...
| Code Block | ||
|---|---|---|
| ||
#include <stdio.h>
#include <pthread.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
typedef struct {
int balance;
pthread_mutex_t balance_mutex;
} bank_account;
typedef struct {
bank_account *from;
bank_account *to;
int amount;
} deposit_thr_args;
/* return negative on error */
int create_bank_account(bank_account **ba, int initial_amount) {
bank_account *nba = malloc(sizeof(bank_account));
if (nba == NULL) {
return -1;
}
nba->balance = initial_amount;
pthread_mutex_init(&nba->balance_mutex, NULL);
*ba = nba;
return 0;
}
void *deposit(void *ptr) {
deposit_thr_args *args = (deposit_thr_args *)ptr;
pthread_mutex_lock(&(args->from->balance_mutex));
/* not enough balance to transfer */
if (args->from->balance < args->amount) {
pthread_mutex_unlock(&(args->from->balance_mutex));
return NULL;
}
pthread_mutex_lock(&(args->to->balance_mutex));
args->from->balance -= args->amount;
args->to->balance += args->amount;
pthread_mutex_unlock(&(args->from->balance_mutex));
pthread_mutex_unlock(&(args->to->balance_mutex));
return NULL;
}
int main() {
pthread_t thr1, thr2;
int err;
bank_account *ba1, *ba2;
err = create_bank_account(&ba1, 1000);
if (err < 0)
exit(err);
err = create_bank_account(&ba2, 1000);
if (err < 0)
exit(err);
deposit_thr_args *arg1 = malloc(sizeof(deposit_thr_args));
if (arg1 == NULL)
exit(-1);
deposit_thr_args *arg2 = malloc(sizeof(deposit_thr_args));
if (arg2 == NULL)
exit(-1);
arg1->from = ba1;
arg1->to = ba2;
arg1->amount = 100;
arg2->from = ba2;
arg2->to = ba1;
arg2->amount = 100;
/* perform the deposit */
err = pthread_create(&thr1, NULL, deposit, (void *)arg1);
if (err)
exit(err);
err = pthread_create(&thr2, NULL, deposit, (void *)arg2);
if (err)
exit(err);
pthread_exit(NULL);
return 0;
}
|
...
The solution to the deadlock problem is to lock in predefined order. In the following example, each thread will lock based on bank_account's id in increasing order. This way circular wait problem is avoided and when one thread requires a lock will guarantee it will require the next lock.
| Code Block | ||
|---|---|---|
| ||
#include <stdio.h> #include <pthread.h> #include <stdlib.h> typedef struct { int balance; pthread_mutex_t balance_mutex; unsigned int id; /* read only and should never be changed */ } bank_account; typedef struct { bank_account *from; bank_account *to; int amount; } deposit_thr_args; unsigned int global_id = 1; /* return negative on error */ int create_bank_account(bank_account **ba, int initial_amount) { bank_account *nba = malloc(sizeof(bank_account)); if (nba == NULL) { return -1; } nba->balance = initial_amount; pthread_mutex_init(&nba->balance_mutex, NULL); nba->id = global_id++; *ba = nba; return 0; } void *deposit(void *ptr) { deposit_thr_args *args = (deposit_thr_args *)ptr; if (args->from->id == args->to->id) return NULL; /* ensure proper ordering for locking */ if (args->from->id < args->to->id) { pthread_mutex_lock(&(args->from->balance_mutex)); pthread_mutex_lock(&(args->to->balance_mutex)); } else { pthread_mutex_lock(&(args->to->balance_mutex)); pthread_mutex_lock(&(args->from->balance_mutex)); } /* not enough balance to transfer */ if (args->from->balance < args->amount) { pthread_mutex_unlock(&(args->from->balance_mutex)); pthread_mutex_unlock(&(args->to->balance_mutex)); return NULL; } args->from->balance -= args->amount; args->to->balance += args->amount; pthread_mutex_unlock(&(args->from->balance_mutex)); pthread_mutex_unlock(&(args->to->balance_mutex)); return NULL; } int main() { pthread_t thr1, thr2; int err; bank_account *ba1, *ba2; err = create_bank_account(&ba1, 1000); if (err < 0) exit(err); err = create_bank_account(&ba2, 1000); if (err < 0) exit(err); deposit_thr_args *arg1 = malloc(sizeof(deposit_thr_args)); deposit_thr_args *arg2 = malloc(sizeof(deposit_thr_args)); arg1->from = ba1; arg1->to = ba2; arg1->amount = 100; arg2->from = ba2; arg2->to = ba1; arg2->amount = 100; /* perform the deposit */ pthread_create(&thr1, NULL, deposit, (void *)arg1); pthread_create(&thr2, NULL, deposit, (void *)arg2); pthread_exit(NULL); return 0; } |
Risk Assessment
Deadlock causes multiple threads to not be able to progress and thus halt the executing program. This is a potential denial-of-service attack when the attacker can force deadlock situations. It's probable that deadlock will occur in multi-thread programs that manage multiple resources. Some automation for detecting deadlock can be implemented in which the detector can try different inputs and wait for a timeout. The fixes can be done manually.
Recommendation | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Level | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
POS43-C | low | probable | medium | L3 | P3 |
Other Languages
CON12-J. Avoid deadlock by requesting and releasing locks in the same order
References
| Wiki Markup |
|---|
\[[pthread_mutex | https://computing.llnl.gov/tutorials/pthreads/#Mutexes]\] pthread_mutex tutorial \[[MITRE CWE:764 | http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/764.html]\] Multiple Locks of Critical Resources \[[Bryant 03|AA. References#Bryant 03]\] Chapter 13, Concurrent Programming |
Other Languages
CON12-J. Avoid deadlock by requesting and releasing locks in the same order