271 lines
10 KiB
HTML
271 lines
10 KiB
HTML
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
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<html>
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<head>
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<meta http-equiv="Content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf8">
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<title>Flawfinder Results</title>
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<meta name="author" content="David A. Wheeler">
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<meta name="keywords" lang="en" content="flawfinder results, security scan">
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</head>
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<body>
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<h1>Flawfinder Results</h1>
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Here are the security scan results from
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<a href="http://www.dwheeler.com/flawfinder">Flawfinder version 1.25</a>,
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(C) 2001-2004 <a href="http://www.dwheeler.com">David A. Wheeler</a>.
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Number of dangerous functions in C/C++ ruleset: 137
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<p>
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Examining test.c <br>
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Examining test2.c <br>
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<ul>
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<li>test.c:32: <b> [5] </b> (buffer) <i> gets:
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Does not check for buffer overflows. Use fgets() instead. </i>
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<pre>
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gets(f);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:56: <b> [5] </b> (buffer) <i> strncat:
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Easily used incorrectly (e.g., incorrectly computing the correct
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maximum size to add). Consider strlcat or automatically resizing strings.
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Risk is high; the length parameter appears to be a constant, instead of
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computing the number of characters left. </i>
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<pre>
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strncat(d,s,sizeof(d)); /* Misuse - this should be flagged as riskier. */
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:57: <b> [5] </b> (buffer) <i> _tcsncat:
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Easily used incorrectly (e.g., incorrectly computing the correct
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maximum size to add). Consider strlcat or automatically resizing strings.
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Risk is high; the length parameter appears to be a constant, instead of
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computing the number of characters left. </i>
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<pre>
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_tcsncat(d,s,sizeof(d)); /* Misuse - flag as riskier */
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:60: <b> [5] </b> (buffer) <i> MultiByteToWideChar:
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Requires maximum length in CHARACTERS, not bytes. Risk is high, it
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appears that the size is given as bytes, but the function requires size as
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characters. </i>
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<pre>
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MultiByteToWideChar(CP_ACP,0,szName,-1,wszUserName,sizeof(wszUserName));
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:62: <b> [5] </b> (buffer) <i> MultiByteToWideChar:
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Requires maximum length in CHARACTERS, not bytes. Risk is high, it
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appears that the size is given as bytes, but the function requires size as
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characters. </i>
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<pre>
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MultiByteToWideChar(CP_ACP,0,szName,-1,wszUserName,sizeof wszUserName);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:73: <b> [5] </b> (misc) <i> SetSecurityDescriptorDacl:
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Never create NULL ACLs; an attacker can set it to Everyone (Deny All
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Access), which would even forbid administrator access. </i>
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<pre>
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SetSecurityDescriptorDacl(&sd,TRUE,NULL,FALSE);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:73: <b> [5] </b> (misc) <i> SetSecurityDescriptorDacl:
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Never create NULL ACLs; an attacker can set it to Everyone (Deny All
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Access), which would even forbid administrator access. </i>
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<pre>
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SetSecurityDescriptorDacl(&sd,TRUE,NULL,FALSE);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:17: <b> [4] </b> (buffer) <i> strcpy:
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Does not check for buffer overflows when copying to destination.
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Consider using strncpy or strlcpy (warning, strncpy is easily misused). </i>
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<pre>
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strcpy(b, a);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:20: <b> [4] </b> (buffer) <i> sprintf:
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Does not check for buffer overflows. Use snprintf or vsnprintf. </i>
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<pre>
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sprintf(s, "hello %s", bug);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:21: <b> [4] </b> (buffer) <i> sprintf:
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Does not check for buffer overflows. Use snprintf or vsnprintf. </i>
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<pre>
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sprintf(s, gettext("hello %s"), bug);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:22: <b> [4] </b> (format) <i> sprintf:
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Potential format string problem. Make format string constant. </i>
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<pre>
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sprintf(s, unknown, bug);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:23: <b> [4] </b> (format) <i> printf:
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If format strings can be influenced by an attacker, they can be
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exploited. Use a constant for the format specification. </i>
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<pre>
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printf(bf, x);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:25: <b> [4] </b> (buffer) <i> scanf:
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The scanf() family's %s operation, without a limit specification,
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permits buffer overflows. Specify a limit to %s, or use a different input
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function. </i>
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<pre>
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scanf("%s", s);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:27: <b> [4] </b> (buffer) <i> scanf:
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The scanf() family's %s operation, without a limit specification,
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permits buffer overflows. Specify a limit to %s, or use a different input
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function. </i>
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<pre>
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scanf("%s", s);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:38: <b> [4] </b> (format) <i> syslog:
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If syslog's format strings can be influenced by an attacker, they can
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be exploited. Use a constant format string for syslog. </i>
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<pre>
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syslog(LOG_ERR, attacker_string);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:49: <b> [4] </b> (buffer) <i> _mbscpy:
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Does not check for buffer overflows when copying to destination.
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Consider using a function version that stops copying at the end of the
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buffer. </i>
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<pre>
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_mbscpy(d,s); /* like strcpy, this doesn't check for buffer overflow */
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:52: <b> [4] </b> (buffer) <i> lstrcat:
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Does not check for buffer overflows when concatenating to destination. </i>
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<pre>
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lstrcat(d,s);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:75: <b> [3] </b> (shell) <i> CreateProcess:
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This causes a new process to execute and is difficult to use safely.
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Specify the application path in the first argument, NOT as part of the
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second, or embedded spaces could allow an attacker to force a different
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program to run. </i>
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<pre>
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CreateProcess(NULL, "C:\\Program Files\\GoodGuy\\GoodGuy.exe -x", "");
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:75: <b> [3] </b> (shell) <i> CreateProcess:
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This causes a new process to execute and is difficult to use safely.
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Specify the application path in the first argument, NOT as part of the
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second, or embedded spaces could allow an attacker to force a different
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program to run. </i>
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<pre>
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CreateProcess(NULL, "C:\\Program Files\\GoodGuy\\GoodGuy.exe -x", "");
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:91: <b> [3] </b> (buffer) <i> getopt_long:
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Some older implementations do not protect against internal buffer
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overflows . Check implementation on installation, or limit the size of all
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string inputs. </i>
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<pre>
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while ((optc = getopt_long (argc, argv, "a",longopts, NULL )) != EOF) {
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:16: <b> [2] </b> (buffer) <i> strcpy:
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Does not check for buffer overflows when copying to destination.
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Consider using strncpy or strlcpy (warning, strncpy is easily misused). Risk
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is low because the source is a constant string. </i>
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<pre>
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strcpy(a, gettext("Hello there")); // Did this work?
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:19: <b> [2] </b> (buffer) <i> sprintf:
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Does not check for buffer overflows. Use snprintf or vsnprintf. Risk
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is low because the source has a constant maximum length. </i>
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<pre>
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sprintf(s, "hello");
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:45: <b> [2] </b> (buffer) <i> char:
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Statically-sized arrays can be overflowed. Perform bounds checking,
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use functions that limit length, or ensure that the size is larger than
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the maximum possible length. </i>
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<pre>
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char d[20];
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:46: <b> [2] </b> (buffer) <i> char:
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Statically-sized arrays can be overflowed. Perform bounds checking,
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use functions that limit length, or ensure that the size is larger than
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the maximum possible length. </i>
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<pre>
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char s[20];
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:50: <b> [2] </b> (buffer) <i> memcpy:
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Does not check for buffer overflows when copying to destination. Make
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sure destination can always hold the source data. </i>
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<pre>
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memcpy(d,s);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:51: <b> [2] </b> (buffer) <i> CopyMemory:
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Does not check for buffer overflows when copying to destination. Make
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sure destination can always hold the source data. </i>
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<pre>
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CopyMemory(d,s);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:97: <b> [2] </b> (misc) <i> fopen:
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Check when opening files - can an attacker redirect it (via symlinks),
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force the opening of special file type (e.g., device files), move
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things around to create a race condition, control its ancestors, or change
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its contents?. </i>
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<pre>
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f = fopen("/etc/passwd", "r");
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:15: <b> [1] </b> (buffer) <i> strcpy:
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Does not check for buffer overflows when copying to destination.
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Consider using strncpy or strlcpy (warning, strncpy is easily misused). Risk
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is low because the source is a constant character. </i>
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<pre>
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strcpy(a, "\n"); // Did this work?
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:18: <b> [1] </b> (buffer) <i> sprintf:
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Does not check for buffer overflows. Use snprintf or vsnprintf. Risk
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is low because the source is a constant character. </i>
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<pre>
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sprintf(s, "\n");
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:26: <b> [1] </b> (buffer) <i> scanf:
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it's unclear if the %s limit in the format string is small enough.
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Check that the limit is sufficiently small, or use a different input
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function. </i>
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<pre>
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scanf("%10s", s);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:53: <b> [1] </b> (buffer) <i> strncpy:
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Easily used incorrectly; doesn't always \0-terminate or check for
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invalid pointers. </i>
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<pre>
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strncpy(d,s);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:54: <b> [1] </b> (buffer) <i> _tcsncpy:
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Easily used incorrectly; doesn't always \0-terminate or check for
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invalid pointers. </i>
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<pre>
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_tcsncpy(d,s);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:55: <b> [1] </b> (buffer) <i> strncat:
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Easily used incorrectly (e.g., incorrectly computing the correct
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maximum size to add). Consider strlcat or automatically resizing strings. </i>
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<pre>
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strncat(d,s,10);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:58: <b> [1] </b> (buffer) <i> strlen:
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Does not handle strings that are not \0-terminated (it could cause a
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crash if unprotected). </i>
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<pre>
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n = strlen(d);
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:64: <b> [1] </b> (buffer) <i> MultiByteToWideChar:
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Requires maximum length in CHARACTERS, not bytes. Risk is very low,
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the length appears to be in characters not bytes. </i>
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<pre>
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MultiByteToWideChar(CP_ACP,0,szName,-1,wszUserName,sizeof(wszUserName)/sizeof(wszUserName[0]));
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</pre>
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<li>test.c:66: <b> [1] </b> (buffer) <i> MultiByteToWideChar:
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Requires maximum length in CHARACTERS, not bytes. Risk is very low,
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the length appears to be in characters not bytes. </i>
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<pre>
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MultiByteToWideChar(CP_ACP,0,szName,-1,wszUserName,sizeof wszUserName /sizeof(wszUserName[0]));
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</pre>
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</ul>
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<p>
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Hits = 36
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<br>
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Lines analyzed = 118
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<br>
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Physical Source Lines of Code (SLOC) = 80
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<br>
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Hits @ level = [0] 0 [1] 9 [2] 7 [3] 3 [4] 10 [5] 7 <br>
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Hits @ level+ = [0+] 36 [1+] 36 [2+] 27 [3+] 20 [4+] 17 [5+] 7 <br>
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Hits/KSLOC @ level+ = [0+] 450 [1+] 450 [2+] 338 [3+] 250 [4+] 213 [5+] 88 <br>
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Suppressed hits = 2 (use --neverignore to show them)
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<br>
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Minimum risk level = 1
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<br>
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Not every hit is necessarily a security vulnerability.
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<br>
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There may be other security vulnerabilities; review your code!
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</body>
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</html>
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