The type , precision, and range of clock_t are implementation defined. time_t is specified as an "arithmetic type capable of representing times." as size_t, which is the unsigned result of the sizeof operator. However, how time is encoded within the arithmetic type is unspecified.
Non-Compliant Code Example
However, the way time is encoded within this arithmetic type by the function time() is unspecified. See unspecified behavior 48 in Annex J of the C Standard. Because the encoding is unspecified, there is no safe way to manually perform arithmetic on the type, and as a result, the values should not be modified directly.
Note that POSIX specifies that the time() function must return a value of type time_t, representing time in seconds since the Epoch. POSIX-conforming applications that are not intended to be portable to other environments therefore may safely perform arithmetic operations on time_t objects.
Noncompliant Code Example
This noncompliant code example attempts to execute doThis code attempts to execute do_some_work() multiple times until at least seconds_to_work has passed. However, because the encoding is not defined, there is no guarantee that adding start to seconds_to_work will result in adding seconds_to_work seconds.
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int do_work(int seconds_to_work) { time_t start; start = time(NULL); if (start == (time_t)(-1)) { /* Handle error */ } while (time(NULL) < start + secondseconds_to_work) { do_some_work(); /* ... */ } return 0; } |
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution uses difftime() to determine the difference between two time_t values. The difftime() function returns the number of seconds, from the second parameter until the first parameter and returns the result, as a double.
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int do_work(int seconds_to_work) { time_t start, current = time(NULL); starttime_t current = time()start; if (start == (time_t)(-1)) { /* Handle error */ } while (timedifftime(current, start) < start + secondseconds_to_work) { current = time(NULL); if (current == (time_t)(-1)) { /* Handle error */ } if (difftime(current, start) >= seconds_to_work) break;/* ... */ } do_some_work()return 0; } } |
Note that this loop may still might not exit , as because the range of time_t may might not be able to represent two times seconds_to_work apart.
Risk Assessment
Using time_t incorrectly can lead to broken logic that could can place a program in an infinite loop or cause an expected logic branch to not actually execute.
Recommendation | Severity | Likelihood |
|---|
Detectable | Repairable | Priority | Level |
|---|---|---|---|
MSC05- |
1 (low)
1 (low)
C | Low | Unlikely | Yes | No | P2 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compass/ROSE | Can detect violations of this recommendation | ||||||||
| CC2.MSC05 | Fully implemented | |||||||
| LDRA tool suite |
| 96 S, 101 S, 107 S, 433 S, 458 S | Partially Implemented |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
References
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Related Guidelines
Bibliography
| [Kettlewell 2002] | Section |
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| 4.1, |
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"time_t" |
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\[[ISO/IEC 9899-1999|AA. C References#ISO/IEC 9899-1999]] Section 7.23, "Date and time <time.h>" Wiki Markup