In Java, data is stored in big-endian format (also called network order). That is, all data is represented sequentially starting from the most significant bit to the least significant. JDK versions prior to JDK 1.4 required definition of custom methods that manage reversing byte order to maintain compatibility with little-endian systems. Correct handling of byte order–related issues is critical when exchanging data in a networked environment that includes both big-endian and little-endian machines or when working with other languages using Java Native Interface (JNI). Failure to handle byte-ordering issues can cause unexpected program behavior.

Noncompliant Code Example

The read methods (readByte(), readShort(), readInt(), readLong(), readFloat(), and readDouble()) and the corresponding write methods defined by class java.io.DataInputStream and class java.io.DataOutputStream operate only on big-endian data. Use of these methods while interoperating with traditional languages, such as C and C++, is insecure because such languages lack any guarantees about endianness. This noncompliant code example shows such a discrepancy:

try {
  DataInputStream dis = null;
  try {
    dis = new DataInputStream(new FileInputStream("data"));
    // Little-endian data might be read as big-endian
    int serialNumber = dis.readInt();
  } catch (IOException x) {
    // Handle error
  } finally {
    if (dis != null) {
      try {
       dis.close();
      } catch (IOException e) {
      // Handle error
      }
    }
  }
}

Compliant Solution (ByteBuffer)

This compliant solution uses methods provided by class ByteBuffer [API 2014] to correctly extract an int from the original input value. It wraps the input byte array with a ByteBuffer, sets the byte order to little-endian, and extracts the int. The result is stored in the integer serialNumber. Class ByteBuffer provides analogous get and put methods for other numeric types.

try {
  DataInputStream dis = null;
  try {
    dis = new DataInputStream( new FileInputStream("data"));
    byte[] buffer = new byte[4];
    int bytesRead = dis.read(buffer);  // Bytes are read into buffer
    if (bytesRead != 4) {
      throw new IOException("Unexpected End of Stream");
    }
    int serialNumber = 
        ByteBuffer.wrap(buffer).order(ByteOrder.LITTLE_ENDIAN).getInt();
  } finally {
    if (dis != null) {
  try {
    dis.close();
  } catch (IOException x) {
    // Handle error
  }
    }
  }
} catch (IOException x) {
  // Handle error
}

Compliant Solution (Define Special-Purpose Methods)

An alternative compliant solution is to define read and write methods that support the necessary byte-swapping while reading from or writing to the file. In this example, the readLittleEndianInteger() method reads four bytes into a byte buffer and then pieces together the integer in the correct order. The writeLittleEndianInteger() method obtains bytes by repeatedly casting the integer so that the least significant byte is extracted on successive right shifts. Long values can be handled by defining a byte buffer of size 8.

// Read method
public static int readLittleEndianInteger(InputStream ips)
                                          throws IOException {
  byte[] buffer = new byte[4];
  int check = ips.read(buffer);

  if (check != 4) {
    throw new IOException("Unexpected End of Stream");
  }
 
  int result = (buffer[3] << 24) | (buffer[2] << 16) |
               (buffer[1] << 8)  | buffer[0];
  return result;
}

// Write method
public static void writeLittleEndianInteger(int i, OutputStream ops)
  throws IOException {
  byte[] buffer = new byte[4];
  buffer[0] = (byte) i;
  buffer[1] = (byte) (i >> 8);
  buffer[2] = (byte) (i >> 16);
  buffer[3] = (byte) (i >> 24);
  ops.write(buffer);
}

Compliant Solution (reverseBytes())

When programming for JDK 1.5 and later, use the reverseBytes() method defined in the classes Character, Short, Integer, and Long to reverse the order of the integral value's bytes. Note that classes Float and Double lack such a method.

public static int reverse(int i) {
  return Integer.reverseBytes(i);
}

Risk Assessment

Reading and writing data without considering endianness can lead to misinterpretations of both the magnitude and sign of the data.

Rule

Severity

Likelihood

Remediation Cost

Priority

Level

FIO12-J

Low

Unlikely

Low

P3

L3

Automated Detection

Automated detection is infeasible in the general case.

ToolVersionCheckerDescription
Parasoft Jtest

2023.1

CERT.FIO12.PMRWLEDProvide methods to read and write little-endian data

Related Guidelines

MITRE CWE

CWE-198, Use of Incorrect Byte Ordering

Bibliography

[API 2014]

Class ByteBuffer
   Method wrap()
   Method order()
Class Integer
   Method reverseBytes()

[Cohen 1981]

"On Holy Wars and a Plea for Peace"

[Harold 1997]

Chapter 2, "Primitive Data Types, Cross-Platform Issues"