They now default to " " as separator, but that can be overridden by
having a hash with parameters as last argument. The only currently
recognised parameter is `separator'.
The special separator `undef' will force the result to become a list
rather than a concatenated string.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
If the local system doesn't have GNU C or clang, and not even
makedepend, the build will stop because the call of 'makedepend'
fails. This changes so the build won't stop because of such failure.
The result will be empty .d files, and that's ok.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
These flags are limitting needlessly, are often patched by packagers,
and should be specified on the configuration command line by anyone
who desires for it to be specific rather than forced by us.
This work was already done with mingw when those configs were worked
on, now it gets applied to the remaining configs.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
GNU make will re-exec if (it thinks that) the Makefile has changed.
Just having the target Makefile seems to make it think it has, so we
end up in a look where GNU make re-execs for ever.
The fix is easy, just remove the Makefile target and have the depend
target run the recipe on its own instead of depending on Makefile.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
This takes us away from the idea that we know exactly how our static
libraries are going to get used. Instead, we make them available to
build shareable things with, be it other shared libraries or DSOs.
On the other hand, we also have greater control of when the shared
library cflags. They will never be used with object files meant got
binaries, such as apps/openssl or test/test*.
With unified, we take this a bit further and prepare for having to
deal with extra cflags specifically to be used with DSOs (dynamic
engines), libraries and binaries (applications).
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
So far, MingW shared libraries were named like this
libeay32.dll + libeay32.dll.a
ssleay32.dll + ssleay32.dll.a
That naming scheme is antiquated, a reminicense of SSLeay. We're
therefore changing the scheme to something that's more like the rest
of OpenSSL.
There are two factors to remember:
- Windows libraries have no recorded SOvers, which means that the
shared library version must be encoded in the name. According to
some, it's unwise to encode extra periods in a Windows file name,
so we convert version number periods to underscores.
- MingW has multilib ability. However, DLLs need to reside with the
binaries that use them, so to allow both 32-bit and 64-bit DLLs to
reside in the same place, we add '-x64' in the name of the 64-bit
ones.
The resulting name scheme (for SOver 1.1) is this:
on x86:
libcrypto-1_1.dll + libcrypto.dll.a
libssl-1_1.dll + libssl.dll.a
on x86_64:
libcrypto-1_1-x64.dll + libcrypto.dll.a
libssl-1_1-x64.dll + libssl.dll.a
An observation is that the import lib is the same for both
architectures. Not to worry, though, as they will be installed in
PREFIX/lib/ for x86 and PREFIX/lib64/ for x86_64.
As a side effect, MingW got its own targets in Makefile.shared.
link_dso.mingw-shared and link_app.mingw-shared are aliases for the
corresponding cygwin-shared targets. link_shlib.mingw-shared is,
however, a target separated from the cygwin one.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Better libclean that removes the exact files that have been built,
nothing more and nothing less.
Corrected typo
A couple of editorial changes.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Since we're using the acronym DSO everywhere else and that's a common
name for that kind of object, we might as well do so here as well.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Instead of having the installation recipe rely on special knowledge,
feed it with information, including what shared library files belong
together. For Cygwin and Mingw, that's the .dll and its import
library .dll.a. For Unixen, it's the shared library file name with SO
version and the one without.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Originally, the Makefile.shared targets described what they used as
input for a shared object, be it a shared library or a DSO. It turned
out, however, that the link_o targets were used exclusively for
engines and the link_a targets were for libcrypto and libssl.
This rename fest turns and indication on the kind of input the targets
get to the intention with using them.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Then it can pass around the information where it belongs. The
Makefile templates pick it up along with other target data, the
DSO module gets to pick up the information through
crypto/include/internal/dso_conf.h
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
- install_sw had a display of text that belongs under the install target
- previous layout installed architecture dependent files in
dev:['prefix'.'arch'.LIB], dev:['prefix'.'arch'.EXE] and
dev:['prefix'.'arch'.ENGINES]. Changed to dev:['prefix'.LIB.'arch'],
dev:['prefix'.EXE.'arch'] and dev:['prefix'.ENGINES.'arch'] instead.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
This is done with a simple file name comparison. We could think of
something more elegant in the future.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Adding uplink and applink to some builds was done by "magic", the
configuration for "mingw" only had a macro definition, the Configure
would react to its presence by adding the uplink source files to
cpuid_asm_src, and crypto/build.info inherited dance to get it
compiled, and Makefile.shared made sure applink.o would be
appropriately linked in. That was a lot under the hood.
To replace this, we create a few template configurations in
Configurations/00-base-templates.conf, inherit one of them in the
"mingw" configuration, the rest is just about refering to the
$target{apps_aux_src} / $target{apps_obj} in the right places.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
VMS DIFF tries to calculate all the differences, which is slower than
just reading the files and stopping at the first difference. The
latter doesn't exist as a command, so the problem is solved with perl
and File::Compare (has been in core perl since very early version 5).
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
DCL may be in extended parsing style, which makes it less case
insensitive, so when removing a string from another, make sure to get
casing correctly.
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
This isn't the fully featured combination of compiler generated
dependency files and Makefile include directives, but a cheaper
variant of the same.
The dependency files are generated automatically, but then we have the
usual "depend" target. However, we depend on it in the bigger phony
targets that are the most likely to be used. That make this feature
automatic enough.
A side effect is that we can't use the build file's timestamp to check
if reconfiguring might be in order. In its place, we use a flag file
that depends on Configure and the build file template and depend on it
in spots where it makes sense to check for the need to reconfigure.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
When cross compiling, we may end up with someting like apps/openssl.exe
and a number of test/*.exe. However, util/shlib_wrap.sh doesn't know
what the executable extension should be, if any, so we need to make
sure it has access to that information when testing, since
OpenSSL::Test uses that script to execute all programs.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
All those flags existed because we had all the dependencies versioned
in the repository, and wanted to have it be consistent, no matter what
the local configuration was. Now that the dependencies are gone from
the versioned Makefile.ins, it makes much more sense to use the exact
same flags as when compiling the object files.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
.d (.MMS in the VMS world) files with just dependencies are built from
exactly the same conditions as the object files. Therefore, the rules
for them can be built at the same time as the rules for the
corresponding object files.
This removes the requirement for a src2dep function in the build file
templates, and for common.tmpl to call it. In the end, the existence
of depend files is entirely up to the build file.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
That variable isn't for us, it's for any user, distributor or package
builder that wants one after the section number. "ssl" seems to be
popular...
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>