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The return values for malloc() and other C memory allocation routines indicate the failure or success of the allocation. According to C99, calloc(), malloc(), and realloc() return null pointers if the requested memory allocation fails [[ISO/IEC 9899:1999]]. Failure to detect and properly handle memory management errors can lead to unpredictable and unintended program behavior. As a result, it is necessary to check the final status of memory management routines and handle errors appropriately.

By default operator new will throw a std::bad_alloc exception if the allocation fails. Therefore you need not check that the result of operator new is NULL. However, to ease conversion of code to C++, the C++ Standard ISO/IEC 14882-2003 provides a variant of operator new that behaves like malloc():

char* s = new char[-1]; // throws a std::bad_alloc exception
char* s = new (std::nothrow) char[-1]; // returns NULL

When using std::nothrow, it is imperative to check that the return value is not NULL before using it.

Noncompliant Code Example (malloc())

In this example, input_string is copied into dynamically allocated memory referenced by str. However, the result of malloc() is not checked before str is referenced. Consequently, if malloc() fails, the program abnormally terminates.

char *input_string;

/* initialize input_string */

size_t size = strlen(input_string) + 1;
char *str = (char *)malloc(size);
strcpy(str, input_string);
/* ... */
free(str);
str = NULL;

Noncompliant Code Example (std::nothrow)

This example remains noncompliant if we replace malloc() with new(std::nothrow).

char *input_string;

/* initialize input_string */

size_t size = strlen(input_string) + 1;
char *str = new(std::nothrow) char[size];
strcpy(str, input_string);
/* ... */
delete[] str;
str = NULL;

Compliant Solution (std::nothrow)

With std::nothrow, the new operator returns either a null pointer or a pointer to the allocated space. Always test the returned pointer to ensure it is not NULL before referencing the pointer. Handle the error condition appropriately when the returned pointer is NULL.

char *input_string;

/* initialize input_string */

size_t size = strlen(input_string) + 1;
char *str = new(std::nothrow) char[size];
if (str == NULL) {
  /* Handle allocation error */
}
else {
  strcpy(str, input_string);
  /* ... */
  delete[] str;
  str = NULL;
}

Compliant Solution (bad_alloc)

Alternatively, one can use operator new without std::nothrow. Unless std::nothrow is provided, operator new never returns NULL; it will instead throw a std::bad_alloc exception if it cannot allocate memory.

char *input_string;

/* initialize input_string */

size_t size = strlen(input_string) + 1;
char *str = new char[size];
strcpy(str, input_string);
/* ... */
delete[] str;
str = NULL;

Risk Assessment

Failing to detect allocation failures can lead to abnormal program termination and denial-of-service attacks.

If the vulnerable program references memory offset from the return value, an attacker can exploit the program to read or write arbitrary memory. This has been used to execute arbitrary code [VU#159523].

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

MEM32-CPP

high

likely

medium

P18

L1

Automated Detection

Fortify SCA Version 5.0 can detect violations of this rule.

Compass/ROSE can detect violations of this rule. In particular, it ensures that variables are compared to NULL before being used, as in EXP34-CPP. Ensure a null pointer is not dereferenced.

Related Vulnerabilities

The vulnerability in Adobe Flash [[VU#159523]] arises because Flash neglects to check the return value from calloc(). Even though calloc() returns NULL, Flash does not attempt to read or write to the return value, but rather attempts to write to an offset from the return value. Dereferencing NULL usually results in a program crash, but dereferencing an offset from NULL allows an exploit to succeed without crashing the program.

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

Other Languages

This rule appears in the C Secure Coding Standard as MEM32-C. Detect and handle memory allocation errors.

References

[[ISO/IEC 9899:1999]] Section 7.20.3, "Memory management functions"
[[ISO/IEC 14882-2003]] Section 5.3.4
[[MITRE 07]] CWE ID 476, "NULL Pointer Dereference," and CWE ID 252, "Unchecked Return Value"
[[Seacord 05]] Chapter 4, "Dynamic Memory Management"
[[VU#159523]]


MEM31-CPP. Free dynamically allocated memory exactly once      08. Memory Management (MEM)      MEM34-CPP. Only free memory allocated dynamically

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