Use of these macros, apart from the benefits mentioned in the commit that adds the macros, has some other good side effects: - Consistency in getting the size of the object from sizeof(type), instead of a mix of sizeof(type) sometimes and sizeof(*p) other times. - More readable code: no casts, and no sizeof(), so also shorter lines that we don't need to cut. - Consistency in using array allocation calls for allocations of arrays of objects, even when the object size is 1. Cc: Valentin V. Bartenev <vbartenev@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Alejandro Colomar <alx@kernel.org>
		
			
				
	
	
		
			131 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			C
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			131 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			C
		
	
	
	
	
	
/*
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 * SPDX-FileCopyrightText:  2022, Alejandro Colomar <alx@kernel.org>
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 *
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 * SPDX-License-Identifier:  BSD-3-Clause
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 */
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#include <config.h>
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#include <limits.h>
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#include <readpassphrase.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <string.h>
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#ident "$Id$"
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#include "alloc.h"
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#include "prototypes.h"
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#if !defined(PASS_MAX)
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#define PASS_MAX  BUFSIZ - 1
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#endif
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/*
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 * SYNOPSIS
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 *	[[gnu::malloc(erase_pass)]]
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 *	char *agetpass(const char *prompt);
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 *
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 *	void erase_pass(char *pass);
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 *
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 * ARGUMENTS
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 *   agetpass()
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 *	prompt	String to be printed before reading a password.
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 *
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 *   erase_pass()
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 *	pass	password previously returned by agetpass().
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 *
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 * DESCRIPTION
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 *   agetpass()
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 *	This function is very similar to getpass(3).  It has several
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 *	advantages compared to getpass(3):
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 *
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 *	- Instead of using a static buffer, agetpass() allocates memory
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 *	  through malloc(3).  This makes the function thread-safe, and
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 *	  also reduces the visibility of the buffer.
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 *
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 *	- agetpass() doesn't reallocate internally.  Some
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 *	  implementations of getpass(3), such as glibc, do that, as a
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 *	  consequence of calling getline(3).  That's a bug in glibc,
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 *	  which allows leaking prefixes of passwords in freed memory.
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 *
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 *	- agetpass() doesn't overrun the output buffer.  If the input
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 *	  password is too long, it simply fails.  Some implementations
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 *	  of getpass(3), share the same bug that gets(3) has.
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 *
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 *	As soon as possible, the password obtained from agetpass() be
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 *	erased by calling erase_pass(), to avoid possibly leaking the
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 *	password.
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 *
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 *   erase_pass()
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 *	This function first clears the password, by calling
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 *	explicit_bzero(3) (or an equivalent call), and then frees the
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 *	allocated memory by calling free(3).
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 *
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 *	NULL is a valid input pointer, and in such a case, this call is
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 *	a no-op.
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 *
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 * RETURN VALUE
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 *	agetpass() returns a newly allocated buffer containing the
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 *	password on success.  On error, errno is set to indicate the
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 *	error, and NULL is returned.
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 *
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 * ERRORS
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 *   agetpass()
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 *	This function may fail for any errors that malloc(3) or
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 *	readpassphrase(3) may fail, and in addition it may fail for the
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 *	following errors:
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 *
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 *	ENOBUFS
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 *		The input password was longer than PASS_MAX.
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 *
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 * CAVEATS
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 *	If a password is passed twice to erase_pass(), the behavior is
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 *	undefined.
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 */
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char *
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agetpass(const char *prompt)
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{
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	char    *pass;
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	size_t  len;
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	/*
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	 * Since we want to support passwords upto PASS_MAX, we need
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	 * PASS_MAX bytes for the password itself, and one more byte for
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	 * the terminating '\0'.  We also want to detect truncation, and
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	 * readpassphrase(3) doesn't detect it, so we need some trick.
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	 * Let's add one more byte, and if the password uses it, it
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	 * means the introduced password was longer than PASS_MAX.
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	 */
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	pass = MALLOCARRAY(PASS_MAX + 2, char);
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	if (pass == NULL)
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		return NULL;
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	if (readpassphrase(prompt, pass, PASS_MAX + 2, RPP_REQUIRE_TTY) == NULL)
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		goto fail;
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	len = strlen(pass);
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	if (len == PASS_MAX + 1) {
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		errno = ENOBUFS;
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		goto fail;
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	}
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	return pass;
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fail:
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	freezero(pass, PASS_MAX + 2);
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	return NULL;
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}
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void
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erase_pass(char *pass)
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{
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	freezero(pass, PASS_MAX + 2);
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}
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