During construction of a mem BIO we allocate some resources. If this
allocation fails we can end up leaking everything we have allocated so
far.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Currently on every BIO mem read operation the remaining data is reallocated.
This commit solves the issue.
BIO mem structure includes additional pointer to the read position.
On every read the pointer moves instead of reallocating the memory for the remaining data.
Reallocation accures before write and some ioctl operations, if the read pointer doesn't point on the beginning of the buffer.
Also the flag is added to rewind the read pointer without losing the data.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Move the the BIO_METHOD and BIO structures into internal header files,
provide appropriate accessor methods and update all internal code to use
the new accessors where appropriate.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
BIO_new, etc., don't need a non-const BIO_METHOD. This allows all the
built-in method tables to live in .rodata.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
This was done by the following
find . -name '*.[ch]' | /tmp/pl
where /tmp/pl is the following three-line script:
print unless $. == 1 && m@/\* .*\.[ch] \*/@;
close ARGV if eof; # Close file to reset $.
And then some hand-editing of other files.
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
Add secure heap for storage of private keys (when possible).
Add BIO_s_secmem(), CBIGNUM, etc.
Add BIO_CTX_secure_new so all BIGNUM's in the context are secure.
Contributed by Akamai Technologies under the Corporate CLA.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
There are header files in crypto/ that are used by a number of crypto/
submodules. Move those to crypto/include/internal and adapt the
affected source code and Makefiles.
The header files that got moved are:
crypto/cryptolib.h
crypto/md32_common.h
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Returning -1 for an attempt to read from an empty buffer is empty is
not an error that should be signalled via the error queue, it's a
'retry read' condition and is signalled as such.
designed for that. This removes the potential error to mix data and
function pointers.
Please note that I'm a little unsure how incorrect calls to the old
ctrl functions should be handled, in som cases. I currently return 0
and that's it, but it may be more correct to generate a genuine error
in those cases.