1=pod 2 3=head1 NAME 4 5OPENSSL_malloc_init, 6OPENSSL_malloc, OPENSSL_zalloc, OPENSSL_realloc, OPENSSL_free, 7OPENSSL_clear_realloc, OPENSSL_clear_free, OPENSSL_cleanse, 8CRYPTO_malloc, CRYPTO_zalloc, CRYPTO_realloc, CRYPTO_free, 9OPENSSL_strdup, OPENSSL_strndup, 10OPENSSL_memdup, OPENSSL_strlcpy, OPENSSL_strlcat, 11CRYPTO_strdup, CRYPTO_strndup, 12OPENSSL_mem_debug_push, OPENSSL_mem_debug_pop, 13CRYPTO_mem_debug_push, CRYPTO_mem_debug_pop, 14CRYPTO_clear_realloc, CRYPTO_clear_free, 15CRYPTO_malloc_fn, CRYPTO_realloc_fn, CRYPTO_free_fn, 16CRYPTO_get_mem_functions, CRYPTO_set_mem_functions, 17CRYPTO_get_alloc_counts, 18CRYPTO_set_mem_debug, CRYPTO_mem_ctrl, 19CRYPTO_mem_leaks, CRYPTO_mem_leaks_fp, CRYPTO_mem_leaks_cb, 20OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES, 21OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD 22- Memory allocation functions 23 24=head1 SYNOPSIS 25 26 #include <openssl/crypto.h> 27 28 int OPENSSL_malloc_init(void); 29 30 void *OPENSSL_malloc(size_t num); 31 void *OPENSSL_zalloc(size_t num); 32 void *OPENSSL_realloc(void *addr, size_t num); 33 void OPENSSL_free(void *addr); 34 char *OPENSSL_strdup(const char *str); 35 char *OPENSSL_strndup(const char *str, size_t s); 36 size_t OPENSSL_strlcat(char *dst, const char *src, size_t size); 37 size_t OPENSSL_strlcpy(char *dst, const char *src, size_t size); 38 void *OPENSSL_memdup(void *data, size_t s); 39 void *OPENSSL_clear_realloc(void *p, size_t old_len, size_t num); 40 void OPENSSL_clear_free(void *str, size_t num); 41 void OPENSSL_cleanse(void *ptr, size_t len); 42 43 void *CRYPTO_malloc(size_t num, const char *file, int line); 44 void *CRYPTO_zalloc(size_t num, const char *file, int line); 45 void *CRYPTO_realloc(void *p, size_t num, const char *file, int line); 46 void CRYPTO_free(void *str, const char *, int); 47 char *CRYPTO_strdup(const char *p, const char *file, int line); 48 char *CRYPTO_strndup(const char *p, size_t num, const char *file, int line); 49 void *CRYPTO_clear_realloc(void *p, size_t old_len, size_t num, 50 const char *file, int line); 51 void CRYPTO_clear_free(void *str, size_t num, const char *, int); 52 53 typedef void *(*CRYPTO_malloc_fn)(size_t num, const char *file, int line); 54 typedef void *(*CRYPTO_realloc_fn)(void *addr, size_t num, const char *file, 55 int line); 56 typedef void (*CRYPTO_free_fn)(void *addr, const char *file, int line); 57 void CRYPTO_get_mem_functions(CRYPTO_malloc_fn *malloc_fn, 58 CRYPTO_realloc_fn *realloc_fn, 59 CRYPTO_free_fn *free_fn); 60 int CRYPTO_set_mem_functions(CRYPTO_malloc_fn malloc_fn, 61 CRYPTO_realloc_fn realloc_fn, 62 CRYPTO_free_fn free_fn); 63 64 void CRYPTO_get_alloc_counts(int *mcount, int *rcount, int *fcount); 65 66 env OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES=... <application> 67 env OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD=... <application> 68 69The following functions have been deprecated since OpenSSL 3.0, and can be 70hidden entirely by defining B<OPENSSL_API_COMPAT> with a suitable version value, 71see L<openssl_user_macros(7)>: 72 73 int CRYPTO_mem_leaks(BIO *b); 74 int CRYPTO_mem_leaks_fp(FILE *fp); 75 int CRYPTO_mem_leaks_cb(int (*cb)(const char *str, size_t len, void *u), 76 void *u); 77 78 int CRYPTO_set_mem_debug(int onoff); 79 int CRYPTO_mem_ctrl(int mode); 80 int OPENSSL_mem_debug_push(const char *info); 81 int OPENSSL_mem_debug_pop(void); 82 int CRYPTO_mem_debug_push(const char *info, const char *file, int line); 83 int CRYPTO_mem_debug_pop(void); 84 85=head1 DESCRIPTION 86 87OpenSSL memory allocation is handled by the B<OPENSSL_xxx> API. These are 88generally macro's that add the standard C B<__FILE__> and B<__LINE__> 89parameters and call a lower-level B<CRYPTO_xxx> API. 90Some functions do not add those parameters, but exist for consistency. 91 92OPENSSL_malloc_init() does nothing and does not need to be called. It is 93included for compatibility with older versions of OpenSSL. 94 95OPENSSL_malloc(), OPENSSL_realloc(), and OPENSSL_free() are like the 96C malloc(), realloc(), and free() functions. 97OPENSSL_zalloc() calls memset() to zero the memory before returning. 98 99OPENSSL_clear_realloc() and OPENSSL_clear_free() should be used 100when the buffer at B<addr> holds sensitive information. 101The old buffer is filled with zero's by calling OPENSSL_cleanse() 102before ultimately calling OPENSSL_free(). 103 104OPENSSL_cleanse() fills B<ptr> of size B<len> with a string of 0's. 105Use OPENSSL_cleanse() with care if the memory is a mapping of a file. 106If the storage controller uses write compression, then it's possible 107that sensitive tail bytes will survive zeroization because the block of 108zeros will be compressed. If the storage controller uses wear leveling, 109then the old sensitive data will not be overwritten; rather, a block of 1100's will be written at a new physical location. 111 112OPENSSL_strdup(), OPENSSL_strndup() and OPENSSL_memdup() are like the 113equivalent C functions, except that memory is allocated by calling the 114OPENSSL_malloc() and should be released by calling OPENSSL_free(). 115 116OPENSSL_strlcpy(), 117OPENSSL_strlcat() and OPENSSL_strnlen() are equivalents of the common C 118library functions and are provided for portability. 119 120If no allocations have been done, it is possible to "swap out" the default 121implementations for OPENSSL_malloc(), OPENSSL_realloc() and OPENSSL_free() 122and replace them with alternate versions. 123CRYPTO_get_mem_functions() function fills in the given arguments with the 124function pointers for the current implementations. 125With CRYPTO_set_mem_functions(), you can specify a different set of functions. 126If any of B<malloc_fn>, B<realloc_fn>, or B<free_fn> are NULL, then 127the function is not changed. 128While it's permitted to swap out only a few and not all the functions 129with CRYPTO_set_mem_functions(), it's recommended to swap them all out 130at once. 131 132If the library is built with the C<crypto-mdebug> option, then one 133function, CRYPTO_get_alloc_counts(), and two additional environment 134variables, B<OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES> and B<OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD>, 135are available. 136 137The function CRYPTO_get_alloc_counts() fills in the number of times 138each of CRYPTO_malloc(), CRYPTO_realloc(), and CRYPTO_free() have been 139called, into the values pointed to by B<mcount>, B<rcount>, and B<fcount>, 140respectively. If a pointer is NULL, then the corresponding count is not stored. 141 142The variable 143B<OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES> controls how often allocations should fail. 144It is a set of fields separated by semicolons, which each field is a count 145(defaulting to zero) and an optional atsign and percentage (defaulting 146to 100). If the count is zero, then it lasts forever. For example, 147C<100;@25> or C<100@0;0@25> means the first 100 allocations pass, then all 148other allocations (until the program exits or crashes) have a 25% chance of 149failing. 150 151If the variable B<OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD> is parsed as a positive integer, then 152it is taken as an open file descriptor. This is used in conjunction with 153B<OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES> described above. For every allocation it will log 154details about how many allocations there have been so far, what percentage 155chance there is for this allocation failing, and whether it has actually failed. 156The following example in classic shell syntax shows how to use this (will not 157work on all platforms): 158 159 OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES='200;@10' 160 export OPENSSL_MALLOC_FAILURES 161 OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD=3 162 export OPENSSL_MALLOC_FD 163 ...app invocation... 3>/tmp/log$$ 164 165=head1 RETURN VALUES 166 167OPENSSL_malloc_init(), OPENSSL_free(), OPENSSL_clear_free() 168CRYPTO_free(), CRYPTO_clear_free() and CRYPTO_get_mem_functions() 169return no value. 170 171OPENSSL_malloc(), OPENSSL_zalloc(), OPENSSL_realloc(), 172OPENSSL_clear_realloc(), 173CRYPTO_malloc(), CRYPTO_zalloc(), CRYPTO_realloc(), 174CRYPTO_clear_realloc(), 175OPENSSL_strdup(), and OPENSSL_strndup() 176return a pointer to allocated memory or NULL on error. 177 178CRYPTO_set_mem_functions() returns 1 on success or 0 on failure (almost 179always because allocations have already happened). 180 181CRYPTO_mem_leaks(), CRYPTO_mem_leaks_fp(), CRYPTO_mem_leaks_cb(), 182CRYPTO_set_mem_debug(), and CRYPTO_mem_ctrl() are deprecated and are no-ops that 183always return -1. 184OPENSSL_mem_debug_push(), OPENSSL_mem_debug_pop(), 185CRYPTO_mem_debug_push(), and CRYPTO_mem_debug_pop() 186are deprecated and are no-ops that always return 0. 187 188=head1 HISTORY 189 190OPENSSL_mem_debug_push(), OPENSSL_mem_debug_pop(), 191CRYPTO_mem_debug_push(), CRYPTO_mem_debug_pop(), 192CRYPTO_mem_leaks(), CRYPTO_mem_leaks_fp(), 193CRYPTO_mem_leaks_cb(), CRYPTO_set_mem_debug(), CRYPTO_mem_ctrl() 194were deprecated in OpenSSL 3.0. 195The memory-leak checking has been deprecated in OpenSSL 3.0 in favor of 196clang's memory and leak sanitizer. 197 198 199=head1 COPYRIGHT 200 201Copyright 2016-2022 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. 202 203Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use 204this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy 205in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at 206L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>. 207 208=cut 209