Developers often separate program logic across multiple classes or files to modularize code and to increase reusability. When developers modify a superclass (during maintenance, for example), the developer must ensure that changes in superclasses preserve all the program invariants on which the subclasses depend. Failure to maintain all relevant invariants can cause security vulnerabilities.
Noncompliant Code Example
In this code example, a class Account stores banking-related information without any inherent security. Security is delegated to the subclass BankAccount. The client application is required to use BankAccount because it contains the security mechanism.
class Account {
// Maintains all banking-related data such as account balance
private double balance = 100;
boolean withdraw(double amount) {
if ((balance - amount) >= 0) {
balance -= amount;
System.out.println("Withdrawal successful. The balance is : "
+ balance);
return true;
}
return false;
}
}
public class BankAccount extends Account {
// Subclass handles authentication
@Override boolean withdraw(double amount) {
if (!securityCheck()) {
throw new IllegalAccessException();
}
return super.withdraw(amount);
}
private final boolean securityCheck() {
// Check that account management may proceed
}
}
public class Client {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Account account = new BankAccount();
// Enforce security manager check
boolean result = account.withdraw(200.0);
System.out.println("Withdrawal successful? " + result);
}
}
At a later date, the maintainer of the Account class added a new method called overdraft(). However, the BankAccount class maintainer was unaware of the change. Consequently, the client application became vulnerable to malicious invocations. For example, the overdraft() method could be invoked directly on a BankAccount object, avoiding the security checks that should have been present. The following noncompliant code example shows this vulnerability:
class Account {
// Maintains all banking-related data such as account balance
private double balance = 100;
boolean overdraft() {
balance += 300; // Add 300 in case there is an overdraft
System.out.println("Added back-up amount. The balance is :"
+ balance);
return true;
}
// Other Account methods
}
public class BankAccount extends Account {
// Subclass handles authentication
// NOTE: unchanged from previous version
// NOTE: lacks override of overdraft method
}
public class Client {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Account account = new BankAccount();
// Enforce security manager check
boolean result = account.withdraw(200.0);
if (!result) {
result = account.overdraft();
}
System.out.println("Withdrawal successful? " + result);
}
}
Although this code works as expected, it adds a dangerous attack vector. Because the overdraft() method has no security check, a malicious client can invoke it without authentication:
public class MaliciousClient {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Account account = new BankAccount();
// No security check performed
boolean result = account.overdraft();
System.out.println("Withdrawal successful? " + result);
}
}
Compliant Solution
In this compliant solution, the BankAccount class provides an overriding version of the overdraft() method that immediately fails, preventing misuse of the overdraft feature. All other aspects of the compliant solution remain unchanged.
class BankAccount extends Account {
// ...
@Override boolean overdraft() { // Override
throw new IllegalAccessException();
}
}
Alternatively, when the intended design permits the new method in the parent class to be invoked directly from a subclass without overriding, install a security manager check directly in the new method.
Noncompliant Code Example (Calendar)
This noncompliant code example overrides the methods after() and compareTo() of the class java.util.Calendar. The Calendar.after() method returns a boolean value that indicates whether or not the Calendar represents a time after that represented by the specified Object parameter. The programmer wishes to extend this functionality so that the after() method returns true even when the two objects represent the same date. The programmer also overrides the method compareTo() to provide a "comparisons by day" option to clients (for example, comparing today's date with the first day of the week, which differs among countries, to check whether it is a weekday).
class CalendarSubclass extends Calendar {
@Override public boolean after(Object when) {
// Correctly calls Calendar.compareTo()
if (when instanceof Calendar &&
super.compareTo((Calendar) when) == 0) {
return true;
}
return super.after(when);
}
@Override public int compareTo(Calendar anotherCalendar) {
return compareDays(this.getFirstDayOfWeek(),
anotherCalendar.getFirstDayOfWeek());
}
private int compareDays(int currentFirstDayOfWeek,
int anotherFirstDayOfWeek) {
return (currentFirstDayOfWeek > anotherFirstDayOfWeek) ? 1
: (currentFirstDayOfWeek == anotherFirstDayOfWeek) ? 0 : -1;
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
CalendarSubclass cs1 = new CalendarSubclass();
cs1.setTime(new Date());
// Date of last Sunday (before now)
cs1.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK, Calendar.SUNDAY);
// Wed Dec 31 19:00:00 EST 1969
CalendarSubclass cs2 = new CalendarSubclass();
// Expected to print true
System.out.println(cs1.after(cs2));
}
// Implementation of other Calendar abstract methods
}
The java.util.Calendar class provides a compareTo() method and an after() method. The after() method is documented in the Java API Reference [API 2014] as follows:
The
after()method returns whether thisCalendarrepresents a time after the time represented by the specifiedObject. This method is equivalent tocompareTo(when) > 0
if and only ifwhenis aCalendarinstance. Otherwise, the method returnsfalse.
The documentation fails to state whether after() invokes compareTo() or whether compareTo() invokes after(). In the Oracle JDK 1.6 implementation, the source code for after() is as follows:
public boolean after(Object when) {
return when instanceof Calendar
&& compareTo((Calendar) when) > 0;
}
In this case, the two objects are initially compared using the overriding CalendarSubclass.after() method, which invokes the superclass's Calendar.after() method to perform the remainder of the comparison. But the Calendar.after() method internally calls the compareTo() method, which delegates to CalendarSubclass.compareTo(). Consequently, CalendarSubclass.after() actually calls CalendarSubclass.compareTo() and returns false.
The developer of the subclass was unaware of the implementation details of Calendar.after() and incorrectly assumed that the superclass's after() method would invoke only the superclass's methods without invoking overriding methods from the subclass. MET05-J. Ensure that constructors do not call overridable methods describes similar programming errors.
Such errors generally occur because the developer made assumptions about the implementation-specific details of the superclass. Even when these assumptions are initially correct, implementation details of the superclass may change without warning.
Compliant Solution (Calendar)
This compliant solution uses a design pattern called Composition and Forwarding (sometimes also called Delegation) [Lieberman 1986], [Gamma 1995]. The compliant solution introduces a new forwarder class that contains a private member field of the Calendar type; this is composition rather than inheritance. In this example, the field refers to CalendarImplementation, a concrete instantiable implementation of the abstract Calendar class. The compliant solution also introduces a wrapper class called CompositeCalendar that provides the same overridden methods found in the CalendarSubclass from the preceding noncompliant code example.
// The CalendarImplementation object is a concrete implementation
// of the abstract Calendar class
// Class ForwardingCalendar
public class ForwardingCalendar {
private final CalendarImplementation c;
public ForwardingCalendar(CalendarImplementation c) {
this.c = c;
}
CalendarImplementation getCalendarImplementation() {
return c;
}
public boolean after(Object when) {
return c.after(when);
}
public int compareTo(Calendar anotherCalendar) {
// CalendarImplementation.compareTo() will be called
return c.compareTo(anotherCalendar);
}
}
class CompositeCalendar extends ForwardingCalendar {
public CompositeCalendar(CalendarImplementation ci) {
super(ci);
}
@Override public boolean after(Object when) {
// This will call the overridden version, i.e.
// CompositeClass.compareTo();
if (when instanceof Calendar &&
super.compareTo((Calendar)when) == 0) {
// Return true if it is the first day of week
return true;
}
// No longer compares with first day of week;
// uses default comparison with epoch
return super.after(when);
}
@Override public int compareTo(Calendar anotherCalendar) {
return compareDays(
super.getCalendarImplementation().getFirstDayOfWeek(),
anotherCalendar.getFirstDayOfWeek());
}
private int compareDays(int currentFirstDayOfWeek,
int anotherFirstDayOfWeek) {
return (currentFirstDayOfWeek > anotherFirstDayOfWeek) ? 1
: (currentFirstDayOfWeek == anotherFirstDayOfWeek) ? 0 : -1;
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
CalendarImplementation ci1 = new CalendarImplementation();
ci1.setTime(new Date());
// Date of last Sunday (before now)
ci1.set(Calendar.DAY_OF_WEEK, Calendar.SUNDAY);
CalendarImplementation ci2 = new CalendarImplementation();
CompositeCalendar c = new CompositeCalendar(ci1);
// Expected to print true
System.out.println(c.after(ci2));
}
}
Note that each method of the class ForwardingCalendar redirects to methods of the contained CalendarImplementation class, from which it receives return values; this is the forwarding mechanism. The ForwardingCalendar class is largely independent of the implementation of the class CalendarImplementation. Consequently, future changes to CalendarImplementation are unlikely to break ForwardingCalendar and are also unlikely to break CompositeCalendar. Invocations of the overriding after() method of CompositeCalendar perform the necessary comparison by using the CalendarImplementation.compareTo() method as required. Using super.after(when) forwards to ForwardingCalendar, which invokes the CalendarImplementation.after() method as required. As a result, java.util.Calendar.after() invokes the CalendarImplementation.compareTo() method as required, resulting in the program correctly printing true.
Risk Assessment
Modifying a superclass without considering the effect on subclasses can introduce vulnerabilities. Subclasses that are developed with an incorrect understanding of the superclass implementation can be subject to erratic behavior, resulting in inconsistent data state and mismanaged control flow. Also, if the superclass implementation changes then the subclass may need to be redesigned to take into account these changes.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Detectable | Repairable | Priority | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
OBJ02-J | Medium | Probable | No | No | P4 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Sound automated detection is not currently feasible.
Related Vulnerabilities
The introduction of the entrySet() method in the java.util.Hashtable superclass in JDK 1.2 left the java.security.Provider subclass vulnerable to a security attack. The Provider class extends java.util.Properties, which in turn extends Hashtable. The Provider class maps a cryptographic algorithm name (for example, RSA) to a class that provides its implementation.
The Provider class inherits the put() and remove() methods from Hashtable and adds security manager checks to each. These checks ensure that malicious code cannot add or remove the mappings. When entrySet() was introduced, it became possible for untrusted code to remove the mappings from the Hashtable because Provider failed to override this method to provide the necessary security manager check [SCG 2009]. This situation is commonly known as the fragile class hierarchy problem.
Related Guidelines
Guideline 4-6 / EXTEND-6: Understand how a superclass can affect subclass behavior |
Bibliography
[API 2014] | |
Item 16, "Favor Composition over Inheritance" | |
Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software (p. 20) | |
"Using Prototypical Objects to Implement Shared Behavior in Object-Oriented Systems" |



11 Comments
Robert Seacord
Having "understand" in the title makes this rule informative / non-normative.
Preserve invariants when making changes to superclasses.
or perhaps:
"Preserve dependencies in subclasses when changing superclasses."
Comments?
Yitzhak Mandelbaum
I vote to remove this rule entirely. As written, there's no distinction between "subclasses," which are nominally the target of the rule, and arbitrary clients. This rule is not actually saying anything more than "don't violate an API when updating an implementation," which boils down to "satisfy the API you publish," which is a very general and fundamental principle of software engineering, and doesn't belong here.
Masaki Kubo
1. In the "Compliant Solution (Calendar)" where is the "CalendarImplementation" class coming from?
2. "Subclasses that are unaware of the superclass implementation" means "Subclass that are unaware of the changes to the superclass implementation"? What does it mean that subclass is unaware of superclass implementation?
David Svoboda
1. The CalendarImplementation class is provided by the user. Its
details don't matter for this rule, which is why we don't define it.
I suppose we could add something like:
class CalendarImplementation extends Calendar { // ... }2. It means the developer or maintainer of the subclass is unaware of how the superclass is built.
I've made both these changes.
Masaki Kubo
In the following compliant solution:
overdraft()is declared to returnbooleaninAccountclass but here it is changed tovoid overdraft(). Should we change it toand return
true?David Svoboda
done
Masaki Kubo
Secure Coding Guidelines for the Java Programming Language, Version 4.0 is now available and OBJ02-J related rule is covered in "Guideline 4-6: Understand how a superclass can affect subclass behavior":
http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/seccodeguide-139067.html
We might want to update our references to the Oracle's secure coding guidelines, including this rule.
Michael Nguyen
The first code example is said to be non-compliant but has a compliant (blue) box. Is that a mistake or an intentional decision? The code seems to be compliant despite the heading.
David Svoboda
The first code example is blue on purpose...it is perfectly compliant. The 2nd code sample is noncompliant, and is boxed in red.
Michael Nguyen
OK, thanks. The words "Noncompliant" above the blue box is misleading if you do not read the preceding text. I apologize for the unnecessary notification.
David Svoboda
Agreed, I wordsmithed the example.