Double Free

Abstract
Calling free twice on the same memory address can lead to a buffer overflow.

Description
Double free errors occur when free is called more than once with the same memory address as an argument.

Calling free twice on the same value can lead to a buffer overflow. When a program calls free twice with the same argument, the program's memory management data structures become corrupted. This corruption can cause the program to crash or, in some circumstances, cause two later calls to malloc to return the same pointer. If malloc returns the same value twice and the program later gives the attacker control over the data that is written into this doubly-allocated memory, the program becomes vulnerable to a buffer overflow attack.

Examples
The following code shows a simple example of a double free vulnerability.

char* ptr = (char*)malloc (SIZE); ...	if (abrt) { free(ptr); }	...	free(ptr);

Double free vulnerabilities have two common (and sometimes overlapping) causes:


 * Error conditions and other exceptional circumstances
 * Confusion over which part of the program is responsible for freeing the memory

Although some double free vulnerabilities are not much more complicated than the previous example, most are spread out across hundreds of lines of code or even different files. Programmers seem particularly susceptible to freeing global variables more than once.