements are used in a macro, they should be bound together in a do-while loop syntactically, so the macro can appear safely inside if clauses or other places that expect a single statement or a statement block. (Alternatively, when an if
, for
, or while
statement uses braces even for a single body statement, then multiple statements in a macro will expand correctly even without a do-while loop. See EXP19-C. Use braces for the body of an if, for, or while statement.
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example contains multiple, unbound statements.
/* * Swaps two values. * Requires tmp variable to be defined. */ #define SWAP(x, y) \ tmp = x; \ x = y; \ y = tmp
This macro will expand correctly in a normal sequence of statements, but not as the then
clause in an if
statement:
int x, y, z, tmp; if (z == 0) SWAP( x, y);
It will expand to the following, which is certainly not what the programmer intended:
int x, y, z, tmp; if (z == 0) tmp = x; x = y; y = tmp;
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example inadequately bounds multiple statements.
/* * Swaps two values. * Requires tmp variable to be defined. */ #define SWAP(x,y) { tmp=x; x=y; y=tmp; }
This macro fails to expand correctly in some case, such as the following example, which is meant to be an if
statement with two branches:
if (x > y) SWAP(x,y); /* Branch 1 */ else do_something(); /* Branch 2 */
Following macro expansion, however, this code is interpreted as an if
statement with only one branch:
if (x > y) { /* Single-branch if-statement!!! */ tmp = x; /* The one and only branch consists */ x = y; /* of the block. */ y = tmp; } ; /* empty statement */ else /* ERROR!!! "parse error before else" */ do_something();
The problem is the semicolon (;
) following the block.
Compliant Solution
Wrapping the macro inside a do-while loop mitigates the problem.
/* * Swaps two values. * Requires tmp variable to be defined. */ #define SWAP(x, y) \ do { \ tmp = x; \ x = y; \ y = tmp; } \ while (0)
The do-while loop will always be executed exactly once.
Risk Assessment
Improperly wrapped statement macros can result in unexpected and difficult to diagnose behavior.
Recommendation | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PRE10-C | medium | probable | low | P12 | L1 |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Related Guidelines
CERT C++ Secure Coding Standard: PRE10-CPP. Wrap multi-statement macros in a do-while loop
ISO/IEC TR 24772 "NMP Pre-processor directions"
Bibliography
Linux Kernel Newbies FAQ FAQ/DoWhile0