/* * Copyright 2015-2017 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. * * Licensed under the OpenSSL license (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 #include "testutil.h" static int test_sec_mem(void) { #if defined(OPENSSL_SYS_LINUX) || defined(OPENSSL_SYS_UNIX) int testresult = 0; char *p = NULL, *q = NULL, *r = NULL, *s = NULL; r = OPENSSL_secure_malloc(20); /* r = non-secure 20 */ if (!TEST_ptr(r) || !TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_init(4096, 32)) || !TEST_false(CRYPTO_secure_allocated(r))) goto end; p = OPENSSL_secure_malloc(20); if (!TEST_ptr(p) /* r = non-secure 20, p = secure 20 */ || !TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_allocated(p)) /* 20 secure -> 32-byte minimum allocaton unit */ || !TEST_size_t_eq(CRYPTO_secure_used(), 32)) goto end; q = OPENSSL_malloc(20); if (!TEST_ptr(q)) goto end; /* r = non-secure 20, p = secure 20, q = non-secure 20 */ if (!TEST_false(CRYPTO_secure_allocated(q))) goto end; s = OPENSSL_secure_malloc(20); if (!TEST_ptr(s) /* r = non-secure 20, p = secure 20, q = non-secure 20, s = secure 20 */ || !TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_allocated(s)) /* 2 * 20 secure -> 64 bytes allocated */ || !TEST_size_t_eq(CRYPTO_secure_used(), 64)) goto end; OPENSSL_secure_free(p); p = NULL; /* 20 secure -> 32 bytes allocated */ if (!TEST_size_t_eq(CRYPTO_secure_used(), 32)) goto end; OPENSSL_free(q); q = NULL; /* should not complete, as secure memory is still allocated */ if (!TEST_false(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_done()) || !TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_initialized())) goto end; OPENSSL_secure_free(s); s = NULL; /* secure memory should now be 0, so done should complete */ if (!TEST_size_t_eq(CRYPTO_secure_used(), 0) || !TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_done()) || !TEST_false(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_initialized())) goto end; TEST_info("Possible infinite loop: allocate more than available"); if (!TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_init(32768, 16))) goto end; TEST_ptr_null(OPENSSL_secure_malloc((size_t)-1)); TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_done()); /* * If init fails, then initialized should be false, if not, this * could cause an infinite loop secure_malloc, but we don't test it */ if (TEST_false(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_init(16, 16)) && !TEST_false(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_initialized())) { TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_done()); goto end; } /*- * There was also a possible infinite loop when the number of * elements was 1<<31, as |int i| was set to that, which is a * negative number. However, it requires minimum input values: * * CRYPTO_secure_malloc_init((size_t)1<<34, (size_t)1<<4); * * Which really only works on 64-bit systems, since it took 16 GB * secure memory arena to trigger the problem. It naturally takes * corresponding amount of available virtual and physical memory * for test to be feasible/representative. Since we can't assume * that every system is equipped with that much memory, the test * remains disabled. If the reader of this comment really wants * to make sure that infinite loop is fixed, they can enable the * code below. */ # if 0 /*- * On Linux and BSD this test has a chance to complete in minimal * time and with minimum side effects, because mlock is likely to * fail because of RLIMIT_MEMLOCK, which is customarily [much] * smaller than 16GB. In other words Linux and BSD users can be * limited by virtual space alone... */ if (sizeof(size_t) > 4) { TEST_info("Possible infinite loop: 1<<31 limit"); if (TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_init((size_t)1<<34, (size_t)1<<4) != 0)) TEST_true(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_done()); } # endif /* this can complete - it was not really secure */ testresult = 1; end: OPENSSL_secure_free(p); OPENSSL_free(q); OPENSSL_secure_free(r); OPENSSL_secure_free(s); return testresult; #else /* Should fail. */ return TEST_false(CRYPTO_secure_malloc_init(4096, 32)); #endif } void register_tests(void) { ADD_TEST(test_sec_mem); }