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If a constant value is given for an identifier, do not diminish the modifiability of the code in which it is used by assuming its value in expressions. Just giving the constant a name is not enough to ensure modifiability; you must be careful to always use the name, and remember that the value could change. This recommendation is related to DCL06-A. Use meaningful symbolic constants to represent literal values in program logic.

Non-Compliant Code Example

The header <stdio.h> defines the BUFSIZ macro which expands to an integer constant expression that is the size of the buffer used by the setbuf() function. This non-compliant code example defeats the purpose of defining BUFSIZ as a constant by assuming its value in the following expression:

#include <stdio.h>
/* ... */
nblocks = 1 + ((nbytes - 1) >> 9); /* BUFSIZ = 512 = 2^9 */

The programmer's assumption underlying this code is that "everyone knows that BUFSIZ equals 512," and right-shifting nine bits is the same (for positive numbers) as dividing by 512. However, if BUFSIZ changes to 1024 on some systems, modifications are difficult and error-prone.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution uses the identifier assigned to the constant value in the expression.

#include <stdio.h>
/* ... */
nblocks = 1 + (nbytes - 1) / BUFSIZ;

Most modern C compilers will optimize this code appropriately.

Risk Assessment

Hardwiring constants renders code potentially nonportable; in fact it will produce unexpected under any circumstances in which the constant changes.

Recommendation

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

EXP07-A

low

unlikely

medium

P2

L3

Related Vulnerabilities

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

References

[[Plum 85]] Rule 1-5
[[ISO/IEC 9899:1999]] Section 6.10, "Preprocessing directives," and Section 5.1.1, "Translation environment"


EXP06-A. Operands to the sizeof operator should not contain side effects      03. Expressions (EXP)       EXP08-A. Ensure pointer arithmetic is used correctly

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