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If an exception is thrown while logging is in progress, data may not be logged unless special care is taken. This can lead to a multitude of vulnerabilities, such as denial of service or vulnerabilities that allow the attacker to conceal critical security exceptions by preventing them from being logged.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example uses statements that can throw exceptions when logging is in process. It attempts to log a SecurityException generated within the run method, however, the original log message is not logged if an exception is thrown during the logging process. An exception is thrown if there is a problem with the application's file system or if a thread attempts to write to the log file when the file is locked by another thread. An attacker can exploit these problems by:

  • Gaining access to the application's file system and deleting or changing the permissions of the log file.
  • Exploiting the multi-threaded nature of the application by providing input to the application via normal input channels that results in log messages being lost due to an OverlappingFileLockException. Because this attack vector makes use of standard input channels to perform the attack, it is much simpler to implement than the previous attack, which requires access to the application's file system.
public class ExceptionLog implements Runnable {
  public void logMessage(String message) {
    FileOutputStream fo = null;
    FileLock lock = null;

    try {
      // This can throw an exception and prevent logging.
      fo = new FileOutputStream("log_file.txt", true); 

      // Lock the file so only one thread can write a log message at a time.
      lock = fo.getChannel().lock();

      // Output the log message.
      System.err.println(message);
      fo.write((message + "\n").getBytes());
    } 

    // If an exception is caught, the original message to log is lost
    catch (FileNotFoundException e){
      logMessage("File Not Found Exception."); 
    }
    catch(IOException e) {
      logMessage("IO Exception."); 
    }
    catch (OverlappingFileLockException e) {
      logMessage("Cannot access file.");
    }
    finally {
      // Clean up by releasing the file lock and closing the file.
      try {
        if (lock != null) {
          lock.release();
        }
        
        if (fo != null) {
          fo.close();
        }
      } catch (IOException e) {
          // This is unexpected.
          throw new RuntimeException(e);
      }
    }
  }

  public void run() {
    try {
      // Some security exception occurs here.
    } catch(SecurityException se) {
        logMessage("Security Exception has occurred!");
    }
  }

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    // Start multiple threads logging messages.
    for (int x=1; x<=20; x++) {
      (new Thread(new ExceptionLog())).start();
    }
  }    
}

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution executes several statements that can possibly throw exceptions prior to performing any security critical operations and uses the thread and exception safe Java Logger class to implement logging (see EXC08-J. Use a logging API to log critical security exceptions for more information on the use of logging libraries). As a result, exceptions do not result in failure to log a message or a different message than intended being logged. While this is a stringent requirement, it is necessary in cases where an exception can be deliberately thrown to conceal an attacker's tracks. The logging mechanism must be robust and should be able to detect and handle such phenomena.

public class ExceptionLog implements Runnable {
  Logger logger;
  Integer id;

  public ExceptionLog(Integer i, Logger l) {
    logger = l;
    id = i;
  }

  public void logMessage(String message) {
    // Note that the Java Logger class does not throw exceptions
    // while logging a message.
    logger.log(Level.WARNING, "From " + id + ": " + message);
  }

  public void run() {
    try {
      // Some security exception occurs here.
    } catch(SecurityException se) {
        logMessage("Security Exception has occurred!");
    }
  }

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    try {
      // Set up the shared logger for use by the multiple threads
      Logger logger = Logger.getLogger("MyLog");
      FileHandler fh = new FileHandler("log_file.txt", true);
      logger.addHandler(fh);
      logger.setLevel(Level.ALL);
      SimpleFormatter formatter = new SimpleFormatter();
      fh.setFormatter(formatter);

      // Start multiple threads for logging messages
      for (int x=1; x<=20; x++) {
        (new Thread(new ExceptionLog(x, logger))).start();
      }
    } catch (SecurityException e) {
        // This is unexpected.
        throw new RuntimeException(e);
    } catch (IOException e) {
        // This is unexpected.
        throw new RuntimeException(e);
    }
  }    
}

A slightly more expensive alternative is to support recursive logging.

Note that this recommendation does not prevent a program from reopening a closed log file after it realizes that important data must be captured. While in this case an IOException is possible, there is little that can be done when writing the data to the log file if the file itself is under question.

Risk Assessment

If an exception is thrown while data is being logged then data may be lost or problems may be concealed.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

EXC02- J

medium

likely

high

P6

L2

Automated Detection

TODO

Related Vulnerabilities

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

References

[[API 06]] Class Logger
[[JLS 05]] Chapter 11, Exceptions


EXC01-J. Do not allow exceptions to transmit sensitive information      12. Exceptional Behavior (EXC)      EXC03-J. Try to recover gracefully from system errors

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