Rename BUF_{strdup,strlcat,strlcpy,memdup,strndup,strnlen}
to OPENSSL_{strdup,strlcat,strlcpy,memdup,strndup,strnlen}
Add #define's for the old names.
Add CRYPTO_{memdup,strndup}, called by OPENSSL_{memdup,strndup} macros.
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
Rename OPENSSL_SYSNAME_xxx to OPENSSL_SYS_xxx
Remove MS_STATIC; it's a relic from platforms <32 bits.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
Use setbuf(fp, NULL) instead of setvbuf(). This removes some
ifdef complexity because all of our platforms support setbuf.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Because of a missing include <fcntl.h> we don't have O_CREATE and don't create
the file with open() using mode 0600 but fall back to using fopen() with the
default umask followed by a chmod().
Problem found by Jakub Wilk <jwilk@debian.org>.
Submitted by: Kevin Regan <k.regan@f5.com>
Clear stat structure if -DPURIFY is set to avoid problems on some
platforms which include unitialised fields.
.DLL, in particular static build. The issue has been discussed in RT#1230
and later on openssl-dev, and mutually exclusive approaches were suggested.
This completes compromise solution suggested in RT#1230.
PR: 1230
knock-on work than expected - they've been extracted into a patch
series that can be completed elsewhere, or in a different branch,
before merging back to HEAD.
For those, unless the environment variables RANDFILE or HOME are
defined (the default case!), RAND_file_name() will return NULL.
This change adds a default HOME for those platforms.
To add a default HOME for any platform, just define DEFAULT_HOME in
the proper place, wrapped in appropriate #ifdef..#endif, in e_os.h.
like Malloc, Realloc and especially Free conflict with already existing names
on some operating systems or other packages. That is reason enough to change
the names of the OpenSSL memory allocation macros to something that has a
better chance of being unique, like prepending them with OPENSSL_.
This change includes all the name changes needed throughout all C files.
(they don't really exist before version 7), so that solution was toast.
Instead, let's do it the way it's done on Unix, but then remove older
versions of the file.
That new mechanism *may* fail for some unixly formated file spec,
although I wouldn't worry too much about it.
this is what we now use to read $RANDFILE / $HOME/.rnd.
(Previously, after 'cat'ting lots of stuff into .rnd
only the first MB would be looked at.)
Bugfix for apps/enc.c: Continue if RAND_pseudo_bytes returns 0
(only -1 is an error).