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Sometimes null is returned intentionally to account for 0 available instances. This practice can lead to denial-of-service vulnerabilities when the client code does not explicitly handle the null return case.

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant code example returns a null ArrayList when the size of the ArrayList is 0. The class Inventory contains a getStock() method that constructs a list of items that have 0 inventory and returns the list of items to the caller. When the size of this list is 0, a null is returned with the assumption that the client will install the necessary checks. Here, the client omits the check, causing a NullPointerException at runtime.

class Inventory {
  private final Hashtable<String, Integer> items;
  public Inventory() {
    items = new Hashtable<String, Integer>();	
  }

  public List<String> getStock() {
    List<String> stock = new ArrayList<String>();
    Enumeration itemKeys = items.keys();
    while(itemKeys.hasMoreElements()) {
      Object value = itemKeys.nextElement();
      if((items.get(value)) == 0) {  		
        stock.add((String)value);	 
      }
    }
    
    if(items.size() == 0) {	
      return null;
    } else {
      return stock;
    }	
  }
}

public class Client {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    Inventory inv = new Inventory();  
    List<String> items = inv.getStock();
    System.out.println(items.size()); // Throws an NPE
  }
}

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution eliminates the null return and simply returns the List, even if it is zero-length. The client can effectively handle this situation without being interrupted by runtime exceptions. When arrays are returned instead of collections, care must be taken to ensure that the client does not access individual elements of a zero-length array. This prevents an ArrayOutOfBoundsException.

class Inventory {
  private final Hashtable<String, Integer> items;
  public Inventory() {
    items = new Hashtable<String, Integer>();	
  }

  public List<String> getStock() {
    List<String> stock = new ArrayList<String>();
    Integer noOfItems; // Number of items left in the inventory
    Enumeration itemKeys = items.keys();
    while(itemkeys.hasMoreElements()) {
      Object value = itemKeys.nextElement();
		
      if((noOfItems = items.get(value)) == 0) {  		
        stock.add((String)value);	 
      }
    }	
    return stock; // Return list (possibly zero-length)
  }
}

public class Client {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    Inventory inv = new Inventory();  
    List<String> items = inv.getStock();
    System.out.println(items.size()); // Does not throw an NPE
  }
}

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution returns an empty list, which is an equivalent, permissible technique:

public List<String> getStock() {
  List<String> stock = new ArrayList<String>();
  Integer noOfItems; // Number of items left in the inventory
  Enumeration itemkeys = items.keys();
  while(itemkeys.hasMoreElements()) {
    Object value = itemKeys.nextElement();
		
    if((noOfItems = items.get(value)) == 0) {  		
      stock.add((String)value);	 
    }
  }	
  
  if(l.isEmpty()) {
    return Collections.EMPTY_LIST; // Always zero-length
  } else {
    return stock; // Return list 
  }
}

// Class Client ...

Applicability

Returning null rather than a zero-length array or collection may lead to denial-of-service vulnerabilities when the client code does not handle null properly.

Automatic detection is straightforward, but fixing the problem will probably require human intervention.

Bibliography

[Bloch 2008]Item 43, "Return Empty Arrays or Collections, Not Nulls"

 


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