CA1062: Validate arguments of public methods
Note
This article applies to Visual Studio 2015. If you're looking for the latest Visual Studio documentation, see Visual Studio documentation. We recommend upgrading to the latest version of Visual Studio. Download it here
Item | Value |
---|---|
TypeName | ValidateArgumentsOfPublicMethods |
CheckId | CA1062 |
Category | Microsoft.Design |
Breaking Change | Non Breaking |
Cause
An externally visible method dereferences one of its reference arguments without verifying whether that argument is null
(Nothing
in Visual Basic).
Rule Description
All reference arguments that are passed to externally visible methods should be checked against null
. If appropriate, throw a ArgumentNullException when the argument is null
.
If a method can be called from an unknown assembly because it is declared public or protected, you should validate all parameters of the method. If the method is designed to be called only by known assemblies, you should make the method internal and apply the InternalsVisibleToAttribute attribute to the assembly that contains the method.
How to Fix Violations
To fix a violation of this rule, validate each reference argument against null
.
When to Suppress Warnings
You can suppress a warning from this rule if you are sure that the dereferenced parameter has been validated by another method call in the function.
Example
The following example shows a method that violates the rule and a method that satisfies the rule.
public class Person
{
public string Name { get; private set; }
public int Age { get; private set; }
public Person(string name, int age)
{
Name = name;
Age = age;
}
// Copy constructor CA1062 fires because other is dereferenced
// without being checked for null
public Person(Person other)
: this(other.Name, other.Age)
{
}
}
using System;
namespace DesignLibrary
{
public class Test
{
// This method violates the rule.
public void DoNotValidate(string input)
{
if (input.Length != 0)
{
Console.WriteLine(input);
}
}
// This method satisfies the rule.
public void Validate(string input)
{
if (input == null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException("input");
}
if (input.Length != 0)
{
Console.WriteLine(input);
}
}
}
}
Imports System
Namespace DesignLibrary
Public Class Test
' This method violates the rule.
Sub DoNotValidate(ByVal input As String)
If input.Length <> 0 Then
Console.WriteLine(input)
End If
End Sub
' This method satisfies the rule.
Sub Validate(ByVal input As String)
If input Is Nothing Then
Throw New ArgumentNullException("input")
End If
If input.Length <> 0 Then
Console.WriteLine(input)
End If
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace
Example
In Visual Studio 2005, this rule does not detect that parameters are being passed to another method that does the validation.
public class Person
{
public string Name { get; private set; }
public int Age { get; private set; }
public Person(string name, int age)
{
Name = name;
Age = age;
}
// Copy constructor
public Person(Person other)
: this(PassThroughNonNull(other).Name,
PassThroughNonNull(other).Age)
{
}
// Null check method
private static Person PassThroughNonNull(Person person)
{
if (person == null)
throw new ArgumentNullException("person");
return person;
}
}
public string Method(string value)
{
EnsureNotNull(value);
// Fires incorrectly
return value.ToString();
}
private void EnsureNotNull(string value)
{
if (value == null)
throw new ArgumentNullException("value");
}
Public Function Method(ByVal value As String) As String
EnsureNotNull(value)
' Fires incorrectly
Return value.ToString()
End Function
Private Sub EnsureNotNull(ByVal value As String)
If value Is Nothing Then
Throw (New ArgumentNullException("value"))
End If
End Sub
Example
Copy constructors that populate field or properties that are reference objects can also violate the CA1062 rule. The violation occurs because the copied object that is passed to the copy constructor might be null
(Nothing
in Visual Basic). To resolve the violation, use a static (Shared in Visual Basic) method to check that the copied object is not null.
In the following Person
class example, the other
object that is passed to the Person
copy constructor might be null
.
public class Person
{
public string Name { get; private set; }
public int Age { get; private set; }
public Person(string name, int age)
{
Name = name;
Age = age;
}
// Copy constructor CA1062 fires because other is dereferenced
// without being checked for null
public Person(Person other)
: this(other.Name, other.Age)
{
}
}
Example
In the following revised Person
example, the other
object that is passed to the copy constructor is first checked for null in the PassThroughNonNull
method.
public class Person
{
public string Name { get; private set; }
public int Age { get; private set; }
public Person(string name, int age)
{
Name = name;
Age = age;
}
// Copy constructor
public Person(Person other)
: this(PassThroughNonNull(other).Name,
PassThroughNonNull(other).Age)
{
}
// Null check method
private static Person PassThroughNonNull(Person person)
{
if (person == null)
throw new ArgumentNullException("person");
return person;
}
}