/* * Copyright (C) 1996-2023 The Squid Software Foundation and contributors * * Squid software is distributed under GPLv2+ license and includes * contributions from numerous individuals and organizations. * Please see the COPYING and CONTRIBUTORS files for details. */ #ifndef SQUID_SRC_SECURITY_LOCKINGPOINTER_H #define SQUID_SRC_SECURITY_LOCKINGPOINTER_H #include "base/HardFun.h" #if USE_OPENSSL #include "compat/openssl.h" #if HAVE_OPENSSL_CRYPTO_H #include #endif // Macro to be used to define the C++ wrapper function of a sk_*_pop_free // openssl family functions. The C++ function suffixed with the _free_wrapper // extension #define sk_free_wrapper(sk_object, argument, freefunction) \ extern "C++" inline void sk_object ## _free_wrapper(argument a) { \ sk_object ## _pop_free(a, freefunction); \ } #endif /* USE_OPENSSL */ // Macro to be used to define the C++ equivalent function of an extern "C" // function. The C++ function suffixed with the _cpp extension #define CtoCpp1(function, argument) \ extern "C++" inline void function ## _cpp(argument a) { \ function(a); \ } namespace Security { inline bool nilFunction(const void *) { return false; } typedef HardFun NilFunctor; /** * A shared pointer to a reference-counting Object with library-specific * absorption, locking, and unlocking implementations. The API largely * follows std::shared_ptr. * * The constructor and the resetWithoutLocking() method import a raw Object pointer. * Normally, reset() would lock(), but libraries like OpenSSL * pre-lock objects before they are fed to LockingPointer, necessitating * this resetWithoutLocking() customization hook. */ template class LockingPointer { public: /// a helper label to simplify this objects API definitions below typedef Security::LockingPointer SelfType; /// constructs a nil smart pointer constexpr LockingPointer(): raw(nullptr) {} /// constructs a nil smart pointer from nullptr constexpr LockingPointer(std::nullptr_t): raw(nullptr) {} /** * Construct directly from a (possibly nil) raw pointer. If the supplied * pointer is not nil, it is expected that its producer has already created * one reference lock for the object pointed to, and our destructor will do * the matching unlock. */ explicit LockingPointer(T *t): raw(nullptr) { // de-optimized for clarity about non-locking resetWithoutLocking(t); } /// use the custom UnLocker to unlock any value still stored. ~LockingPointer() { unlock(); } // copy semantics are okay only when adding a lock reference LockingPointer(const SelfType &o) : raw(nullptr) { resetAndLock(o.get()); } const SelfType &operator =(const SelfType &o) { resetAndLock(o.get()); return *this; } LockingPointer(SelfType &&o) : raw(nullptr) { resetWithoutLocking(o.release()); } SelfType &operator =(SelfType &&o) { if (o.get() != raw) resetWithoutLocking(o.release()); return *this; } bool operator !() const { return !raw; } explicit operator bool() const { return raw; } bool operator ==(const SelfType &o) const { return (o.get() == raw); } bool operator !=(const SelfType &o) const { return (o.get() != raw); } T *operator ->() const { return raw; } /// Returns raw and possibly nullptr pointer T *get() const { return raw; } /// Reset raw pointer - unlock any previous one and save new one without locking. void resetWithoutLocking(T *t) { unlock(); raw = t; } void resetAndLock(T *t) { if (t != get()) { resetWithoutLocking(t); lock(t); } } /// Forget the raw pointer - unlock if any value was set. Become a nil pointer. void reset() { unlock(); } /// Forget the raw pointer without unlocking it. Become a nil pointer. T *release() { T *ret = raw; raw = nullptr; return ret; } private: /// The lock() method increments Object's reference counter. void lock(T *t) { if (t) { Locker doLock; doLock(t); } } /// Become a nil pointer. Decrements any pointed-to Object's reference counter /// using UnLocker which ideally destroys the object when the counter reaches zero. void unlock() { if (raw) { UnLocker(raw); raw = nullptr; } } /** * Normally, no other code will have this raw pointer. * * However, OpenSSL does some strange and not always consistent things. * OpenSSL library may keep its own internal raw pointers and manage * their reference counts independently, or it may not. This varies between * API functions, though it is usually documented. * * This means the caller code needs to be carefuly written to use the correct * reset method and avoid the raw-pointer constructor unless OpenSSL function * producing the pointer is clearly documented as incrementing a lock for it. */ T *raw; }; } // namespace Security #endif /* SQUID_SRC_SECURITY_LOCKINGPOINTER_H */