cpython/Modules/_hacl/Lib_Memzero0.c

55 lines
1.7 KiB
C

#if defined(__has_include)
#if __has_include("config.h")
#include "config.h"
#endif
#endif
#ifdef _WIN32
#include <windows.h>
#endif
#if (defined(__APPLE__) && defined(__MACH__)) || defined(__linux__)
#define __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__ 1
#include <string.h>
#endif
#if defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__NetBSD__)
#include <strings.h>
#endif
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
/* This is now a hand-written header */
#include "lib_memzero0.h"
#include "krml/internal/target.h"
/* The F* formalization talks about the number of elements in the array. The C
implementation wants a number of bytes in the array. KaRaMeL is aware of this
and inserts a sizeof multiplication. */
void Lib_Memzero0_memzero0(void *dst, uint64_t len) {
/* This is safe: karamel checks at run-time (if needed) that all object sizes
fit within a size_t, so the size we receive has been checked at
allocation-time, possibly via KRML_CHECK_SIZE, to fit in a size_t. */
size_t len_ = (size_t) len;
#ifdef _WIN32
SecureZeroMemory(dst, len);
#elif defined(__APPLE__) && defined(__MACH__)
memset_s(dst, len_, 0, len_);
#elif (defined(__linux__) && !defined(LINUX_NO_EXPLICIT_BZERO)) || defined(__FreeBSD__)
explicit_bzero(dst, len_);
#elif defined(__NetBSD__)
explicit_memset(dst, 0, len_);
#else
/* Default implementation for platforms with no particular support. */
#warning "Your platform does not support any safe implementation of memzero -- consider a pull request!"
volatile unsigned char *volatile dst_ = (volatile unsigned char *volatile) dst;
size_t i = 0U;
while (i < len)
dst_[i++] = 0U;
#endif
}