Passing narrow string arguments to wide string functions or wide string arguments to narrow string functions can lead to unexpected and undefined behavior. Scaling problems are likely because of the difference in size between wide and narrow characters. (See ARR39-C. Do not add or subtract a scaled integer to a pointer.) Because wide strings are terminated by a null wide character and can contain null bytes, determining the length is also problematic.
Because wchar_t
and char
are distinct types, many compilers will produce a warning diagnostic if an inappropriate function is used. (See MSC00-C. Compile cleanly at high warning levels.)
Noncompliant Code Example (Wide Strings with Narrow String Functions)
This noncompliant code example incorrectly uses the strncpy()
function in an attempt to copy up to 10 wide characters. However, because wide characters can contain null bytes, the copy operation may end earlier than anticipated, resulting in the truncation of the wide string.
#include <stddef.h> #include <string.h> void func(void) { wchar_t wide_str1[] = L"0123456789"; wchar_t wide_str2[] = L"0000000000"; strncpy(wide_str2, wide_str1, 10); }
Noncompliant Code Example (Narrow Strings with Wide String Functions)
This noncompliant code example incorrectly invokes the wcsncpy()
function to copy up to 10 wide characters from narrow_str1
to narrow_str2
. Because narrow_str2
is a narrow string, it has insufficient memory to store the result of the copy and the copy will result in a buffer overflow.
#include <wchar.h> void func(void) { char narrow_str1[] = "01234567890123456789"; char narrow_str2[] = "0000000000"; wcsncpy(narrow_str2, narrow_str1, 10); }
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution uses the proper-width functions. Using wcsncpy()
for wide character strings and strncpy()
for narrow character strings ensures that data is not truncated and buffer overflow does not occur.
#include <string.h> #include <wchar.h> void func(void) { wchar_t wide_str1[] = L"0123456789"; wchar_t wide_str2[] = L"0000000000"; /* Use of proper-width function */ wcsncpy(wide_str2, wide_str1, 10); char narrow_str1[] = "0123456789"; char narrow_str2[] = "0000000000"; /* Use of proper-width function */ strncpy(narrow_str2, narrow_str1, 10); }
Noncompliant Code Example (strlen()
)
In this noncompliant code example, the strlen()
function is used to determine the size of a wide character string:
#include <stdlib.h> #include <string.h> void func(void) { wchar_t wide_str1[] = L"0123456789"; wchar_t *wide_str2 = (wchar_t*)malloc(strlen(wide_str1) + 1); if (wide_str2 == NULL) { /* Handle error */ } /* ... */ free(wide_str2); wide_str2 = NULL; }
The strlen()
function determines the number of characters that precede the terminating null character. However, wide characters can contain null bytes, particularly when expressing characters from the ASCII character set, as in this example. As a result, the strlen()
function will return the number of bytes preceding the first null byte in the wide string.
Compliant Solution
This compliant solution correctly calculates the number of bytes required to contain a copy of the wide string, including the terminating null wide character:
#include <stdlib.h> #include <wchar.h> void func(void) { wchar_t wide_str1[] = L"0123456789"; wchar_t *wide_str2 = (wchar_t *)malloc( (wcslen(wide_str1) + 1) * sizeof(wchar_t)); if (wide_str2 == NULL) { /* Handle error */ } /* ... */ free(wide_str2); wide_str2 = NULL; }
Risk Assessment
Confusing narrow and wide character strings can result in buffer overflows, data truncation, and other defects.
Rule | Severity | Likelihood | Remediation Cost | Priority | Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
STR38-C | High | Likely | Low | P27 | L1 |
Automated Detection
Modern compilers recognize the difference between a char *
and a wchar_t *
, so compiling code that violates this rule will generate warnings. It is feasible to have automated software that recognizes functions of improper width and replaces them with functions of proper width (that is, software that uses wcsncpy()
when it recognizes that the parameters are of type wchar_t *
).
Tool | Version | Checker | Description |
Astrée | 24.04 | wide-narrow-string-cast wide-narrow-string-cast-implicit | Partially checked |
Axivion Bauhaus Suite | 7.2.0 | CertC-STR38 | Fully implemented |
Clang | 3.9 | -Wincompatible-pointer-types | |
Coverity | 2017.07 | PW | Implemented |
Parasoft C/C++test | 2023.1 | CERT_C-STR38-a | Do not confuse narrow and wide character strings and functions |
Polyspace Bug Finder | R2024a | Pointer implicitly cast to different data type Allocated memory does not match destination pointer Function writes to buffer at offset greater than buffer size | |
PRQA QA-C | Unable to render {include} The included page could not be found. | 0432 | |
PRQA QA-C++ | 4.4 | 0403 | |
RuleChecker | 24.04 | wide-narrow-string-cast wide-narrow-string-cast-implicit | Partially checked |
Related Vulnerabilities
Search for vulnerabilities resulting from the violation of this rule on the CERT website.
Bibliography
[ISO/IEC 9899:2011] | 7.24.2.4, "The strncpy Function"7.29.4.2.2, "The wcsncpy Function" |