Some C standard library functions are not guaranteed to be reentrant with respect to threads. 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.
According to the C Standard, the library functions listed in the following table may contain data races when invoked by multiple threads.
| Functions | Remediation |
|---|---|
rand(), srand() | MSC30-C. Do not use the rand() function for generating pseudorandom numbers |
getenv(), getenv_s() | ENV34-C. Do not store pointers returned by certain functions |
strtok() | strtok_s() in C11 Annex Kstrtok_r() in POSIX |
strerror() | strerror_s() in C11 Annex Kstrerror_r() in POSIX |
asctime(), ctime(),localtime(), gmtime() | asctime_s(), ctime_s(), localtime_s(), gmtime_s() in C11 Annex K |
setlocale() | Protect multithreaded access to locale-specific functions with a mutex |
ATOMIC_VAR_INIT, atomic_init() | Do not attempt to initialize an atomic variable from multiple threads |
tmpnam() | tmpnam_s() in C11 Annex Ktmpnam_r() in POSIX |
mbrtoc16(), c16rtomb(),mbrtoc32(), c32rtomb() | Do not call with a null mbstate_t * argument |
Section 2.9.1 of the Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX®), Base Specifications, Issue 7 [IEEE Std 1003.1:2013] extends the list of functions that are not required to be thread-safe.
In this noncompliant code example, the function f() is called from within a multithreaded application but encounters an error while calling a system function. The strerror() function returns a human-readable error string given an error number. The C Standard, 7.24.6.2 [ISO/IEC 9899:2011], specifically states that strerror() is not required to avoid data races. An implementation could write the error string into a static array and return a pointer to it, and that array might be accessible and modifiable by other threads.
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
void f(FILE *fp) {
fpos_t pos;
errno = 0;
if (0 != fgetpos(fp, &pos)) {
char *errmsg = strerror(errno);
printf("Could not get the file position: %s\n", errmsg);
}
} |
Note that this code first sets errno to 0 to comply with 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.
strerror_s()) This 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:
#define __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__ 1
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
enum { BUFFERSIZE = 64 };
void f(FILE *fp) {
fpos_t pos;
errno = 0;
if (0 != fgetpos(fp, &pos)) {
char errmsg[BUFFERSIZE];
if (strerror_s(errmsg, BUFFERSIZE, errno) != 0) {
/* Handle error */
}
printf("Could not get the file position: %s\n", errmsg);
}
} |
Note that because Annex K is optional, strerror_s() may not be available in all implementations.
strerror_r())This compliant solution uses the POSIX strerror_r() function, which has the same functionality as strerror() but guarantees thread safety:
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
enum { BUFFERSIZE = 64 };
void f(FILE *fp) {
fpos_t pos;
errno = 0;
if (0 != fgetpos(fp, &pos)) {
char errmsg[BUFFERSIZE];
if (strerror_r(errno, errmsg, BUFFERSIZE) != 0) {
/* Handle error */
}
printf("Could not get the file position: %s\n", errmsg);
}
} |
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, which is the default when an application is compiled as required by POSIX (that is, by defining _POSIX_C_SOURCE or _XOPEN_SOURCE appropriately). Thestrerror_r() manual page lists versions that are available on a particular system.
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 |
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| CodeSonar | BADFUNC.RANDOM.RAND | Use of | |
|
| A module written in Compass/ROSE can detect violations of this rule | |
| Parasoft C/C++test | 9.5 | SECURITY-25 |
| [IEEE Std 1003.1:2013] | Section 2.9.1, "Thread Safety" |
| [ISO/IEC 9899:2011] | Subclause 7.24.6.2, "The |
| [Open Group 1997b] | Section 10.12, "Thread-Safe POSIX.1 and C-Language Functions" |