mirror of
https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/core/tor.git
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231 lines
6.5 KiB
C
231 lines
6.5 KiB
C
/* Copyright (c) 2003, Roger Dingledine
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* Copyright (c) 2004-2006, Roger Dingledine, Nick Mathewson.
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* Copyright (c) 2007-2018, The Tor Project, Inc. */
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/* See LICENSE for licensing information */
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/**
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* \file malloc.c
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* \brief Wrappers for C malloc code, and replacements for items that
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* may be missing.
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**/
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#include "orconfig.h"
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <string.h>
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#include "lib/testsupport/testsupport.h"
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#define UTIL_MALLOC_PRIVATE
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#include "lib/malloc/malloc.h"
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#include "lib/cc/torint.h"
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#include "lib/err/torerr.h"
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#ifdef __clang_analyzer__
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#undef MALLOC_ZERO_WORKS
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#endif
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/** Allocate a chunk of <b>size</b> bytes of memory, and return a pointer to
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* result. On error, log and terminate the process. (Same as malloc(size),
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* but never returns NULL.)
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*/
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void *
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tor_malloc_(size_t size)
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{
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void *result;
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raw_assert(size < SIZE_T_CEILING);
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#ifndef MALLOC_ZERO_WORKS
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/* Some libc mallocs don't work when size==0. Override them. */
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if (size==0) {
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size=1;
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}
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#endif /* !defined(MALLOC_ZERO_WORKS) */
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result = raw_malloc(size);
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if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(result == NULL)) {
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/* LCOV_EXCL_START */
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/* If these functions die within a worker process, they won't call
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* spawn_exit, but that's ok, since the parent will run out of memory soon
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* anyway. */
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raw_assert_unreached_msg("Out of memory on malloc(). Dying.");
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/* LCOV_EXCL_STOP */
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}
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return result;
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}
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/** Allocate a chunk of <b>size</b> bytes of memory, fill the memory with
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* zero bytes, and return a pointer to the result. Log and terminate
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* the process on error. (Same as calloc(size,1), but never returns NULL.)
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*/
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void *
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tor_malloc_zero_(size_t size)
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{
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/* You may ask yourself, "wouldn't it be smart to use calloc instead of
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* malloc+memset? Perhaps libc's calloc knows some nifty optimization trick
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* we don't!" Indeed it does, but its optimizations are only a big win when
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* we're allocating something very big (it knows if it just got the memory
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* from the OS in a pre-zeroed state). We don't want to use tor_malloc_zero
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* for big stuff, so we don't bother with calloc. */
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void *result = tor_malloc_(size);
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memset(result, 0, size);
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return result;
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}
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/* The square root of SIZE_MAX + 1. If a is less than this, and b is less
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* than this, then a*b is less than SIZE_MAX. (For example, if size_t is
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* 32 bits, then SIZE_MAX is 0xffffffff and this value is 0x10000. If a and
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* b are less than this, then their product is at most (65535*65535) ==
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* 0xfffe0001. */
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#define SQRT_SIZE_MAX_P1 (((size_t)1) << (sizeof(size_t)*4))
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/** Return non-zero if and only if the product of the arguments is exact,
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* and cannot overflow. */
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STATIC int
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size_mul_check(const size_t x, const size_t y)
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{
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/* This first check is equivalent to
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(x < SQRT_SIZE_MAX_P1 && y < SQRT_SIZE_MAX_P1)
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Rationale: if either one of x or y is >= SQRT_SIZE_MAX_P1, then it
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will have some bit set in its most significant half.
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*/
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return ((x|y) < SQRT_SIZE_MAX_P1 ||
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y == 0 ||
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x <= SIZE_MAX / y);
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}
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/** Allocate a chunk of <b>nmemb</b>*<b>size</b> bytes of memory, fill
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* the memory with zero bytes, and return a pointer to the result.
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* Log and terminate the process on error. (Same as
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* calloc(<b>nmemb</b>,<b>size</b>), but never returns NULL.)
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* The second argument (<b>size</b>) should preferably be non-zero
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* and a compile-time constant.
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*/
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void *
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tor_calloc_(size_t nmemb, size_t size)
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{
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raw_assert(size_mul_check(nmemb, size));
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return tor_malloc_zero_((nmemb * size));
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}
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/** Change the size of the memory block pointed to by <b>ptr</b> to <b>size</b>
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* bytes long; return the new memory block. On error, log and
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* terminate. (Like realloc(ptr,size), but never returns NULL.)
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*/
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void *
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tor_realloc_(void *ptr, size_t size)
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{
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void *result;
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raw_assert(size < SIZE_T_CEILING);
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#ifndef MALLOC_ZERO_WORKS
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/* Some libc mallocs don't work when size==0. Override them. */
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if (size==0) {
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size=1;
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}
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#endif /* !defined(MALLOC_ZERO_WORKS) */
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result = raw_realloc(ptr, size);
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if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(result == NULL)) {
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/* LCOV_EXCL_START */
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raw_assert_unreached_msg("Out of memory on realloc(). Dying.");
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/* LCOV_EXCL_STOP */
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}
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return result;
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}
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/**
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* Try to realloc <b>ptr</b> so that it takes up sz1 * sz2 bytes. Check for
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* overflow. Unlike other allocation functions, return NULL on overflow.
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*/
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void *
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tor_reallocarray_(void *ptr, size_t sz1, size_t sz2)
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{
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/* XXXX we can make this return 0, but we would need to check all the
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* reallocarray users. */
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raw_assert(size_mul_check(sz1, sz2));
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return tor_realloc(ptr, (sz1 * sz2));
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}
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/** Return a newly allocated copy of the NUL-terminated string s. On
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* error, log and terminate. (Like strdup(s), but never returns
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* NULL.)
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*/
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char *
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tor_strdup_(const char *s)
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{
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char *duplicate;
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raw_assert(s);
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duplicate = raw_strdup(s);
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if (PREDICT_UNLIKELY(duplicate == NULL)) {
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/* LCOV_EXCL_START */
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raw_assert_unreached_msg("Out of memory on strdup(). Dying.");
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/* LCOV_EXCL_STOP */
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}
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return duplicate;
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}
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/** Allocate and return a new string containing the first <b>n</b>
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* characters of <b>s</b>. If <b>s</b> is longer than <b>n</b>
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* characters, only the first <b>n</b> are copied. The result is
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* always NUL-terminated. (Like strndup(s,n), but never returns
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* NULL.)
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*/
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char *
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tor_strndup_(const char *s, size_t n)
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{
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char *duplicate;
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raw_assert(s);
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raw_assert(n < SIZE_T_CEILING);
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duplicate = tor_malloc_((n+1));
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/* Performance note: Ordinarily we prefer strlcpy to strncpy. But
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* this function gets called a whole lot, and platform strncpy is
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* much faster than strlcpy when strlen(s) is much longer than n.
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*/
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strncpy(duplicate, s, n);
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duplicate[n]='\0';
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return duplicate;
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}
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/** Allocate a chunk of <b>len</b> bytes, with the same contents as the
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* <b>len</b> bytes starting at <b>mem</b>. */
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void *
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tor_memdup_(const void *mem, size_t len)
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{
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char *duplicate;
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raw_assert(len < SIZE_T_CEILING);
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raw_assert(mem);
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duplicate = tor_malloc_(len);
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memcpy(duplicate, mem, len);
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return duplicate;
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}
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/** As tor_memdup(), but add an extra 0 byte at the end of the resulting
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* memory. */
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void *
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tor_memdup_nulterm_(const void *mem, size_t len)
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{
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char *duplicate;
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raw_assert(len < SIZE_T_CEILING+1);
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raw_assert(mem);
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duplicate = tor_malloc_(len+1);
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memcpy(duplicate, mem, len);
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duplicate[len] = '\0';
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return duplicate;
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}
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/** Helper for places that need to take a function pointer to the right
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* spelling of "free()". */
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void
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tor_free_(void *mem)
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{
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tor_free(mem);
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}
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