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.
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.
I've checked fairly well that nothing breaks with this (apart from
external software that will adapt if they have used something like
NO_KRB5), but I can't guarantee it completely, so a review of this
change would be a good thing.
only queried when the /dev/[u]random devices did not return enough
entropy. Only the amount of entropy missing to reach the required minimum
is queried, as EGD may be drained.
Queried locations are: /etc/entropy, /var/run/egd-pool
them for a short period of time (actually, poll them with select(),
then read() whatever is there), which is about 10ms (hard-coded value)
each.
Separate Windows and Unixly code, and start on a VMS variant that
currently just returns 0.
This will soon be complemented with MacOS specific source code files and
INSTALL.MacOS.
I (Andy) have decided to get rid of a number of #include <sys/types.h>.
I've verified it's ok (both by examining /usr/include/*.h and compiling)
on a number of Unix platforms. Unfortunately I don't have Windows box
to verify this on. I really appreciate if somebody could try to compile
it and contact me a.s.a.p. in case a problem occurs.
Submitted by: Roy Wood <roy@centricsystems.ca>
Reviewed by: Andy Polyakov <appro@fy.chalmers.se>
Fixed -strparse option: it didn't work if used more than once (this was due
to the d2i_ASN1_TYPE call parsing a freed buffer). On Win32 the file wincrypt.h
#define's X509_NAME and PKCS7_SIGNER_INFO causing clashes so these are #undef'ed
`openssl' and second, the shortcut symlinks for the `openssl <command>' are no
longer created. This way we have a single and consistent command line
interface `openssl <command>', similar to `cvs <command>'.
Notice, the openssl.cnf, openssl.c and progs.pl files were changed after a
repository copy, i.e. they still contain the complete file history.