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Increasingly, programmers view string data as a portable means of storing and communicating data, including numeric values.  A real world example involved storing the binary values of encrypted passwords as strings in a database.

While inefficient, it is generally feasible to convert numeric values to strings and then reverse the process.  However, the binary numeric value may not be representable in any character set, because not all bit patterns represent valid characters.  Consequently, programmers must never convert directly from a binary numeric value to a string.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example attempts to convert a BigInteger value to a String and then restore it back again. The toByteArray() method used returns a byte array containing the two's-complement representation of this BigInteger. The byte array is in big-endian byte-order: the most significant byte is in the zeroth element.  The program uses the String(byte[] bytes) constructor to create the string from the byte array.  The behavior of this constructor when the given bytes are not valid in the default character set is unspecified, which is likely to be the case.  Specifying the character set as a string also has unspecified behavior, although the Java API [API 2014] document claims that the String(byte[], Charset)  method always replaces malformed-input and unmappable-character sequences with this character set's default replacement string.  In any case, converting the String back to a BigInteger is unlikely to reproduce the original value. 

BigInteger x = new BigInteger("530500452766");
byte[] byteArray = x.toByteArray();
String s = new String(byteArray);
byteArray = s.getBytes();
x = new BigInteger(byteArray);

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution first produces a String representation of the BigInteger object and then converts the String object to a byte array. This process is then reversed. Because the textual representation in the String object is generated by the BigInteger class, it contains valid character data in the default character set.

BigInteger x = new BigInteger("530500452766");
String s = x.toString();  // valid character data
byte[] byteArray = s.getBytes();
String ns = new String(byteArray);  
x = new BigInteger(ns); 

Risk Assessment

Storing numeric data as a string is likely to result in a loss of data integrity.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

STR03-J

low

unlikely

medium

P2

L3

Related Guidelines

MITRE CWE

CWE-838. Inappropriate Encoding for Output Context

Bibliography

 

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