If a constant value is given for an identifier, do not diminish the maintainability of the code in which it is used by assuming its value in expressions. Simply giving the constant a name is not enough to ensure modifiability; you must be careful to always use the name, and remember that the value can change. This recommendation is related to DCL06-C. Use meaningful symbolic constants to represent literal values.

Noncompliant Code Example

The header stdio.h defines the BUFSIZ macro, which expands to an integer constant expression that is the size of the buffer used by the setbuf() function. This noncompliant code example defeats the purpose of defining BUFSIZ as a constant by assuming its value in the following expression:

#include <stdio.h>
/* ... */
nblocks = 1 + ((nbytes - 1) >> 9); /* BUFSIZ = 512 = 2^9 */

The programmer's assumption underlying this code is that "everyone knows that BUFSIZ equals 512," and right-shifting 9 bits is the same (for positive numbers) as dividing by 512. However, if BUFSIZ changes to 1024 on some systems, modifications are difficult and error prone.

Compliant Solution

This compliant solution uses the identifier assigned to the constant value in the expression:

#include <stdio.h>
/* ... */
nblocks = 1 + (nbytes - 1) / BUFSIZ;

Most modern C compilers will optimize this code appropriately.

Risk Assessment

Assuming the value of an expression diminishes the maintainability of code and can produce unexpected behavior under any circumstances in which the constant changes.

Recommendation

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

EXP07-C

Low

Unlikely

Medium

P2

L3

Automated Detection

Tool

Version

Checker

Description

Axivion Bauhaus Suite

7.2.0

CertC-EXP07
Helix QAC

2024.1

C3120, C3121, C3122, C3123, C3131, C3132


LDRA tool suite
9.7.1
201 S

Fully implemented

Related Vulnerabilities

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

Related Guidelines

Bibliography

[Plum 1985]Rule 1-5



5 Comments

  1. I think the example should include

    enum { BUFSIZ = 512 };
    

    in the non-compliant code (and, presumably, the compliant code would include it too).

    [First attempt wrote the preformatted box inline, and then appeared with 'unknown macro' in the Wiki markup.] 

  2. I would suggest mentioning the alternative compliant solution of introducing a second constant BUFSIZ_SHIFT with the value 9. This approach seems fairly common.

  3. I added an explanation of where BUFSIZ is defined. I think this should address the initial concern.

    I didn't add the BUFSIZ_SHIFT compliant solution, common as it may be. At some point I thought we had started a recommendation to avoid performing bitwise operations on arithmetic values, and vice versa, although I can not find it now.

  4. BUFSIZ is not allowed to be defined as an enumeration constant.

     The talk about BUFSIZE_SHIFT brings up the point that C could benefit from a log-base-2 operator.  Anyway, in general:

    #define X_OFFSET 9u  // the "u" is important for bitwise operations
    #define X_SIZE (1<<X_OFFSET)

    1. I don't see that any changes are required in response to this comment.