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Apex

Apex static code analysis

Unique rules to find Bugs, Vulnerabilities, Security Hotspots, and Code Smells in your APEX code

  • All rules 56
  • Vulnerability1
  • Bug12
  • Security Hotspot3
  • Code Smell40
 
Tags
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Test methods should not be annotated with "@isTest(SeeAllData=true)"

           Code Smell
        2. Tested code should be enclosed between "Test.StartTest()" and "Test.StopTest()"

           Code Smell
        3. Messages should not be hardcoded

           Code Smell
        4. URLs of Salesforce pages should be relative, not absolute.

           Bug
        5. "getRecordTypeInfosByDeveloperName()" should be used instead of "getRecordTypeInfosByName()"

           Bug
        6. System.runAs should be used to test user permissions

           Code Smell
        7. Business logic should not be implemented inside Triggers

           Code Smell
        8. DML statements should not be used inside loops

           Bug
        9. Record IDs should not be hardcoded

           Bug
        10. Executing SOQL, SOSL or DML queries without sharing or with inherited sharing is security sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        11. Sharing level should be specified in Apex Classes with SOQL/SOSL Queries or DML Statements

           Vulnerability
        12. Triggers should process records in bulk

           Bug
        13. Multi-line comments should not be empty

           Code Smell
        14. Methods should not have identical implementations

           Code Smell
        15. All branches in a conditional structure should not have exactly the same implementation

           Bug
        16. Cognitive Complexity of functions should not be too high

           Code Smell
        17. Non-existent operators like "=+" should not be used

           Bug
        18. Track parsing failures

           Code Smell
        19. Hard-coded credentials are security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        20. Boolean checks should not be inverted

           Code Smell
        21. Two branches in a conditional structure should not have exactly the same implementation

           Code Smell
        22. Related "if"/"else if" statements and "when" in a "switch" should not have the same condition

           Bug
        23. "switch" statements should not be nested

           Code Smell
        24. Identical expressions should not be used on both sides of a binary operator

           Bug
        25. All code should be reachable

           Bug
        26. Variables should not be self-assigned

           Bug
        27. Unused local variables should be removed

           Code Smell
        28. "switch" statements should not have too many "case" clauses

           Code Smell
        29. Track lack of copyright and license headers

           Code Smell
        30. Functions should not have too many lines of code

           Code Smell
        31. Control flow statements "if", "for", "while", "switch" and "try" should not be nested too deeply

           Code Smell
        32. Using hardcoded IP addresses is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        33. "switch" statements should have "when else" clauses

           Code Smell
        34. "if ... else if" constructs should end with "else" clauses

           Code Smell
        35. Sections of code should not be commented out

           Code Smell
        36. Statements should be on separate lines

           Code Smell
        37. String literals should not be duplicated

           Code Smell
        38. Methods should not be empty

           Code Smell
        39. Unused function parameters should be removed

           Code Smell
        40. Local variable and method parameter names should comply with a naming convention

           Code Smell
        41. "when" clauses should not have too many lines of code

           Code Smell
        42. Useless "if(true) {...}" and "if(false){...}" blocks should be removed

           Bug
        43. Unused "private" methods should be removed

           Code Smell
        44. Track uses of "TODO" tags

           Code Smell
        45. Track uses of "FIXME" tags

           Code Smell
        46. Boolean literals should not be redundant

           Code Smell
        47. Redundant pairs of parentheses should be removed

           Code Smell
        48. Nested blocks of code should not be left empty

           Code Smell
        49. Functions should not have too many parameters

           Code Smell
        50. Expressions should not be too complex

           Code Smell
        51. Mergeable "if" statements should be combined

           Code Smell
        52. Tabulation characters should not be used

           Code Smell
        53. Files should not have too many lines of code

           Code Smell
        54. Lines should not be too long

           Code Smell
        55. Class names should comply with a naming convention

           Code Smell
        56. Function names should comply with a naming convention

           Code Smell

        Using hardcoded IP addresses is security-sensitive

        responsibility - trustworthy
        security
        Security Hotspot

          Hardcoding IP addresses is security-sensitive. It has led in the past to the following vulnerabilities:

          • CVE-2006-5901
          • CVE-2005-3725

          Today’s services have an ever-changing architecture due to their scaling and redundancy needs. It is a mistake to think that a service will always have the same IP address. When it does change, the hardcoded IP will have to be modified too. This will have an impact on the product development, delivery, and deployment:

          • The developers will have to do a rapid fix every time this happens, instead of having an operation team change a configuration file.
          • It misleads to use the same address in every environment (dev, sys, qa, prod).

          Last but not least it has an effect on application security. Attackers might be able to decompile the code and thereby discover a potentially sensitive address. They can perform a Denial of Service attack on the service, try to get access to the system, or try to spoof the IP address to bypass security checks. Such attacks can always be possible, but in the case of a hardcoded IP address solving the issue will take more time, which will increase an attack’s impact.

          Ask Yourself Whether

          The disclosed IP address is sensitive, e.g.:

          • Can give information to an attacker about the network topology.
          • It’s a personal (assigned to an identifiable person) IP address.

          There is a risk if you answered yes to any of these questions.

          Recommended Secure Coding Practices

          Don’t hard-code the IP address in the source code, instead make it configurable with environment variables, configuration files, or a similar approach. Alternatively, if confidentially is not required a domain name can be used since it allows to change the destination quickly without having to rebuild the software.

          Sensitive Code Example

          String ip = '192.168.12.42'; // Sensitive
          String clientIp = ApexPages.currentPage().getHeaders().get(‘True-Client-IP’);
          Boolean isKnown = ip.equals(clientIp);
          

          Compliant Solution

          StaticResource sr= [SELECT ip_address FROM StaticResource WHERE Name = 'configuration' LIMIT 1]; // Compliant
          String ip_address = sr.body.toString();
          String clientIp = ApexPages.currentPage().getHeaders().get(‘True-Client-IP’);
          Boolean isKnown = ip_address.equals(clientIp);
          

          Exceptions

          No issue is reported for the following cases because they are not considered sensitive:

          • Loopback addresses 127.0.0.0/8 in CIDR notation (from 127.0.0.0 to 127.255.255.255)
          • Broadcast address 255.255.255.255
          • Non-routable address 0.0.0.0
          • Strings of the form 2.5.<number>.<number> as they often match Object Identifiers (OID)
          • Addresses in the ranges 192.0.2.0/24, 198.51.100.0/24, 203.0.113.0/24, reserved for documentation purposes by RFC 5737
          • Addresses in the range 2001:db8::/32, reserved for documentation purposes by RFC 3849

          See

          • OWASP - Top 10 2021 Category A1 - Broken Access Control
          • OWASP - Top 10 2017 Category A3 - Sensitive Data Exposure
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            Enterprise
            Edition
            Available Since
            9.1

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