Hardened malloc: Difference between revisions
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=== How to use === | === How to use === | ||
{{note| Need Alpine Linux Edge with testing repo in | {{note| Need Alpine Linux Edge with testing repo in {{path|/etc/apk/repositories}}}} | ||
{{cmd| $ doas apk add hardened-malloc}} | {{cmd| $ doas apk add {{pkg|hardened-malloc|arch=}}}} | ||
Then you can set <code>LD_PRELOAD="/usr/lib/libhardened_malloc.so"</code> while launching individual applications or before your window manager starts if you prefer. For a more global setting placing the LD_PRELOAD reference into | Then you can set <code>LD_PRELOAD="/usr/lib/libhardened_malloc.so"</code> while launching individual applications or before your window manager starts if you prefer. For a more global setting placing the LD_PRELOAD reference into {{path|/etc/profile}} or {{path|/etc/profile.d/}} might help, as well as {{path|/etc/environment}} for PAM-based systems. | ||
=== External sources === | === External sources === |
Latest revision as of 01:05, 22 January 2025
What is it?
An excerpt on github [1]:
This is a security-focused general purpose memory allocator providing the malloc API along with various extensions. It provides substantial hardening against heap corruption vulnerabilities.
How to use
Note: Need Alpine Linux Edge with testing repo in /etc/apk/repositories
$ doas apk add hardened-malloc
Then you can set LD_PRELOAD="/usr/lib/libhardened_malloc.so"
while launching individual applications or before your window manager starts if you prefer. For a more global setting placing the LD_PRELOAD reference into /etc/profile or /etc/profile.d/ might help, as well as /etc/environment for PAM-based systems.
External sources
Hardened malloc github