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Methods can return values to communicate failure or success or to update local objects or fields. Security risks can arise when method return values are ignored or when the invoking method fails to take suitable action. Consequently, programs must not ignore method return values.

When getter methods are named after an action, a programmer could fail to realize that a return value is expected. For example, the only purpose of the ProcessBuilder.redirectErrorStream() method is to report via return value whether the process builder successfully merged standard error and standard output. The method that actually performs redirection of the error stream is the overloaded single-argument method ProcessBuilder.redirectErrorStream(boolean).

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Another example is ignoring the return value from add() on a HashSet. If duplicate, false will be returned.

Noncompliant Code Example (File Deletion)

This noncompliant code example attempts to delete a file but fails to check whether the operation has succeeded.

public void deleteFile(){

  File someFile = new File("someFileName.txt");
  // do something with someFile
  someFile.delete();

}

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution checks the boolean value returned by the delete() method and handles any resulting errors.

public void deleteFile(){

  File someFile = new File("someFileName.txt");
  // do something with someFile
  if (!someFile.delete()) {
    // handle failure to delete the file
  }

}

Noncompliant Code Example (String Replacement)

This noncompliant code example ignores the return value of the String.replace() method, failing to update the original string. The String.replace() method cannot modify the state of the String (because String objects are immutable); rather, it returns a reference to a new String object containing the modified string.

public class Replace {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    String original = "insecure";
    original.replace('i', '9');
    System.out.println(original);
  }
}

It is especially important to process the return values of immutable object methods. While many methods of mutable objects operate by changing some internal state of the object, methods of immutable objects cannot change the object and often return a mutated new object, leaving the original object unchanged.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution correctly updates the String reference original with the return value from the String.replace() method.

public class Replace {
  public static void main(String[] args) {
    String original = "insecure";
    original = original.replace( 'i', '9' );
    System.out.println(original);
  }
}

Risk Assessment

Ignoring method return values can lead to unexpected program behavior.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

EXP00-J

medium

probable

medium

P8

L2

Related Guidelines

[seccode:CERT C Secure Coding Standard]

[seccode:EXP12-C. Do not ignore values returned by functions]

[cplusplus:CERT C++ Secure Coding Standard]

[cplusplus:EXP12-CPP. Do not ignore values returned by functions or methods]

ISO/IEC TR 24772:2010

Passing Parameters and Return Values [CSJ]

MITRE CWE

CWE-252. Unchecked return value

Bibliography

[[API 2006]]

method delete()

 

method replace()

[[Green 2008]]

String.replace

[[Pugh 2009]]

misusing putIfAbsent


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