You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 46 Next »

Under certain circumstances, terminating a destructor, operator delete, or operator delete[] by throwing an exception can trigger undefined behavior.

For instance, the C++ Standard, [basic.stc.dynamic.deallocation], paragraph 3 [ISO/IEC 14882-2014], in part, states the following:

If a deallocation function terminates by throwing an exception, the behavior is undefined.

In these situations, the function must logically be declared noexcept because throwing an exception from the function can never have well-defined behavior. The C++ Standard, [except.spec], paragraph 15, states the following:

A deallocation function with no explicit exception-specification is treated as if it were specified with noexcept(true).

As such, deallocation functions (object, array, and placement forms at either global or class scope) must not terminate by throwing an exception. Do not declare such functions to be noexcept(false). However, it is acceptable to rely on the implicit noexcept(true) specification or declare noexcept explicitly on the function signature.

Object destructors are likely to be called during stack unwinding as a result of an exception being thrown. If the destructor itself throws an exception, having been called as the result of an exception being thrown, then the function std::terminate() is called with the default effect of calling std::abort() [ISO/IEC 14882-2014]. When std::abort() is called, no further objects are destroyed, resulting in an indeterminate program state and undefined behavior. Do not terminate a destructor by throwing an exception. 

The C++ Standard, [class.dtor], paragraph 3, states [ISO/IEC 14882-2014] the following:

A declaration of a destructor that does not have an exception-specification is implicitly considered to have the same exception-specification as an implicit declaration.

An implicit declaration of a destructor is considered to be noexcept(true) according to [except.spec], paragraph 14. As such, destructors must not be declared noexcept(false) but may instead rely on the implicit noexcept(true) or declare noexcept explicitly.

Any noexcept function that terminates by throwing an exception violates ERR55-CPP. Honor exception specifications.

Noncompliant Code Example

In this noncompliant code example, the class destructor does not meet the implicit noexcept guarantee because it may throw an exception even if it was called as the result of an exception being thrown. Consequently, it is declared as noexcept(false) but still can trigger undefined behavior.

#include <stdexcept>
 
class S {
  bool has_error() const;
 
public:
  ~S() noexcept(false) {
    // Normal processing
    if (has_error()) {
      throw std::logic_error("Something bad");
    }
  }
};

Noncompliant Code Example (std::uncaught_exception())

Use of std::uncaught_exception() in the destructor solves the termination problem by avoiding the propagation of the exception if an existing exception is being processed, as demonstrated in this noncompliant code example. However, by circumventing normal destructor processing, this approach may keep the destructor from releasing important resources.

#include <exception>
#include <stdexcept>
 
class S {
  bool has_error() const;
 
public:
  ~S() noexcept(false) {
    // Normal processing
    if (has_error() && !std::uncaught_exception()) {
      throw std::logic_error("Something bad");
    }
  }
};

Noncompliant Code Example (function-try-block)

This noncompliant code example, as well as the following compliant solution, presumes the existence of a Bad class with a destructor that can throw. Although the class violates this rule, it is presumed that the class cannot be modified to comply with this rule.

// Assume that this class is provided by a 3rd party and it is not something
// that can be modified by the user.
class Bad {
  ~Bad() noexcept(false);
};

To safely use the Bad class, the SomeClass destructor attempts to handle exceptions thrown from the Bad destructor by absorbing them.

class SomeClass {
  Bad bad_member;
public:
  ~SomeClass()
  try {
    // ...
  } catch(...) {
    // Handle the exception thrown from the Bad destructor.
  }
};

However, the C++ Standard, [except.handle], paragraph 15 [ISO/IEC 14882-2014], in part, states the following:

The currently handled exception is rethrown if control reaches the end of a handler of the function-try-block of a constructor or destructor.

Consequently, the caught exception will inevitably escape from the SomeClass destructor because it is implicitly rethrown when control reaches the end of the function-try-block handler/.

Compliant Solution

A destructor should perform the same way whether or not there is an active exception. Typically, this means that it should invoke only operations that do not throw exceptions, or it should handle all exceptions and not rethrow them (even implicitly). This compliant solution differs from the previous noncompliant code example by having an explicit return statement in the SomeClass destructor. This statement prevents control from reaching the end of the exception handler. Consequently, this handler will catch the exception thrown by Bad::~Bad() when bad_member is destroyed. It will also catch any exceptions thrown within the compound statement of the function-try-block, but the SomeClass destructor will not terminate by throwing an exception.

class SomeClass {
  Bad bad_member;
public:
  ~SomeClass()
  try {
    // ...
  } catch(...) {
    // Catch exceptions thrown from noncompliant destructors of
    // member objects or base class subobjects.

    // NOTE: Flowing off the end of a destructor function-try-block causes
    // the caught exception to be implicitly rethrown, but an explicit
    // return statement will prevent that from happening.
    return;
  }
};

Noncompliant Code Example

In this noncompliant code example, a global deallocation is declared noexcept(false) and throws an exception if some conditions are not properly met. However, throwing from a deallocation function results in undefined behavior.

#include <stdexcept>
 
bool perform_dealloc(void *);
 
void operator delete(void *ptr) noexcept(false) {
  if (perform_dealloc(ptr)) {
    throw std::logic_error("Something bad");
  }
}

Compliant Solution

The compliant solution does not throw exceptions in the event the deallocation fails but instead fails as gracefully as possible.

#include <cstdlib>
#include <stdexcept>
 
bool perform_dealloc(void *);
void log_failure(const char *);
 
void operator delete(void *ptr) noexcept(true) {
  if (perform_dealloc(ptr)) {
    log_failure("Deallocation of pointer failed");
    std::exit(1); // Fail, but still call destructors
  }
}

Risk Assessment

Attempting to throw exceptions from destructors or deallocation functions can result in undefined behavior, leading to resource leaks or denial-of-service attacks.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

DCL57-CPP

Low

Likely

Medium

P6

L3

Automated Detection

Tool

Version

Checker

Description

LDRA tool suite
9.7.1

 

453 S

Partially implemented

Related Vulnerabilities

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

Related Guidelines

Bibliography

[Henricson 97]Recommendation 12.5, Do not let destructors called during stack unwinding throw exceptions
[ISO/IEC 14882-2014]

Subclause 3.4.7.2, "Deallocation Functions"
Subclause 15.2, "Constructors and Destructors"
Subclause 15.3, "Handling an Exception"
Subclause 15.4, "Exception Specifications"

[Meyers 05]Item 8, "Prevent Exceptions from Leaving Destructors"
[Sutter 00]"Never allow exceptions from escaping destructors or from an overloaded operator delete()" (p. 29)

 


  • No labels