des_encrypt() and des_encrypt() defined on some systems (Solaris and
Unixware and maybe others), we rename des_encrypt() to des_encrypt1().
This should have very little impact on external software unless
someone has written a mode of DES, since that's all des_encrypt() is
meant for.
duplicated in cbc_enc.c (without IV updating) and in des_enc.c
As pointed out by others on the openssl-dev list, des_cbc_encrypt (without
IV updating; defined in cbc_enc.c) exists only for historical reasons:
des_ncbc_encrypt should be used instead (and the caller does not have
to manually update the IV).
If des_cbc_enrypt is not needed for backwards compatibility, the
definition of des_ncbc_encrypt should be put back into des_enc.c, and
both cbc_enc.c and ncbc_enc.c can be deleted.
If des_cbc_encrypt *is* needed for backwards compatibility, its behaviour
obviously should not change (i.e., don't add IV updating).
(meaning pointer to char) to des_cblock * (meaning pointer to
array with 8 char elements), which allows the compiler to
do more typechecking. (The changed argument types were of type
des_cblock * back in SSLeay, and a lot of ugly casts were
used then to turn them into pointers to elements; but it can be
done without those casts.)
Introduce new type const_des_cblock -- before, the pointers rather
than the elements pointed to were declared const, and for
some reason gcc did not complain about this (but some other
compilers did).