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- =pod
- =head1 NAME
- OPENSSL_malloc_init,
- OPENSSL_malloc, OPENSSL_zalloc, OPENSSL_realloc, OPENSSL_free,
- OPENSSL_clear_realloc, OPENSSL_clear_free, OPENSSL_cleanse,
- CRYPTO_malloc, CRYPTO_zalloc, CRYPTO_realloc, CRYPTO_free,
- OPENSSL_strdup, OPENSSL_strndup,
- OPENSSL_memdup, OPENSSL_strlcpy, OPENSSL_strlcat,
- OPENSSL_hexstr2buf, OPENSSL_buf2hexstr, OPENSSL_hexchar2int,
- CRYPTO_strdup, CRYPTO_strndup,
- OPENSSL_mem_debug_push, OPENSSL_mem_debug_pop,
- CRYPTO_mem_debug_push, CRYPTO_mem_debug_pop,
- CRYPTO_clear_realloc, CRYPTO_clear_free,
- CRYPTO_get_mem_functions, CRYPTO_set_mem_functions,
- CRYPTO_get_alloc_counts,
- CRYPTO_set_mem_debug, CRYPTO_mem_ctrl,
- CRYPTO_mem_leaks, CRYPTO_mem_leaks_fp, CRYPTO_mem_leaks_cb,
- OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES,
- OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD
- - Memory allocation functions
- =head1 SYNOPSIS
- #include <openssl/crypto.h>
- int OPENSSL_malloc_init(void)
- void *OPENSSL_malloc(size_t num)
- void *OPENSSL_zalloc(size_t num)
- void *OPENSSL_realloc(void *addr, size_t num)
- void OPENSSL_free(void *addr)
- char *OPENSSL_strdup(const char *str)
- char *OPENSSL_strndup(const char *str, size_t s)
- size_t OPENSSL_strlcat(char *dst, const char *src, size_t size);
- size_t OPENSSL_strlcpy(char *dst, const char *src, size_t size);
- void *OPENSSL_memdup(void *data, size_t s)
- void *OPENSSL_clear_realloc(void *p, size_t old_len, size_t num)
- void OPENSSL_clear_free(void *str, size_t num)
- void OPENSSL_cleanse(void *ptr, size_t len);
- unsigned char *OPENSSL_hexstr2buf(const char *str, long *len);
- char *OPENSSL_buf2hexstr(const unsigned char *buffer, long len);
- int OPENSSL_hexchar2int(unsigned char c);
- void *CRYPTO_malloc(size_t num, const char *file, int line)
- void *CRYPTO_zalloc(size_t num, const char *file, int line)
- void *CRYPTO_realloc(void *p, size_t num, const char *file, int line)
- void CRYPTO_free(void *str, const char *, int)
- char *CRYPTO_strdup(const char *p, const char *file, int line)
- char *CRYPTO_strndup(const char *p, size_t num, const char *file, int line)
- void *CRYPTO_clear_realloc(void *p, size_t old_len, size_t num,
- const char *file, int line)
- void CRYPTO_clear_free(void *str, size_t num, const char *, int)
- void CRYPTO_get_mem_functions(
- void *(**m)(size_t, const char *, int),
- void *(**r)(void *, size_t, const char *, int),
- void (**f)(void *, const char *, int))
- int CRYPTO_set_mem_functions(
- void *(*m)(size_t, const char *, int),
- void *(*r)(void *, size_t, const char *, int),
- void (*f)(void *, const char *, int))
- void CRYPTO_get_alloc_counts(int *m, int *r, int *f)
- int CRYPTO_set_mem_debug(int onoff)
- env OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES=... <application>
- env OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD=... <application>
- int CRYPTO_mem_ctrl(int mode);
- int OPENSSL_mem_debug_push(const char *info)
- int OPENSSL_mem_debug_pop(void);
- int CRYPTO_mem_debug_push(const char *info, const char *file, int line);
- int CRYPTO_mem_debug_pop(void);
- int CRYPTO_mem_leaks(BIO *b);
- int CRYPTO_mem_leaks_fp(FILE *fp);
- int CRYPTO_mem_leaks_cb(int (*cb)(const char *str, size_t len, void *u),
- void *u);
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
- OpenSSL memory allocation is handled by the B<OPENSSL_xxx> API. These are
- generally macro's that add the standard C B<__FILE__> and B<__LINE__>
- parameters and call a lower-level B<CRYPTO_xxx> API.
- Some functions do not add those parameters, but exist for consistency.
- OPENSSL_malloc_init() sets the lower-level memory allocation functions
- to their default implementation.
- It is generally not necessary to call this, except perhaps in certain
- shared-library situations.
- OPENSSL_malloc(), OPENSSL_realloc(), and OPENSSL_free() are like the
- C malloc(), realloc(), and free() functions.
- OPENSSL_zalloc() calls memset() to zero the memory before returning.
- OPENSSL_clear_realloc() and OPENSSL_clear_free() should be used
- when the buffer at B<addr> holds sensitive information.
- The old buffer is filled with zero's by calling OPENSSL_cleanse()
- before ultimately calling OPENSSL_free().
- OPENSSL_cleanse() fills B<ptr> of size B<len> with a string of 0's.
- Use OPENSSL_cleanse() with care if the memory is a mapping of a file.
- If the storage controller uses write compression, then its possible
- that sensitive tail bytes will survive zeroization because the block of
- zeros will be compressed. If the storage controller uses wear leveling,
- then the old sensitive data will not be overwritten; rather, a block of
- 0's will be written at a new physical location.
- OPENSSL_strdup(), OPENSSL_strndup() and OPENSSL_memdup() are like the
- equivalent C functions, except that memory is allocated by calling the
- OPENSSL_malloc() and should be released by calling OPENSSL_free().
- OPENSSL_strlcpy(),
- OPENSSL_strlcat() and OPENSSL_strnlen() are equivalents of the common C
- library functions and are provided for portability.
- OPENSSL_hexstr2buf() parses B<str> as a hex string and returns a
- pointer to the parsed value. The memory is allocated by calling
- OPENSSL_malloc() and should be released by calling OPENSSL_free().
- If B<len> is not NULL, it is filled in with the output length.
- Colons between two-character hex "bytes" are ignored.
- An odd number of hex digits is an error.
- OPENSSL_buf2hexstr() takes the specified buffer and length, and returns
- a hex string for value, or NULL on error.
- B<Buffer> cannot be NULL; if B<len> is 0 an empty string is returned.
- OPENSSL_hexchar2int() converts a character to the hexadecimal equivalent,
- or returns -1 on error.
- If no allocations have been done, it is possible to "swap out" the default
- implementations for OPENSSL_malloc(), OPENSSL_realloc and OPENSSL_free()
- and replace them with alternate versions (hooks).
- CRYPTO_get_mem_functions() function fills in the given arguments with the
- function pointers for the current implementations.
- With CRYPTO_set_mem_functions(), you can specify a different set of functions.
- If any of B<m>, B<r>, or B<f> are NULL, then the function is not changed.
- The default implementation can include some debugging capability (if enabled
- at build-time).
- This adds some overhead by keeping a list of all memory allocations, and
- removes items from the list when they are free'd.
- This is most useful for identifying memory leaks.
- CRYPTO_set_mem_debug() turns this tracking on and off. In order to have
- any effect, is must be called before any of the allocation functions
- (e.g., CRYPTO_malloc()) are called, and is therefore normally one of the
- first lines of main() in an application.
- CRYPTO_mem_ctrl() provides fine-grained control of memory leak tracking.
- To enable tracking call CRYPTO_mem_ctrl() with a B<mode> argument of
- the B<CRYPTO_MEM_CHECK_ON>.
- To disable tracking call CRYPTO_mem_ctrl() with a B<mode> argument of
- the B<CRYPTO_MEM_CHECK_OFF>.
- While checking memory, it can be useful to store additional context
- about what is being done.
- For example, identifying the field names when parsing a complicated
- data structure.
- OPENSSL_mem_debug_push() (which calls CRYPTO_mem_debug_push())
- attachs an identifying string to the allocation stack.
- This must be a global or other static string; it is not copied.
- OPENSSL_mem_debug_pop() removes identifying state from the stack.
- At the end of the program, calling CRYPTO_mem_leaks() or
- CRYPTO_mem_leaks_fp() will report all "leaked" memory, writing it
- to the specified BIO B<b> or FILE B<fp>. These functions return 1 if
- there are no leaks, 0 if there are leaks and -1 if an error occurred.
- CRYPTO_mem_leaks_cb() does the same as CRYPTO_mem_leaks(), but instead
- of writing to a given BIO, the callback function is called for each
- output string with the string, length, and userdata B<u> as the callback
- parameters.
- If the library is built with the C<crypto-mdebug> option, then one
- function, CRYPTO_get_alloc_counts(), and two additional environment
- variables, B<OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES> and B<OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD>,
- are available.
- The function CRYPTO_get_alloc_counts() fills in the number of times
- each of CRYPTO_malloc(), CRYPTO_realloc(), and CRYPTO_free() have been
- called, into the values pointed to by B<mcount>, B<rcount>, and B<fcount>,
- respectively. If a pointer is NULL, then the corresponding count is not stored.
- The variable
- B<OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES> controls how often allocations should fail.
- It is a set of fields separated by semicolons, which each field is a count
- (defaulting to zero) and an optional atsign and percentage (defaulting
- to 100). If the count is zero, then it lasts forever. For example,
- C<100;@25> or C<100@0;0@25> means the first 100 allocations pass, then all
- other allocations (until the program exits or crashes) have a 25% chance of
- failing.
- If the variable B<OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD> is parsed as a positive integer, then
- it is taken as an open file descriptor, and a record of all allocations is
- written to that descriptor. If an allocation will fail, and the platform
- supports it, then a backtrace will be written to the descriptor. This can
- be useful because a malloc may fail but not be checked, and problems will
- only occur later. The following example in classic shell syntax shows how
- to use this (will not work on all platforms):
- OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES='200;@10'
- export OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES
- OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD=3
- export OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD
- ...app invocation... 3>/tmp/log$$
- =head1 RETURN VALUES
- OPENSSL_malloc_init(), OPENSSL_free(), OPENSSL_clear_free()
- CRYPTO_free(), CRYPTO_clear_free() and CRYPTO_get_mem_functions()
- return no value.
- CRYPTO_mem_leaks(), CRYPTO_mem_leaks_fp() and CRYPTO_mem_leaks_cb() return 1 if
- there are no leaks, 0 if there are leaks and -1 if an error occurred.
- OPENSSL_malloc(), OPENSSL_zalloc(), OPENSSL_realloc(),
- OPENSSL_clear_realloc(),
- CRYPTO_malloc(), CRYPTO_zalloc(), CRYPTO_realloc(),
- CRYPTO_clear_realloc(),
- OPENSSL_buf2hexstr(), OPENSSL_hexstr2buf(),
- OPENSSL_strdup(), and OPENSSL_strndup()
- return a pointer to allocated memory or NULL on error.
- CRYPTO_set_mem_functions() and CRYPTO_set_mem_debug()
- return 1 on success or 0 on failure (almost
- always because allocations have already happened).
- CRYPTO_mem_ctrl() returns -1 if an error occurred, otherwise the
- previous value of the mode.
- OPENSSL_mem_debug_push() and OPENSSL_mem_debug_pop()
- return 1 on success or 0 on failure.
- =head1 NOTES
- While it's permitted to swap out only a few and not all the functions
- with CRYPTO_set_mem_functions(), it's recommended to swap them all out
- at once. I<This applies specially if OpenSSL was built with the
- configuration option> C<crypto-mdebug> I<enabled. In case, swapping out
- only, say, the malloc() implementation is outright dangerous.>
- =head1 COPYRIGHT
- Copyright 2016-2018 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
- Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
- this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
- in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
- L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
- =cut
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