
When multiple threads can read or modify the same data, use synchronization techniques to avoid software flaws that can lead to security vulnerabilities. Concurrency problems Data races can often result in abnormal termination or denial of service, but it is possible for them to result in more serious vulnerabilities. The C Standard, section 5.1.2.5, paragraph 35 [ISO/IEC 9899:2024], says:
The execution of a program contains a data race if it contains two conflicting actions in different threads, at least one of which is not atomic, and neither happens before the other. Any such data race results in undefined behavior.
Noncompliant Code Example
Assume this simplified code is part of a multithreaded bank system. Threads call credit()
and debit()
as money is deposited into and withdrawn from the single account. Because the addition and subtraction operations are not atomic, it is possible that two operations can occur concurrently, but only the result of one would be saved. This despite saved—despite declaring the account_balance
volatile
. For example, an attacker can credit the account with a sum of money and make a large number of small debits concurrently. Some of the debits might not affect the account balance because of the race condition, so the attacker is effectively creating money.
Code Block | ||||
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static volatile int account_balance; void debit(int amount) { account_balance -= amount; } void credit(int amount) { account_balance += amount; } |
Compliant Solution (Mutex)
This compliant solution uses a mutex to make credits and debits atomic operations. All credits and debits will now affect the account balance, so an attacker cannot exploit the race condition to steal money from the bank. The mutex is created with the mtx_init()
function. Note that the The presence of the mutex makes declaring account_balance
volatile
unnecssary unnecessary.
Code Block | ||||
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#include <threads.h> static int account_balance; static mtx_t account_lock; int debit(int amount) { if (mtx_initlock(&account_lock, mtx_plain) == thrd_error) { return -1; /* Indicate error to caller */ } account_balance -= amount; if (mtx_unlock(&account_lock) == thrd_error) { return -1; /* handleIndicate error to caller */ } return 0; /* Indicate ...success */ } int debitcredit(int amount) { if (mtx_lock(&account_lock) == thrd_error) { return -1; /* indicateIndicate error to caller */ } account_balance -+= amount; if (mtx_unlock(&account_lock) == thrd_error) { return -1; /* indicateIndicate error to caller */ } return 0; /* indicateIndicate success */ } int creditmain(int amountvoid) { if (mtx_lockinit(&account_lock, mtx_plain) == thrd_error) { /* Handle error return -1; /* indicate error to caller */ */ } /* ... */ } |
Compliant Solution (Atomic)
This compliant solution uses an atomic variable to synchronize credit and debit operations. All credits and debits will now affect the account balance, so an attacker cannot exploit the race condition to steal money from the bank. The atomic integer does not need to be initialized because default (zero) initialization of an atomic object with static or thread-local storage is guaranteed to produce a valid state. The +=
and -=
operators behave atomically when used with an atomic variable.
Code Block | ||||
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#include <stdatomic.h> atomic_int account_balance; void debit(int amount) { account_balance -= amount; } void credit(int amount) { account_balance += amount; } |
Noncompliant Code Example (Double-Fetch)
This noncompliant code example illustrates Xen Security Advisory CVE-2015-8550 / XSA-155 In this example, the following code is vulnerable to a data race where the integer referenced by ps
could be modified by a second thread that ran between the two reads of the variable.
Code Block | ||||
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#include <stdio.h> void doStuff(int *ps) { switch (*ps) { case 0: { printf("0"); break; } case 1: { printf("1"); break; } case if2: { (mtx_unlock(&account_lock) == thrd_error) return -1; /* indicate error to caller */ return 0; /* indicate success */printf("2"); break; } case 3: { printf("3"); break; } case 4: { printf("4"); break; } default: { printf("default"); break; } } } |
Even though there is only one read of the *ps
variable in the source code, the compiler is permitted to produce object code that performs multiple reads of the memory location. This is permitted by the "as-if" principle, as explained by section 5.1 of the [C99 Rationale 2003]:
The /as if/ principle is invoked repeatedly in this Rationale. The C89 Committee found that describing various aspects of the C language, library, and environment in terms of concrete models best serves discussion and presentation. Every attempt has been made to craft these models so that implementations are constrained only insofar as they must bring about the same result, /as if/ they had implemented the presentation model; often enough the clearest model would make for the worst implementation.
Implementation Details (GCC)
This code produces two reads of the *ps
value using GCC 4.8.4 on x86, as well as GCC 5.3.0 on x86-64 (Compiler-Introduced Double-Fetch Vulnerabilities – Understanding XSA-155).
Noncompliant Code Example (Volatile)
The data race can be disabled by declaring the data to be volatile, because the volatile
keyword forces the compiler to not produce two reads of the data. However, this violates CON02-C. Do not use volatile as a synchronization primitive.
Code Block | ||||
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#include <stdio.h>
void doStuff(volatile int *ps) {
switch (*ps) {
case 0: { printf("0"); break; }
case 1: { printf("1"); break; }
case 2: { printf("2"); break; }
case 3: { printf("3"); break; }
case 4: { printf("4"); break; }
default: { printf("default"); break; }
}
}
|
Compliant Solution (C11, Atomic)
Declaring the data to be atomic also forces the compiler to produce only one read of the data.
Code Block | ||||
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#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdatomic.h>
void doStuff(atomic_int *ps) {
switch (atomic_load(ps)) {
case 0: { printf("0"); break; }
case 1: { printf("1"); break; }
case 2: { printf("2"); break; }
case 3: { printf("3"); break; }
case 4: { printf("4"); break; }
default: { printf("default"); break; }
}
}
|
Compliant Solution (C11, Fences)
The bug was actually resolved by erecting fences around the switch
statement.
Code Block | ||||
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#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdatomic.h>
void doStuff(int *ps) {
atomic_thread_fence(memory_order_acquire);
switch (*ps) {
case 0: { printf("0"); break; }
case 1: { printf("1"); break; }
case 2: { printf("2"); break; }
case 3: { printf("3"); break; }
case 4: { printf("4"); break; }
default: { printf("default"); break; }
}
atomic_thread_fence(memory_order_release);
}
|
Risk Assessment
Race conditions caused by multiple threads concurrently accessing and modifying the same data can lead to abnormal termination and denial-of-service attacks or data integrity violations.
Recommendation | Severity | Likelihood | Detectable |
---|
Repairable | Priority | Level |
---|
CON43-C | Medium |
Probable |
No |
No | P4 | L3 |
Automated Detection
Tool | Version | Checker | Description | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Astrée |
| read_data_race write_data_race | Supported by sound analysis (data race alarm) | ||||||
CodeSonar |
| CONCURRENCY.DATARACE CONCURRENCY.MAA | Data race Multiple Accesses of Atomic | ||||||
Coverity |
| MISSING_LOCK (partial) | Implemented | ||||||
Helix QAC |
| C1765, C1766, C1770, C1771 C++1765, C++1766, C++1770, C++1771 | |||||||
Parasoft C/C++test |
| CERT_C-CON43-a | Do not use global variable with different locks set | ||||||
PC-lint Plus |
| 457 | Partially supported: access is detected at the object level (not at the field level) | ||||||
Polyspace Bug Finder |
| CERT C: Rule CON43-C | Checks for data race (rule fully covered) | ||||||
| V1088 |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Related Guidelines
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Key here (explains table format and definitions)
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Race |
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condition within a thread | 2017-07-07: CERT: Exact |
Bibliography
[ISO/IEC 9899:2024] | 5.1.2.5, "Multi-threaded Executions and Data Races" |
[C99 Rationale 2003] |
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2013] | Chapter |
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8, "File I/O" |
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