it to be defined on all platforms whether or not it is of any practical
use on them. This also resolves linker problems on "special" platforms,
such as win32.
of the stack, and the (void *) type used in the underlying sk_***
functions. However, declaring a STACK_OF(type) where type is a *function*
type implicitly involves casts between function pointers and data pointers.
That's a no-no. This changes the ENGINE_CLEANUP handling to use a regular
data type in the stack.
algorithms present in all loaded ENGINEs. The result is that if any of
those ENGINEs successfully initialises, and the ENGINE_TABLE_FLAG_NOINIT
flag isn't set, then they will always be used (and cached as defaults) in
preference to software implementations. Ie. accidental auto-detection of
acceleration hardware :-)
This change stops all implementations being automatically registered in
"openssl" sub-commands, so that the "setup_engine()" handler in apps.c
controls which ENGINEs are registered for use. A special case has been
added that will revert to this "auto-detect" logic, ie. if the "-engine"
switch is used as;
-engine auto
Show timing parameters and timing functions used.
It looks like some Linuxen have very weird settings for CLK_TCK. I'm
very unsure about this change and will investigate further.
1. if there are several symbols with the same entry number, sort those
symbols in ASCII order.
2. Do not stop reading the header files when "BEGIN ERROR CODES" is
found, since mkerr.pl will add a function declaration after that
comment. Instead, trigger on "Error codes for the \w+ function",
which is the actual start of the error code macros.
Additionally, a few more debugging printouts that helped.
ENGINE redevelopment. The idea had been that "-1" could be used as a
special "ask me later" 'nid' rather than specifying supported cipher and
digest 'nid's up front. However the idea turned out to be pretty broken.
testing. Because of the recent changes (see crypto/engine/README), the
"openssl" ENGINE is no longer needed nor is it loaded automatically or by
ENGINE_load_builtin_engines(). So a explicit ENGINE_load_openssl() call is
required by applications or a modification to eng_all.c before this ENGINE
will be used. This change will send output to stderr as/when its
implementations are used.
See crypto/engine/README for details.
- it also removes openbsd_hw.c from the build (that functionality is
going to be available in the openbsd ENGINE in a upcoming commit)
- evp_test has had the extra initialisation added so it will use (if
possible) any ENGINEs supporting the algorithms required.