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Some functions in the C standard library are not guaranteed to be reentrant with respect to threads. Some functions (such as strtok() and asctime()) return a pointer to the result stored in function-allocated memory on a per-process basis. Other functions (such as rand()) store state information in function-allocated memory on a per-process basis. Multiple threads invoking the same function can cause concurrency problems, which often result in abnormal behavior and can cause more serious vulnerabilities, such as abnormal termination, denial-of-service attack, and data integrity violations.

As per the N1401-C1X document, the following library functions are not required to avoid data races:

  • rand()
  • getenv()
  • strtok()
  • strerror()
  • asctime()
  • ctime()

Section 2.9.1 of the System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1-2008 has a much longer list of functions that are not required to be thread safe.

Noncompliant Code Example

Consider a multithreaded application that encounters an error while calling a system function. The strerror() function returns a human-readable error string given an error number. C99, Section 7.22.6.2, specifically states that strerror() is not required to avoid data races. Conventionally, it could rely on a static array that maps error numbers to error strings, and that array might be accessible and modifiable by other threads.

errno = 0;
FILE* fd = fopen( filename, "r");
if (fd == NULL) {
  char* errmsg = strerror(errno);
  printf("Could not open file because of %s\n", errmsg);
}

Note that this code first sets errno to 0 to comply with rule ERR30-C. Set errno to zero before calling a library function known to set errno, and check errno only after the function returns a value indicating failure.

Compliant Solution (POSIX)

The compliant solution uses the POSIX strerror_r() function, which has the same functionality as strerror() but guarantees thread safety.

errno = 0;
FILE* fd = fopen( filename, "r");
if (fd == NULL) {
  char errmsg[BUFSIZ];
  if (strerror_r(errno, errmsg, BUFSIZ) != 0) {
    /* handle error */
  }
  printf("Could not open file because of %s\n", errmsg);
}

Note that Linux provides two versions of strerror_r(), known as the XSI-compliant version and the GNU-specific version. This compliant solution assumes the XSI-compliant version. You can get the XSI-compliant version if you compile applications in the way POSIX requires (that is, by defining _POSIX_C_SOURCE or _XOPEN_SOURCE appropriately). Check your strerror_r() manual page to see which version(s) are available on your system.

Compliant Solution (strerror_s)

The compliant solution uses the strerror_s() function from Annex K of the C Standard, which has the same functionality as strerror() but guarantees thread safety.

errno = 0;
FILE* fd = fopen( filename, "r");
if (fd == NULL) {
  char errmsg[BUFSIZ];
  if (strerror_s(errno, errmsg, BUFSIZ) != 0) {
    /* handle error */
  }
  printf("Could not open file because of %s\n", errmsg);
}

Note that because of the optional nature of Annex K, strerror_s() may not be available in all implementations. 

Risk Assessment

Race conditions caused by multiple threads invoking the same library function can lead to abnormal termination of the application, data integrity violations, or denial-of-service attack.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

CON33-C

medium

probable

high

P4

L3

Related Guidelines

CERT C++ Secure Coding Standard: CON03-CPP. Avoid assuming functions are thread safe unless otherwise specified.

Automated Detection

Tool

Version

Checker

Description

Compass/ROSE

 

 

a module written in Compass/ROSE can detect violations of this rule

Bibliography

[N1401-C1X Draft] Section 7.21.2.1 rand() function, Section 7.21.4.6 getenv() function, Section 7.22.5.8 strtok() function, Section 7.22.6.2 strerror() function, Section 7.25.3.1 asctime() function, Section 7.25.3.2 ctime() function
[Historical information about POSIX.1 Thread Safety]


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