openssl/crypto/o_str.c
Pauli 32ee452496 Remove OPENSSL_memcmp.
After avoiding OPENSSL_memcmp for EC curve comparison, there are no remaining
uses in the source code.  The function is only defined in an internal header
and thus should be safe to remove for 3.0.0.

Reviewed-by: Tomas Mraz <tmraz@fedoraproject.org>
Reviewed-by: Dmitry Belyavskiy <beldmit@gmail.com>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/9207)
2019-06-21 10:03:55 +10:00

255 lines
6.1 KiB
C

/*
* Copyright 2003-2017 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
* https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
*/
#include "e_os.h"
#include <limits.h>
#include <openssl/crypto.h>
#include "internal/cryptlib.h"
char *CRYPTO_strdup(const char *str, const char* file, int line)
{
char *ret;
if (str == NULL)
return NULL;
ret = CRYPTO_malloc(strlen(str) + 1, file, line);
if (ret != NULL)
strcpy(ret, str);
return ret;
}
char *CRYPTO_strndup(const char *str, size_t s, const char* file, int line)
{
size_t maxlen;
char *ret;
if (str == NULL)
return NULL;
maxlen = OPENSSL_strnlen(str, s);
ret = CRYPTO_malloc(maxlen + 1, file, line);
if (ret) {
memcpy(ret, str, maxlen);
ret[maxlen] = '\0';
}
return ret;
}
void *CRYPTO_memdup(const void *data, size_t siz, const char* file, int line)
{
void *ret;
if (data == NULL || siz >= INT_MAX)
return NULL;
ret = CRYPTO_malloc(siz, file, line);
if (ret == NULL) {
CRYPTOerr(CRYPTO_F_CRYPTO_MEMDUP, ERR_R_MALLOC_FAILURE);
return NULL;
}
return memcpy(ret, data, siz);
}
size_t OPENSSL_strnlen(const char *str, size_t maxlen)
{
const char *p;
for (p = str; maxlen-- != 0 && *p != '\0'; ++p) ;
return p - str;
}
size_t OPENSSL_strlcpy(char *dst, const char *src, size_t size)
{
size_t l = 0;
for (; size > 1 && *src; size--) {
*dst++ = *src++;
l++;
}
if (size)
*dst = '\0';
return l + strlen(src);
}
size_t OPENSSL_strlcat(char *dst, const char *src, size_t size)
{
size_t l = 0;
for (; size > 0 && *dst; size--, dst++)
l++;
return l + OPENSSL_strlcpy(dst, src, size);
}
int OPENSSL_hexchar2int(unsigned char c)
{
#ifdef CHARSET_EBCDIC
c = os_toebcdic[c];
#endif
switch (c) {
case '0':
return 0;
case '1':
return 1;
case '2':
return 2;
case '3':
return 3;
case '4':
return 4;
case '5':
return 5;
case '6':
return 6;
case '7':
return 7;
case '8':
return 8;
case '9':
return 9;
case 'a': case 'A':
return 0x0A;
case 'b': case 'B':
return 0x0B;
case 'c': case 'C':
return 0x0C;
case 'd': case 'D':
return 0x0D;
case 'e': case 'E':
return 0x0E;
case 'f': case 'F':
return 0x0F;
}
return -1;
}
/*
* Give a string of hex digits convert to a buffer
*/
unsigned char *OPENSSL_hexstr2buf(const char *str, long *len)
{
unsigned char *hexbuf, *q;
unsigned char ch, cl;
int chi, cli;
const unsigned char *p;
size_t s;
s = strlen(str);
if ((hexbuf = OPENSSL_malloc(s >> 1)) == NULL) {
CRYPTOerr(CRYPTO_F_OPENSSL_HEXSTR2BUF, ERR_R_MALLOC_FAILURE);
return NULL;
}
for (p = (const unsigned char *)str, q = hexbuf; *p; ) {
ch = *p++;
if (ch == ':')
continue;
cl = *p++;
if (!cl) {
CRYPTOerr(CRYPTO_F_OPENSSL_HEXSTR2BUF,
CRYPTO_R_ODD_NUMBER_OF_DIGITS);
OPENSSL_free(hexbuf);
return NULL;
}
cli = OPENSSL_hexchar2int(cl);
chi = OPENSSL_hexchar2int(ch);
if (cli < 0 || chi < 0) {
OPENSSL_free(hexbuf);
CRYPTOerr(CRYPTO_F_OPENSSL_HEXSTR2BUF, CRYPTO_R_ILLEGAL_HEX_DIGIT);
return NULL;
}
*q++ = (unsigned char)((chi << 4) | cli);
}
if (len)
*len = q - hexbuf;
return hexbuf;
}
/*
* Given a buffer of length 'len' return a OPENSSL_malloc'ed string with its
* hex representation @@@ (Contents of buffer are always kept in ASCII, also
* on EBCDIC machines)
*/
char *OPENSSL_buf2hexstr(const unsigned char *buffer, long len)
{
static const char hexdig[] = "0123456789ABCDEF";
char *tmp, *q;
const unsigned char *p;
int i;
if (len == 0)
{
return OPENSSL_zalloc(1);
}
if ((tmp = OPENSSL_malloc(len * 3)) == NULL) {
CRYPTOerr(CRYPTO_F_OPENSSL_BUF2HEXSTR, ERR_R_MALLOC_FAILURE);
return NULL;
}
q = tmp;
for (i = 0, p = buffer; i < len; i++, p++) {
*q++ = hexdig[(*p >> 4) & 0xf];
*q++ = hexdig[*p & 0xf];
*q++ = ':';
}
q[-1] = 0;
#ifdef CHARSET_EBCDIC
ebcdic2ascii(tmp, tmp, q - tmp - 1);
#endif
return tmp;
}
int openssl_strerror_r(int errnum, char *buf, size_t buflen)
{
#if defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER>=1400
return !strerror_s(buf, buflen, errnum);
#elif defined(_GNU_SOURCE)
char *err;
/*
* GNU strerror_r may not actually set buf.
* It can return a pointer to some (immutable) static string in which case
* buf is left unused.
*/
err = strerror_r(errnum, buf, buflen);
if (err == NULL || buflen == 0)
return 0;
/*
* If err is statically allocated, err != buf and we need to copy the data.
* If err points somewhere inside buf, OPENSSL_strlcpy can handle this,
* since src and dest are not annotated with __restrict and the function
* reads src byte for byte and writes to dest.
* If err == buf we do not have to copy anything.
*/
if (err != buf)
OPENSSL_strlcpy(buf, err, buflen);
return 1;
#elif (defined(_POSIX_C_SOURCE) && _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 200112L) || \
(defined(_XOPEN_SOURCE) && _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 600)
/*
* We can use "real" strerror_r. The OpenSSL version differs in that it
* gives 1 on success and 0 on failure for consistency with other OpenSSL
* functions. Real strerror_r does it the other way around
*/
return !strerror_r(errnum, buf, buflen);
#else
char *err;
/* Fall back to non-thread safe strerror()...its all we can do */
if (buflen < 2)
return 0;
err = strerror(errnum);
/* Can this ever happen? */
if (err == NULL)
return 0;
OPENSSL_strlcpy(buf, err, buflen);
return 1;
#endif
}