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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: 49 rules found
spring
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Methods annotated with "@BeforeTransaction" or "@AfterTransaction" must respect the contract

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

           Code Smell
        3. @EventListener methods should have one parameter at most

           Bug
        4. "@Scheduled" annotation should only be applied to no-arg methods

           Bug
        5. @InitBinder methods should have void return type

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

           Code Smell
        7. @Cacheable and @CachePut should not be combined

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

           Code Smell
        9. Use appropriate @DirtiesContext modes

           Code Smell
        10. Set appropriate Status Codes on HTTP responses

           Bug
        11. Beans in "@Configuration" class should have different names

           Bug
        12. SpEL expression should have a valid syntax

           Bug
        13. "@PathVariable" annotation should be present if a path variable is used

           Bug
        14. "@Bean" methods for Singleton should not be invoked in "@Configuration" when proxyBeanMethods is false

           Bug
        15. Superfluous "@ResponseBody" annotations should be removed

           Code Smell
        16. "@Controller" should be replaced with "@RestController"

           Code Smell
        17. Non-singleton Spring beans should not be injected into singleton beans

           Code Smell
        18. "@Qualifier" should not be used on "@Bean" methods

           Bug
        19. Bean names should adhere to the naming conventions

           Code Smell
        20. "@Autowired" should be used when multiple constructors are provided

           Code Smell
        21. "@Autowired" should only be used on a single constructor

           Bug
        22. Use of the "@Async" annotation on methods declared within a "@Configuration" class in Spring Boot

           Bug
        23. Nullable injected fields and parameters should provide a default value

           Bug
        24. "@Value" annotation should inject property or SpEL expression

           Code Smell
        25. Spring's ModelAndViewAssert assertions should be used instead of other assertions

           Code Smell
        26. A new session should be created during user authentication

           Vulnerability
        27. Allowing user enumeration is security-sensitive

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

           Vulnerability
        29. Passwords should not be stored in plaintext or with a fast hashing algorithm

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

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

           Vulnerability
        32. Spring beans should be considered by "@ComponentScan"

           Code Smell
        33. "@SpringBootApplication" and "@ComponentScan" should not be used in the default package

           Bug
        34. "HttpSecurity" URL patterns should be correctly ordered

           Vulnerability
        35. Delivering code in production with debug features activated is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        36. Disabling CSRF protections is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        37. Composed "@RequestMapping" variants should be preferred

           Code Smell
        38. Spring components should use constructor injection

           Code Smell
        39. "@Controller" classes that use "@SessionAttributes" must call "setComplete" on their "SessionStatus" objects

           Bug
        40. Allowing both safe and unsafe HTTP methods is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        41. "@RequestMapping" methods should not be "private"

           Code Smell
        42. Spring "@Controller" classes should not use "@Scope"

           Bug
        43. Members of Spring components should be injected

           Code Smell
        44. Constructor injection should be used instead of field injection

           Bug
        45. Factory method injection should be used in "@Configuration" classes

           Code Smell
        46. Methods with Spring proxying annotations should be public

           Bug
        47. Methods should not call same-class methods with incompatible "@Transactional" values

           Bug
        48. Creating cookies without the "secure" flag is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot
        49. Formatting SQL queries is security-sensitive

           Security Hotspot

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

        intentionality - complete
        security
        Security Hotspot
        • cwe
        • spring

        Having a permissive Cross-Origin Resource Sharing policy is security-sensitive. It has led in the past to the following vulnerabilities:

        • CVE-2018-0269
        • CVE-2017-14460

        Same origin policy in browsers prevents, by default and for security-reasons, a javascript frontend to perform a cross-origin HTTP request to a resource that has a different origin (domain, protocol, or port) from its own. The requested target can append additional HTTP headers in response, called CORS, that act like directives for the browser and change the access control policy / relax the same origin policy.

        Ask Yourself Whether

        • You don’t trust the origin specified, example: Access-Control-Allow-Origin: untrustedwebsite.com.
        • Access control policy is entirely disabled: Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *
        • Your access control policy is dynamically defined by a user-controlled input like origin header.

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

        Recommended Secure Coding Practices

        • The Access-Control-Allow-Origin header should be set only for a trusted origin and for specific resources.
        • Allow only selected, trusted domains in the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header. Prefer whitelisting domains over blacklisting or allowing any domain (do not use * wildcard nor blindly return the Origin header content without any checks).

        Sensitive Code Example

        Java servlet framework:

        @Override
        protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp) throws ServletException, IOException {
            resp.setHeader("Content-Type", "text/plain; charset=utf-8");
            resp.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*"); // Sensitive
            resp.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Credentials", "true");
            resp.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Methods", "GET");
            resp.getWriter().write("response");
        }
        

        Spring MVC framework:

        • CrossOrigin
        @CrossOrigin // Sensitive
        @RequestMapping("")
        public class TestController {
            public String home(ModelMap model) {
                model.addAttribute("message", "ok ");
                return "view";
            }
        }
        
        • cors.CorsConfiguration
        CorsConfiguration config = new CorsConfiguration();
        config.addAllowedOrigin("*"); // Sensitive
        config.applyPermitDefaultValues(); // Sensitive
        
        • servlet.config.annotation.CorsConfiguration
        class Insecure implements WebMvcConfigurer {
          @Override
          public void addCorsMappings(CorsRegistry registry) {
            registry.addMapping("/**")
              .allowedOrigins("*"); // Sensitive
          }
        }
        

        User-controlled origin:

        public ResponseEntity<String> userControlledOrigin(@RequestHeader("Origin") String origin) {
          HttpHeaders responseHeaders = new HttpHeaders();
          responseHeaders.add("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", origin); // Sensitive
        
          return new ResponseEntity<>("content", responseHeaders, HttpStatus.CREATED);
        }
        

        Compliant Solution

        Java Servlet framework:

        @Override
        protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp) throws ServletException, IOException {
            resp.setHeader("Content-Type", "text/plain; charset=utf-8");
            resp.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "trustedwebsite.com"); // Compliant
            resp.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Credentials", "true");
            resp.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Methods", "GET");
            resp.getWriter().write("response");
        }
        

        Spring MVC framework:

        • CrossOrigin
        @CrossOrigin("trustedwebsite.com") // Compliant
        @RequestMapping("")
        public class TestController {
            public String home(ModelMap model) {
                model.addAttribute("message", "ok ");
                return "view";
            }
        }
        
        • cors.CorsConfiguration
        CorsConfiguration config = new CorsConfiguration();
        config.addAllowedOrigin("http://domain2.com"); // Compliant
        
        • servlet.config.annotation.CorsConfiguration
        class Safe implements WebMvcConfigurer {
          @Override
          public void addCorsMappings(CorsRegistry registry) {
            registry.addMapping("/**")
              .allowedOrigins("safe.com"); // Compliant
          }
        }
        

        User-controlled origin validated with an allow-list:

        public ResponseEntity<String> userControlledOrigin(@RequestHeader("Origin") String origin) {
          HttpHeaders responseHeaders = new HttpHeaders();
          if (trustedOrigins.contains(origin)) {
            responseHeaders.add("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", origin);
          }
        
          return new ResponseEntity<>("content", responseHeaders, HttpStatus.CREATED);
        }
        

        See

        • OWASP - Top 10 2021 Category A5 - Security Misconfiguration
        • OWASP - Top 10 2021 Category A7 - Identification and Authentication Failures
        • developer.mozilla.org - CORS
        • developer.mozilla.org - Same origin policy
        • OWASP - Top 10 2017 Category A6 - Security Misconfiguration
        • OWASP HTML5 Security Cheat Sheet - Cross Origin Resource Sharing
        • CWE - CWE-346 - Origin Validation Error
        • CWE - CWE-942 - Overly Permissive Cross-domain Whitelist
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