such cases, a flush should *not* attempt to finalise the encoding, as
the EVP_ENCODE_CTX structure will only be filled with garbage. For
the same reason, do the same check when a wpending is performed.
reveal whether illegal block cipher padding was found or a MAC
verification error occured.
In ssl/s2_pkt.c, verify that the purported number of padding bytes is in
the legal range.
in "types.h" so that very few headers will need to include engine.h,
generally only C files using API functions will need it (reducing
the header dependencies quite a lot).
(Working file: progs.h
revision 1.24
date: 2001/02/19 16:06:03; author: levitte; state: Exp; lines: +59 -59
Make all configuration macros available for application by making
sure they are available in opensslconf.h, by giving them names starting
with "OPENSSL_" to avoid conflicts with other packages and by making
sure e_os2.h will cover all platform-specific cases together with
opensslconf.h.
[...])
distinction (which does not work well because if CRYPTO_MDEBUG is
defined at library compile time, it is not necessarily defined at
application compile time; and memory debugging now can be reconfigured
at run-time anyway). To get the intended semantics, we could just use
the EVP_DigestInit_dbg unconditionally (which uses the caller's
__FILE__ and __LINE__ for memory leak debugging), but this would make
memory debugging inconsistent. Instead, callers can use
CRYPTO_push_info() to track down memory leaks.
distinction (which does not work well because if CRYPTO_MDEBUG is
defined at library compile time, it is not necessarily defined at
application compile time; and memory debugging now can be reconfigured
at run-time anyway). To get the intended semantics, we could just use
the EVP_DigestInit_dbg unconditionally (which uses the caller's
__FILE__ and __LINE__ for memory leak debugging), but this would make
memory debugging inconsistent. Instead, callers can use
CRYPTO_push_info() to track down memory leaks.
Also fix indentation, and add OpenSSL copyright.