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Comment: Edited by sciSpider Java v3.0 (sch jp)

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Classes and class members should be given the minimum access possible so that malicious code has the least chance to manipulate the system.

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Noncompliant Code Example

In this non-compliant noncompliant example, the class publicClass has been declared public. This may well be necessary. However, the member function getPoint as well as the (x.y) coordinates are public. This gives world-access to the class members. A real world scenario can arise when an evil applet attempts to access the credit card field of another object that is not protected.

Code Block
bgColor#FFcccc
public class publicClass {
  public int x;
  public int y;
	
  public void getPoint() {
     System.out.println("(" + x + "," + y + ")");  
  }	
}

Compliant Solution

Limiting the scope of classes, interfaces, methods and fields as far as possible reduces the chance of malicious manipulation. Restrictive access should be granted to limit the accessibility depending on the desired implementation scope. This also helps eliminate the threat of a malicious method overriding some legitimate method. The most restrictive condition is demonstrated in this compliant solution.

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"In addition, refrain from increasing the accessibility of an inherited method, as doing so may break assumptions made by the superclass. A class that overrides the protected java.lang.Object.finalize method and declares that method public, for example, enables hostile callers to finalize an instance of that class, and to call methods on that instance after it has been finalized. A superclass implementation unprepared to handle such a call sequence could throw runtime exceptions that leak private information, or that leave the object in an invalid state that compromises security. One noteworthy exception to this guideline pertains to classes that implement the java.lang.Cloneable interface. In these cases, the accessibility of the Object.clone method should be increased from protected to public." Sun Java Secure Coding Guidelines, guideline 1-1

Risk Assessment

TODO

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

SCP32-J

??

??

??

P??

L??

Automated Detection

TODO

Related Vulnerabilities

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

References

JLS Section 6.6 "Access Control" http://java.sun.com/docs/books/jls/third_edition/html/names.html#6.6
Sun Secure Coding Guidelines
The Java Tutorial by Mary Campione and Kathy Walrath http://www.telecom.ntua.gr/HTML.Tutorials/java/javaOO/accesscontrol.html#protectedcaveat
Securing Java, Chapter 3, Java Language Security Constructs