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Protect explicit_bzero() from link-time optimization

Modern compiler toolchains are capable of optimizing even across
translation unit boundaries, so simply moving the memory clearing into
a separate function is not guaranteed to clear memory.
To avoid this, we take advantage of ELF weak symbol semantics, and
insert a call to an empty, weakly named function.  The semantics of
calling this function aren't determinable until load time, so the
compiler and linker need to keep the memset() call.
There are still ways a toolchain might defeat this trick (e.g.,
optimistically expecting the weak symbol to not be overloaded, and
only calling memset() if it is; promoting weak symbols to strong
symbols at link-time when emitting a static binary because they won't
be interposed; implementing load-time optimizations).  But at least
for the foreseeable future, these seem unlikely.
ok deraadt
OPENBSD_5_6
matthew 10 years ago
parent
commit
f198222e04
1 changed files with 10 additions and 7 deletions
  1. +10
    -7
      src/lib/libc/string/explicit_bzero.c

+ 10
- 7
src/lib/libc/string/explicit_bzero.c View File

@ -1,16 +1,19 @@
/* $OpenBSD: explicit_bzero.c,v 1.2 2014/06/10 04:17:37 deraadt Exp $ */
/* $OpenBSD: explicit_bzero.c,v 1.3 2014/06/21 02:34:26 matthew Exp $ */
/*
* Public domain.
* Written by Ted Unangst
* Written by Matthew Dempsky.
*/
#include <string.h>
/*
* explicit_bzero - don't let the compiler optimize away bzero
*/
__attribute__((weak)) void
__explicit_bzero_hook(void *buf, size_t len)
{
}
void
explicit_bzero(void *p, size_t n)
explicit_bzero(void *buf, size_t len)
{
bzero(p, n);
memset(buf, 0, len);
__explicit_bzero_hook(buf, len);
}

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