diff options
-rw-r--r-- | src/basic/string-util.c | 26 |
1 files changed, 11 insertions, 15 deletions
diff --git a/src/basic/string-util.c b/src/basic/string-util.c index e9856b90d3..5d4510e1b3 100644 --- a/src/basic/string-util.c +++ b/src/basic/string-util.c @@ -22,6 +22,7 @@ #include <stdint.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> +#include <string.h> #include "alloc-util.h" #include "gunicode.h" @@ -822,25 +823,20 @@ int free_and_strdup(char **p, const char *s) { return 1; } -#pragma GCC push_options -#pragma GCC optimize("O0") +/* + * Pointer to memset is volatile so that compiler must de-reference + * the pointer and can't assume that it points to any function in + * particular (such as memset, which it then might further "optimize") + * This approach is inspired by openssl's crypto/mem_clr.c. + */ +typedef void *(*memset_t)(void *,int,size_t); -void* memory_erase(void *p, size_t l) { - volatile uint8_t* x = (volatile uint8_t*) p; - - /* This basically does what memset() does, but hopefully isn't - * optimized away by the compiler. One of those days, when - * glibc learns memset_s() we should replace this call by - * memset_s(), but until then this has to do. */ - - for (; l > 0; l--) - *(x++) = 'x'; +static volatile memset_t memset_func = memset; - return p; +void* memory_erase(void *p, size_t l) { + return memset_func(p, 'x', l); } -#pragma GCC pop_options - char* string_erase(char *x) { if (!x) |