cleanse.cpp
1 // Copyright (c) 2009-2010 Satoshi Nakamoto 2 // Copyright (c) 2009-2019 The Bitcoin Core developers 3 // Distributed under the MIT software license, see the accompanying 4 // file COPYING or http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php. 5 6 #include <support/cleanse.h> 7 8 #include <cstring> 9 10 #if defined(WIN32) 11 #include <windows.h> 12 #endif 13 14 void memory_cleanse(void *ptr, size_t len) 15 { 16 #if defined(WIN32) 17 /* SecureZeroMemory is guaranteed not to be optimized out. */ 18 SecureZeroMemory(ptr, len); 19 #else 20 std::memset(ptr, 0, len); 21 22 /* Memory barrier that scares the compiler away from optimizing out the memset. 23 * 24 * Quoting Adam Langley <agl@google.com> in commit ad1907fe73334d6c696c8539646c21b11178f20f 25 * in BoringSSL (ISC License): 26 * As best as we can tell, this is sufficient to break any optimisations that 27 * might try to eliminate "superfluous" memsets. 28 * This method is used in memzero_explicit() the Linux kernel, too. Its advantage is that it 29 * is pretty efficient because the compiler can still implement the memset() efficiently, 30 * just not remove it entirely. See "Dead Store Elimination (Still) Considered Harmful" by 31 * Yang et al. (USENIX Security 2017) for more background. 32 */ 33 __asm__ __volatile__("" : : "r"(ptr) : "memory"); 34 #endif 35 }