the OPENSSL_USE_GMP symbol is defined). Also, I've re-ordered the listing
of other builtin ENGINEs to be alphabetical (though "dynamic" will still
come first).
of libcrypto, then it is possible that when they are loaded they will share
the same static data as the loading application/library. This means it will
be too late to set memory/ERR/ex_data/[etc] callbacks, but entirely
unnecessary to try. This change puts a static variable in the core ENGINE
code (contained in libcrypto) and a function returning a pointer to it. If
the loaded ENGINE's return value from this function matches the loading
application/library's return value - they share static data. If they don't
match, the loaded ENGINE has its own copy of libcrypto's static data and so
the callbacks need to be set.
Also, although 0.9.7 hasn't been released yet, it's clear this will
introduce a binary incompatibility between dynamic ENGINEs built for 0.9.7
and 0.9.8 (though others probably exist already from EC_*** hooks and
what-not) - so the version control values are correspondingly bumped.
normal 'structural' case (ENGINE_init() satisfies this in the less normal
'functional' case). This change provides such a function.
- Correct some "read" locks that should actually be "write" locks.
- make update.
automatic load of dynamic engines. Change the iterator to try to load
the requested engine dynamically. The environment variable
OPENSSL_ENGINES can be used to override the internal default directory
where one can expect to find dynamically loadable engines.
Note: The changes in step 11 have all been made by Geoff Thorpe.
Credit where credit is due.
automatic load of dynamic engines. Add functionality to the dynamic
engine to handle engine directories and loading from those. This
is currently NOT compatible with the use of LD_LIBRARY_PATH and
similar environment variables.
Note: The changes in step 11 have all been made by Geoff Thorpe.
Credit where credit is due.
engine with something they claim is better. I have nothing to compare to,
and I assume they know what they're talking about. The interesting part with
this one is that it's loaded by default on OpenBSD systems.
This change was originally introduced in OpenBSD's tracking of OpenSSL.
Additional changes:
- use EC_GROUP_get_degree() in apps/req.c
- add ECDSA and ECDH to apps/speed.c
- adds support for EC curves over binary fields to ECDSA
- new function EC_KEY_up_ref() in crypto/ec/ec_key.c
- reorganize crypto/ecdsa/ecdsatest.c
- add engine support for ECDH
- fix a few bugs in ECDSA engine support
Submitted by: Douglas Stebila <douglas.stebila@sun.com>
Changes marked "(CHATS)" were sponsored by the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and Air Force Research Laboratory,
Air Force Materiel Command, USAF, under agreement number
F30602-01-2-0537.
(the same keys can be used for ECC schemes other than ECDSA)
and add some new options.
Similarly, use string "EC PARAMETERS" instead of "ECDSA PARAMETERS"
in 'PEM' format.
Fix ec_asn1.c (take into account the desired conversion form).
'make update'.
Submitted by: Nils Larsch
des_old.h redefines crypt:
#define crypt(b,s)\
DES_crypt((b),(s))
This scheme leads to failure, if header files with the OS's true definition
of crypt() are processed _after_ des_old.h was processed. This is e.g. the
case on HP-UX with unistd.h.
As evp.h now again includes des.h (which includes des_old.h), this problem
only came up after this modification.
Solution: move header files (indirectly) including e_os.h before the header
files (indirectly) including evp.h.
Submitted by:
Reviewed by:
PR:
pointers passed to them whenever necessary. Otherwise it is possible the
caller may have overwritten (or deallocated) the original string data
when a later ENGINE operation tries to use the stored values.
Submitted by: Götz Babin-Ebell <babinebell@trustcenter.de>
Reviewed by: Geoff Thorpe
PR: 98