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Wiki MarkupThe C99 {{The C fopen()}} function is used to open an existing file or create a new one \[[ISO/IEC 9899:1999|AA. C References#ISO/IEC 9899-1999]\]. However, {{fopen()}} does not indicate if an existing file has been opened for writing or a new file has been created. This may lead to a program overwriting or accessing an unintended . The C11 version of the fopen() and fopen_s() functions provides a mode flag, x, that provides the mechanism needed to determine if the file that is to be opened exists. Not using this mode flag can lead to a program overwriting or accessing an unintended file.

Noncompliant Code Example (fopen())

In this noncompliant code example, the file referenced by file_name is opened for writing. This example is noncompliant if the programmer's intent was to create a new file, but the referenced file already exists.

Code Block
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char *file_name;
FILE *fp;

/* initializeInitialize file_name */

fp = fopen(file_name, "w");
if (!fp) {
  /* Handle error */
}

Noncompliant Code Example (fopen_s(),

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C11 Annex K)

The C11 Annex K  Wiki MarkupThe ISO/IEC TR 24731-1 {{fopen_s()}} function is designed to improve the security of the {{fopen()}} function \[[ISO/IEC TR 24731-1:2007|AA. C References#SO/IEC TR 24731-1-2007]\]. However, like {{. Like the fopen()}} function, {{fopen_s()}} provides no mechanism to determine if an existing file has been opened for writing or a new file has been created. provides a mechanism to determine whether the file exists. See below for use of the exclusive mode flag.

Code Block
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langc
char *file_name;
FILE *fp;

/* Initialize file_name */
errno_t res = fopen_s(&fp, file_name, "w");
if (res != 0) {
  /* Handle error */
}

Compliant Solution (fopen_s(), C11 Annex K)

The C Standard provides a new flag to address this problem. Subclause 7.21.5.3, paragraph 5 [ISO/IEC 9899:2011], states:

Opening a file with exclusive mode ('x' as the last character in the mode argument) fails if the file already exists or cannot be created. Otherwise, the file is created with exclusive (also known as non-shared) access to the extent that the underlying system supports exclusive access.

This option is also provided by the GNU C library [Loosemore 2007].

This compliant solution uses the x mode character to instruct fopen_s() to fail rather than open an existing file:

Code Block
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langc
char *file_name
Code Block
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char *file_name;
FILE *fp;

/* initializeInitialize file_name */
FILE *fp;
errno_t res = fopen_s(&fp, file_name, "wwx");
if (res != 0) {
  /* Handle error */
}

Use of this option allows for the easy remediation of legacy code. However, note that Microsoft Visual Studio 2012 and earlier do not support the x mode character [MSDN].

Compliant Solution (open(), POSIX)

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The {{open()}} function, as defined in the Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6 \[[Open Group 04|AA. C References#Open Group 04]\], is available on many platforms and provides finer control than {{fopen()}}. In particular, {{open()}} accepts the {{O_CREAT}} and {{O_EXCL}} flags. When used together, these flags instruct the {{open()}} function to fail if the file specified by {{file_name}} already the Standard for Information Technology—Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX®), Base Specifications, Issue 7 [IEEE Std 1003.1:2013], is available on many platforms and provides finer control than fopen(). In particular, open() accepts the O_CREAT and O_EXCL flags. When used together, these flags instruct the open() function to fail if the file specified by file_name already exists.

Code Block
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langc

char *file_name;
int new_file_mode;

/* initializeInitialize file_name and new_file_mode */

int fd = open(file_name, O_CREAT | O_EXCL | O_WRONLY, new_file_mode);
if (fd == -1) {
  /* Handle error */
}

...

Care should be taken when using {{O_EXCL}} with remote file systems because it does not work with NFS version 2. NFS version 3 added support for {{O_EXCL}} mode in {{open()}}. IETF RFC 1813 [Callaghan 1995] defines the {{EXCLUSIVE}} value to the {{mode}} argument of {{CREATE}} \[[Callaghan 95|AA. C References#Callaghan 95]\]. CREATE:

EXCLUSIVE specifies that the server is to follow exclusive creation semantics, using the verifier to ensure exclusive creation of the target. No attributes may be provided in this case, since the server may use the target file metadata to store the createverf3 verifier.

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For examples on of how to check for the existence of a file without opening it, see recommendation FIO10-C. Take care when using the rename() function.

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Wiki Markup
Section 12.3 of the GNU C Library says: \[[Loosemore 07|AA. C References#Loosemore 07]\]

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function

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This compliant solution uses the x mode character to instruct fopen() to fail rather than open an existing functions.

Code Block
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char *file_name;

/* initialize file_name */

FILE *fp = fopen(file_name, "wx");
if (!fp) {
  /* Handle error */
}

Use of this (nonportable) extension allows for the easy remediation of legacy code.

Compliant Solution (fdopen(), POSIX)

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For code that operates on {{FILE}} pointers and not file descriptors, the POSIX {{fdopen()}} function can be used to associate an open stream with the file descriptor returned by {{open()}}, as shown in this compliant solution \[[Open Group 04|AA. C References#Open Group 04]\].[IEEE Std 1003.1:2013]:

Code Block
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langc

char *file_name;
int new_file_mode;
FILE *fp;
int fd;

/* initializeInitialize file_name and new_file_mode */

fd = open(file_name, O_CREAT | O_EXCL | O_WRONLY, new_file_mode);
if (fd == -1) {
  /* Handle error */
}

fp = fdopen(fd, "w");
if (fp == NULL) {
  /* Handle error */
}

Compliant Solution (Windows)

The Win32 API CreateFile() allows a programmer to create or open a file depending on the flags passed in. Passing in the CREATE_NEW flag ensures the call fails if the file already exists. This compliant solution demonstrates how to open a file for reading and writing without sharing access to the file such that the call fails if the file already exists.

Code Block
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TCHAR *file_name;
HANDLE hFile = CreateFile(file_name, GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE, 0, 0, 
                          CREATE_NEW, FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL, 0);
if (INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE == hFile) {
  DWORD err = GetLastError();
  if (ERROR_FILE_EXISTS == err) {
    /* Handle file exists error */
  } else {
    /* Handle other error */
  }
}

Risk Assessment

The ability to determine if whether an existing file has been opened or a new file has been created provides greater assurance that a file other than the intended file is not acted upon.

Recommendation

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

FIO03-C

medium

Medium

probable

Probable

high

High

P4

L3

Automated Detection

Tool

Version

Checker

Description

Coverity6.5OPEN_ARGSFully implemented
LDRA tool suite
Include Page
LDRA_V
LDRA_V
44 SEnhanced Enforcement
PRQA QA-C
Include Page
PRQA QA-C_v
PRQA QA-C_v
5012Partially implemented

Related Vulnerabilities

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

Other Languages

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Related Guidelines

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2.1, "The fopen_s Function"

Bibliography

References

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2011]Subclause 7.21.5.3,

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"

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The fopen Function"
Subclause K.3.5.2.1,

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"The

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fopen_s

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"Opening Streams"
[Seacord 2013]Chapter 8, "File I/O"


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Image Added Image Added Image Added Streams"|http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Opening-Streams.html] \[[Open Group 04|AA. C References#Open Group 04]\] \[[Seacord 05a|AA. C References#Seacord 05]\] Chapter 7, "File I/O"FIO02-C. Canonicalize path names originating from untrusted sources      09. Input Output (FIO)      FIO04-C. Detect and handle input and output errors