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According to the Java API [[API 06]], Interface Enumeration Documentation:

An object that implements the Enumeration interface generates a series of elements, one at a time. Successive calls to the nextElement method return successive elements of the series.

As an example, an Enumeration is used below to display the contents of a Vector.

for (Enumeration e = v.elements() ; e.hasMoreElements() ;) {
  System.out.println(e.nextElement());
}

Unfortunately, a Vector and an Enumeration may not always work well together, as is demonstrated in the noncompliant code example. In fact, the Java API [[API 06]] recommends, "New implementations should consider using Iterator in preference to Enumeration."

Noncompliant Code Example

This noncompliant example implements a BankOperations class with a removeAccounts() method that is used to terminate all the accounts of a particular account holder, as identified by the name. Names can be repeated in the vector if a person has more than one account. The remove() method attempts to iterate through all the vector entries comparing each entry with the name "Harry".

Upon encountering the first "Harry", it successfully removes the entry and the size of the vector diminishes to three. Awkwardly, the index of the Enumeration does not decrease by one leading the program to use "Tom" for the next (now final) comparison. As a result, the second "Harry" continues to remain in the vector unscathed, having shifted to the second position in the vector.

class BankOperations {
  private static void removeAccounts(Vector v, String name) {
  
    Enumeration e = v.elements();
		 
    while (e.hasMoreElements()) {
      String s = (String) e.nextElement();
      if (s.equals(name))
        v.remove("Harry"); //Second Harry is not removed!
    }

    // Display current account holders
    System.out.println("The names are:");
    e = v.elements();
    while (e.hasMoreElements())
      System.out.println(e.nextElement());  //Prints Dick, Harry, Tom	  
    }
	 
  public static void main(String args[]) { 
    // List contains a sorted array of account holder names
    // Repeats are admissible 
    List list = new ArrayList(Arrays.asList(
      new String[] {"Dick", "Harry", "Harry", "Tom"}));
    Vector v = new Vector(list);
    removeAccount(v,"Harry"); 
  }
}

Compliant Solution

According to the Java API [[API 06]], interface Iterator documentation:

Iterator takes the place of Enumeration in the Java collections framework. Iterators differ from enumerations in two ways:

  • Iterators allow the caller to remove elements from the underlying collection during the iteration with well-defined semantics.
  • Method names have been improved.

The compliant solution remedies the aforementioned problem and confirms the advantages of using an Iterator over an Enumeration.

class BankOperations {
  private static void removeAccounts(Vector v, String name) {
    Iterator i = v.iterator();
	 
    while (i.hasNext()) {
      String s = (String) i.next();
      if (s.equals(name))
        i.remove(); // Correctly removes all instances of the name Harry
    }

    // Display current account holders
    System.out.println("The names are:");
    i = v.iterator();
    while (i.hasNext())
      System.out.println(i.next()); // Prints Dick, Tom only	 
  }
	 
  public static void main(String args[]) {
    List list = new ArrayList(Arrays.asList(
      new String[] {"Dick", "Harry", "Harry", "Tom"}));
    Vector v = new Vector(list);
    remove(v,"Harry"); 
  }
}

Risk Assessment

Using Enumerations when performing remove operations on a vector may cause unexpected program behavior.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

MSC04- J

low

unlikely

medium

P2

L3

Automated Detection

TODO

Related Vulnerabilities

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

References

[[API 06]] Interfaces: Enumeration and Iterator
[[Daconta 03]] Item 21: Use Iteration over Enumeration


MSC03-J. Prefer using URIs to URLs      49. Miscellaneous (MSC)      MSC05-J. Carefully design interfaces before releasing them

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