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CWE Rule 823

Use of Out-of-range Pointer Offset

Since R2024a

Description

Rule Description

The product performs pointer arithmetic on a valid pointer, but it uses an offset that can point outside of the intended range of valid memory locations for the resulting pointer.

Polyspace Implementation

The rule checker checks for these issues:

  • Pointer access out of bounds

  • Pointer dereference with tainted offset

Examples

expand all

Issue

This issue occurs when a pointer is dereferenced outside its bounds.

When a pointer is assigned an address, a block of memory is associated with the pointer. You cannot access memory beyond that block using the pointer.

Risk

Dereferencing a pointer outside its bounds is undefined behavior. You can read an unpredictable value or try to access a location that is not allowed and encounter a segmentation fault.

Fix

The fix depends on the root cause of the defect. For instance, you dereferenced a pointer inside a loop and one of these situations happened:

  • The upper bound of the loop is too large.

  • You used pointer arithmetic to advance the pointer with an incorrect value for the pointer increment.

To fix the issue, you have to modify the loop bound or the pointer increment value.

Often the result details (or source code tooltips in Polyspace as You Code) show a sequence of events that led to the defect. You can implement the fix on any event in the sequence. If the result details do not show this event history, you can search for previous references of variables relevant to the defect using right-click options in the source code and find related events. See also Interpret Bug Finder Results in Polyspace Desktop User Interface or Interpret Bug Finder Results in Polyspace Access Web Interface (Polyspace Access).

See examples of fixes below.

If you do not want to fix the issue, add comments to your result or code to avoid another review. See:

Example — Pointer access out of bounds error
int* Initialize(void)
{
 int arr[10];
 int *ptr=arr;

 for (int i=0; i<=9;i++)
   {
    ptr++;
    *ptr=i; //Noncompliant
    /* Defect: ptr out of bounds for i=9 */
   }

 return(arr);
}

ptr is assigned the address arr that points to a memory block of size 10*sizeof(int). In the for-loop, ptr is incremented 10 times. In the last iteration of the loop, ptr points outside the memory block assigned to it. Therefore, it cannot be dereferenced.

Correction — Check Pointer Stays Within Bounds

One possible correction is to reverse the order of increment and dereference of ptr.

int* Initialize(void)
{
 int arr[10];
 int *ptr=arr;

 for (int i=0; i<=9;i++)
     {
      /* Fix: Dereference pointer before increment */
      *ptr=i;
      ptr++;
     }

 return(arr);
}

After the last increment, even though ptr points outside the memory block assigned to it, it is not dereferenced more.

Issue

This issue occurs when a pointer dereference uses an offset variable from an unknown or unsecure source.

This check focuses on dynamically allocated buffers. For static buffer offsets, see Array access with tainted index.

Risk

The index might be outside the valid array range. If the tainted index is outside the array range, it can cause:

  • Buffer underflow/underwrite, or writing to memory before the beginning of the buffer.

  • Buffer overflow, or writing to memory after the end of a buffer.

  • Over reading a buffer, or accessing memory after the end of the targeted buffer.

  • Under-reading a buffer, or accessing memory before the beginning of the targeted buffer.

An attacker can use an invalid read or write to compromise your program.

Fix

Validate the index before you use the variable to access the pointer. Check to make sure that the variable is inside the valid range and does not overflow.

Extend Checker

By default, Polyspace® assumes that data from external sources are tainted. See Sources of Tainting in a Polyspace Analysis. To consider any data that does not originate in the current scope of Polyspace analysis as tainted, use the command line option -consider-analysis-perimeter-as-trust-boundary.

Example — Dereference Pointer Array
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
enum {
    SIZE10  =  10,
    SIZE100 = 100,
    SIZE128 = 128
};
extern void read_pint(int*);

int taintedptroffset(void) {
    int offset;
    scanf("%d",&offset);
    int* pint = (int*)calloc(SIZE10, sizeof(int));
    int c = 0;
    if(pint) {
        /* Filling array */
        read_pint(pint);
        c = pint[offset];//Noncompliant //Noncompliant
        free(pint);
    }
    return c;
}

In this example, the function initializes an integer pointer pint. The pointer is dereferenced using the input index offset. The value of offset could be outside the pointer range, causing an out-of-range error.

Correction — Check Index Before Dereference

One possible correction is to validate the value of offset. Continue with the pointer dereferencing only if offset is inside the valid range.

#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
enum {
    SIZE10  =  10,
    SIZE100 = 100,
    SIZE128 = 128
};
extern void read_pint(int*);

int taintedptroffset(void) {
    int offset;
    scanf("%d",&offset);
    int* pint = (int*)calloc(SIZE10, sizeof(int));
    int c = 0;
    if (pint) {
        /* Filling array */
        read_pint(pint);
        if (offset>0 && offset<SIZE10) {
            c = pint[offset];
        }
        free(pint);
    }
    return c;
}

Check Information

Category: Pointer Issues

Version History

Introduced in R2024a