SonarSource Rules
  • Products

    In-IDE

    Code Quality and Security in your IDE with SonarQube Ide

    IDE extension that lets you fix coding issues before they exist!

    Discover SonarQube for IDE

    SaaS

    Code Quality and Security in the cloud with SonarQube Cloud

    Setup is effortless and analysis is automatic for most languages

    Discover SonarQube Cloud

    Self-Hosted

    Code Quality and Security Self-Hosted with SonarQube Server

    Fast, accurate analysis; enterprise scalability

    Discover SonarQube Server
  • SecretsSecrets
  • ABAPABAP
  • AnsibleAnsible
  • ApexApex
  • AzureResourceManagerAzureResourceManager
  • CC
  • C#C#
  • C++C++
  • CloudFormationCloudFormation
  • COBOLCOBOL
  • CSSCSS
  • DartDart
  • DockerDocker
  • FlexFlex
  • GitHub ActionsGitHub Actions
  • GoGo
  • HTMLHTML
  • JavaJava
  • JavaScriptJavaScript
  • JSONJSON
  • JCLJCL
  • KotlinKotlin
  • KubernetesKubernetes
  • Objective CObjective C
  • PHPPHP
  • PL/IPL/I
  • PL/SQLPL/SQL
  • PythonPython
  • RPGRPG
  • RubyRuby
  • RustRust
  • ScalaScala
  • ShellShell
  • SwiftSwift
  • TerraformTerraform
  • TextText
  • TypeScriptTypeScript
  • T-SQLT-SQL
  • VB.NETVB.NET
  • VB6VB6
  • XMLXML
  • YAMLYAML
Java

Java static code analysis

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

  • All rules 733
  • Vulnerability60
  • Bug175
  • Security Hotspot40
  • Code Smell458

  • Quick Fix 65
Filtered: 106 rules found
Tags
    security
      Clean code attribute
        1. Sensitive information should not be logged in production builds

           Vulnerability
        2. WebViews should not be vulnerable to cross-app scripting attacks

           Vulnerability
        3. Privileged prompts should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        4. Processing persistent unique identifiers is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        5. Exposing native code through JavaScript interfaces is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        6. Methods annotated with "@BeforeTransaction" or "@AfterTransaction" must respect the contract

           Code Smell
        7. Methods returning "Page" or "Slice" must take "Pageable" as an input parameter

           Code Smell
        8. "@Scheduled" annotation should only be applied to no-arg methods

           Bug
        9. @InitBinder methods should have void return type

           Code Smell
        10. "@Cache*" annotations should only be applied on concrete classes

           Code Smell
        11. Injecting data into static fields is not supported by Spring

           Code Smell
        12. Server-side requests should not be vulnerable to traversing attacks

           Vulnerability
        13. Accessing files should not lead to filesystem oracle attacks

           Vulnerability
        14. Environment variables should not be defined from untrusted input

           Vulnerability
        15. Credentials should not be hard-coded

           Vulnerability
        16. Counter Mode initialization vectors should not be reused

           Vulnerability
        17. Hard-coded secrets are security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        18. XML operations should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        19. JSON operations should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        20. Thread suspensions should not be vulnerable to Denial of Service attacks

           Vulnerability
        21. Components should not be vulnerable to intent redirection

           Vulnerability
        22. XML signatures should be validated securely

           Vulnerability
        23. XML parsers should not be vulnerable to Denial of Service attacks

           Vulnerability
        24. XML parsers should not load external schemas

           Vulnerability
        25. XML parsers should not allow inclusion of arbitrary files

           Vulnerability
        26. Enabling file access for WebViews is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        27. Enabling JavaScript support for WebViews is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        28. Constructing arguments of system commands from user input is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        29. Mobile database encryption keys should not be disclosed

           Vulnerability
        30. Using unencrypted files in mobile applications is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        31. Using biometric authentication without a cryptographic solution is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        32. Using unencrypted databases in mobile applications is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        33. Authorizing non-authenticated users to use keys in the Android KeyStore is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        34. Applications should not create session cookies from untrusted input

           Vulnerability
        35. Using long-term access keys is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        36. Reflection should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        37. Extracting archives should not lead to zip slip vulnerabilities

           Vulnerability
        38. OS commands should not be vulnerable to argument injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        39. A new session should be created during user authentication

           Vulnerability
        40. Using slow regular expressions is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        41. Authorizations should be based on strong decisions

           Vulnerability
        42. Allowing user enumeration is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        43. Allowing requests with excessive content length is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        44. Disclosing fingerprints from web application technologies is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        45. OpenSAML2 should be configured to prevent authentication bypass

           Vulnerability
        46. JWT should be signed and verified with strong cipher algorithms

           Vulnerability
        47. Cipher algorithms should be robust

           Vulnerability
        48. Encryption algorithms should be used with secure mode and padding scheme

           Vulnerability
        49. Server hostnames should be verified during SSL/TLS connections

           Vulnerability
        50. Server-side templates should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        51. Insecure temporary file creation methods should not be used

           Vulnerability
        52. Using publicly writable directories is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        53. Passwords should not be stored in plaintext or with a fast hashing algorithm

           Vulnerability
        54. Dynamic code execution should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        55. Using clear-text protocols is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        56. Accessing Android external storage is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        57. Receiving intents is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        58. Broadcasting intents is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        59. "ActiveMQConnectionFactory" should not be vulnerable to malicious code deserialization

           Vulnerability
        60. Disabling auto-escaping in template engines is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        61. NoSQL operations should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        62. HTTP request redirections should not be open to forging attacks

           Vulnerability
        63. Logging should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        64. Server-side requests should not be vulnerable to forging attacks

           Vulnerability
        65. Deserialization should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        66. Endpoints should not be vulnerable to reflected cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks

           Vulnerability
        67. Having a permissive Cross-Origin Resource Sharing policy is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        68. Expanding archive files without controlling resource consumption is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        69. Server certificates should be verified during SSL/TLS connections

           Vulnerability
        70. Configuring loggers is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        71. Using weak hashing algorithms is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        72. Persistent entities should not be used as arguments of "@RequestMapping" methods

           Vulnerability
        73. "HttpSecurity" URL patterns should be correctly ordered

           Vulnerability
        74. Using unsafe Jackson deserialization configuration is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        75. Setting JavaBean properties is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        76. Delivering code in production with debug features activated is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        77. Disabling CSRF protections is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        78. Allowing deserialization of LDAP objects is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        79. LDAP connections should be authenticated

           Vulnerability
        80. Cryptographic keys should be robust

           Vulnerability
        81. Weak SSL/TLS protocols should not be used

           Vulnerability
        82. Secure random number generators should not output predictable values

           Vulnerability
        83. Searching OS commands in PATH is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        84. Allowing both safe and unsafe HTTP methods is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        85. Database queries should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        86. Creating cookies without the "HttpOnly" flag is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        87. Cipher Block Chaining IVs should be unpredictable

           Vulnerability
        88. XML parsers should not be vulnerable to XXE attacks

           Vulnerability
        89. Classes should not be loaded dynamically

           Vulnerability
        90. Basic authentication should not be used

           Vulnerability
        91. Regular expressions should not be vulnerable to Denial of Service attacks

           Vulnerability
        92. Setting loose POSIX file permissions is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        93. Using non-standard cryptographic algorithms is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        94. "HttpServletRequest.getRequestedSessionId()" should not be used

           Vulnerability
        95. Using pseudorandom number generators (PRNGs) is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        96. A secure password should be used when connecting to a database

           Vulnerability
        97. Creating cookies without the "secure" flag is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        98. XPath expressions should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        99. I/O function calls should not be vulnerable to path injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        100. LDAP queries should not be vulnerable to injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        101. Formatting SQL queries is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        102. OS commands should not be vulnerable to command injection attacks

           Vulnerability
        103. Hard-coded passwords are security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        104. Password hashing functions should use an unpredictable salt

           Vulnerability
        105. Exceptions should not be thrown from servlet methods

           Vulnerability
        106. Using hardcoded IP addresses is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot

        Configuring loggers is security-sensitive

        consistency - conventional
        security
        Security Hotspot

          This rule is deprecated, and will eventually be removed.

          Configuring loggers is security-sensitive. It has led in the past to the following vulnerabilities:

          • CVE-2018-0285
          • CVE-2000-1127
          • CVE-2017-15113
          • CVE-2015-5742

          Logs are useful before, during and after a security incident.

          • Attackers will most of the time start their nefarious work by probing the system for vulnerabilities. Monitoring this activity and stopping it is the first step to prevent an attack from ever happening.
          • In case of a successful attack, logs should contain enough information to understand what damage an attacker may have inflicted.

          Logs are also a target for attackers because they might contain sensitive information. Configuring loggers has an impact on the type of information logged and how they are logged.

          This rule flags for review code that initiates loggers configuration. The goal is to guide security code reviews.

          Ask Yourself Whether

          • unauthorized users might have access to the logs, either because they are stored in an insecure location or because the application gives access to them.
          • the logs contain sensitive information on a production server. This can happen when the logger is in debug mode.
          • the log can grow without limit. This can happen when additional information is written into logs every time a user performs an action and the user can perform the action as many times as he/she wants.
          • the logs do not contain enough information to understand the damage an attacker might have inflicted. The loggers mode (info, warn, error) might filter out important information. They might not print contextual information like the precise time of events or the server hostname.
          • the logs are only stored locally instead of being backuped or replicated.

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

          Recommended Secure Coding Practices

          • Check that your production deployment doesn’t have its loggers in "debug" mode as it might write sensitive information in logs.
          • Production logs should be stored in a secure location which is only accessible to system administrators.
          • Configure the loggers to display all warnings, info and error messages. Write relevant information such as the precise time of events and the hostname.
          • Choose log format which is easy to parse and process automatically. It is important to process logs rapidly in case of an attack so that the impact is known and limited.
          • Check that the permissions of the log files are correct. If you index the logs in some other service, make sure that the transfer and the service are secure too.
          • Add limits to the size of the logs and make sure that no user can fill the disk with logs. This can happen even when the user does not control the logged information. An attacker could just repeat a logged action many times.

          Remember that configuring loggers properly doesn’t make them bullet-proof. Here is a list of recommendations explaining on how to use your logs:

          • Don’t log any sensitive information. This obviously includes passwords and credit card numbers but also any personal information such as user names, locations, etc…​ Usually any information which is protected by law is good candidate for removal.
          • Sanitize all user inputs before writing them in the logs. This includes checking its size, content, encoding, syntax, etc…​ As for any user input, validate using whitelists whenever possible. Enabling users to write what they want in your logs can have many impacts. It could for example use all your storage space or compromise your log indexing service.
          • Log enough information to monitor suspicious activities and evaluate the impact an attacker might have on your systems. Register events such as failed logins, successful logins, server side input validation failures, access denials and any important transaction.
          • Monitor the logs for any suspicious activity.

          Sensitive Code Example

          This rule supports the following libraries: Log4J, java.util.logging and Logback

          // === Log4J 2 ===
          import org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.builder.api.ConfigurationBuilderFactory;
          import org.apache.logging.log4j.Level;
          import org.apache.logging.log4j.core.*;
          import org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.*;
          
          // Sensitive: creating a new custom configuration
          abstract class CustomConfigFactory extends ConfigurationFactory {
              // ...
          }
          
          class A {
              void foo(Configuration config, LoggerContext context, java.util.Map<String, Level> levelMap,
                      Appender appender, java.io.InputStream stream, java.net.URI uri,
                      java.io.File file, java.net.URL url, String source, ClassLoader loader, Level level, Filter filter)
                      throws java.io.IOException {
                  // Creating a new custom configuration
                  ConfigurationBuilderFactory.newConfigurationBuilder();  // Sensitive
          
                  // Setting loggers level can result in writing sensitive information in production
                  Configurator.setAllLevels("com.example", Level.DEBUG);  // Sensitive
                  Configurator.setLevel("com.example", Level.DEBUG);  // Sensitive
                  Configurator.setLevel(levelMap);  // Sensitive
                  Configurator.setRootLevel(Level.DEBUG);  // Sensitive
          
                  config.addAppender(appender); // Sensitive: this modifies the configuration
          
                  LoggerConfig loggerConfig = config.getRootLogger();
                  loggerConfig.addAppender(appender, level, filter); // Sensitive
                  loggerConfig.setLevel(level); // Sensitive
          
                  context.setConfigLocation(uri); // Sensitive
          
                  // Load the configuration from a stream or file
                  new ConfigurationSource(stream);  // Sensitive
                  new ConfigurationSource(stream, file);  // Sensitive
                  new ConfigurationSource(stream, url);  // Sensitive
                  ConfigurationSource.fromResource(source, loader);  // Sensitive
                  ConfigurationSource.fromUri(uri);  // Sensitive
              }
          }
          
          // === java.util.logging ===
          import java.util.logging.*;
          
          class M {
              void foo(LogManager logManager, Logger logger, java.io.InputStream is, Handler handler)
                      throws SecurityException, java.io.IOException {
                  logManager.readConfiguration(is); // Sensitive
          
                  logger.setLevel(Level.FINEST); // Sensitive
                  logger.addHandler(handler); // Sensitive
              }
          }
          
          // === Logback ===
          import ch.qos.logback.classic.util.ContextInitializer;
          import ch.qos.logback.core.Appender;
          import ch.qos.logback.classic.joran.JoranConfigurator;
          import ch.qos.logback.classic.spi.ILoggingEvent;
          import ch.qos.logback.classic.*;
          
          class M {
              void foo(Logger logger, Appender<ILoggingEvent> fileAppender) {
                  System.setProperty(ContextInitializer.CONFIG_FILE_PROPERTY, "config.xml"); // Sensitive
                  JoranConfigurator configurator = new JoranConfigurator(); // Sensitive
          
                  logger.addAppender(fileAppender); // Sensitive
                  logger.setLevel(Level.DEBUG); // Sensitive
              }
          }
          

          Exceptions

          Log4J 1.x is not covered as it has reached end of life.

          See

          • OWASP - Top 10 2021 Category A9 - Security Logging and Monitoring Failures
          • OWASP - Top 10 2017 Category A3 - Sensitive Data Exposure
          • OWASP - Top 10 2017 Category A10 - Insufficient Logging & Monitoring
          • CWE - CWE-117 - Improper Output Neutralization for Logs
          • CWE - CWE-532 - Information Exposure Through Log Files
            Available In:
          • SonarQube IdeCatch issues on the fly,
            in your IDE
          • SonarQube CloudDetect issues in your GitHub, Azure DevOps Services, Bitbucket Cloud, GitLab repositories
          • SonarQube Community BuildAnalyze code in your
            on-premise CI
            Available Since
            9.1
          • SonarQube ServerAnalyze code in your
            on-premise CI
            Developer Edition
            Available Since
            9.1

          © 2008-2025 SonarSource SA. All rights reserved.

          Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | Terms of Use