Commit graph

20 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dr. Stephen Henson
927a28ba3b gcc 4.2 fixes to avoid use or function pointer casts in OpenSSL.
Fix various "computed value not used" warnings too.
2007-09-06 12:43:54 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
60a938c6bc (oops) Apologies all, that last header-cleanup commit was from the wrong
tree. This further reduces header interdependencies, and makes some
associated cleanups.
2004-04-19 18:09:28 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
8dc344ccbf Relax some over-zealous constification that gave some lhash-based code no
choice but to have to cast away "const" qualifiers from their prototypes.
This does not remove constification restrictions from hash/compare
callbacks, but allows destructor commands to be run over a tables' elements
without bad casts.
2003-10-29 04:57:05 +00:00
Ben Laurie
546ec5a9b3 Redo type-safety fix. 2001-09-07 11:43:30 +00:00
Bodo Möller
435037d4e4 OpenSSL copyright notices ... 2001-09-04 11:02:23 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
72849dce81 Convert "max" to "mx" for variable names (brought to my attention by Steve
Henson). Also, reverse a previous change that used an implicit function
pointer cast rather than an explicit data pointer cast in the STACK cleanup
code.
2001-09-02 20:41:34 +00:00
Ben Laurie
2618893114 Make MD functions take EVP_MD_CTX * instead of void *, add copy() function. 2001-09-02 20:05:27 +00:00
Geoff Thorpe
3a0799977b First step in fixing "ex_data" support. Warning: big commit log ...
Currently, this change merely addresses where ex_data indexes are stored
and managed, and thus fixes the thread-safety issues that existed at that
level. "Class" code (eg. RSA, DSA, etc) no longer store their own STACKS
and per-class index counters - all such data is stored inside ex_data.c. So
rather than passing both STACK+counter to index-management ex_data
functions, a 'class_index' is instead passed to indicate the class (eg.
CRYPTO_EX_INDEX_RSA). New classes can be dynamically registered on-the-fly
and this is also thread-safe inside ex_data.c (though whether the caller
manages the return value in a thread-safe way is not addressed).

This does not change the "get/set" functions on individual "ex_data"
structures, and so thread-safety at that level isn't (yet) assured.
Likewise, the method of getting and storing per-class indexes has not
changed, so locking may still be required at the "caller" end but is
nonetheless thread-safe inside "ex_data"'s internal implementation.
Typically this occurs when code implements a new method of some kind and
stores its own per-class index in a global variable without locking the
setting and usage of that variable. If the code in question is likely to be
used in multiple threads, locking the setting and use of that index is
still up to the code in question. Possible fixes to this are being
sketched, but definitely require more major changes to the API itself than
this change undertakes.

The underlying implementation in ex_data.c has also been modularised so
that alternative "ex_data" implementations (that control all access to
state) can be plugged in. Eg. a loaded module can have its implementation
set to that of the application loaded it - the result being that
thread-safety and consistency of "ex_data" classes and indexes can be
maintained in the same place rather than the loaded module using its own
copy of ex_data support code and state.

Due to the centralisation of "state" with this change, cleanup of all
"ex_data" state can now be performed properly. Previously all allocation of
ex_data state was guaranteed to leak - and MemCheck_off() had been used to
avoid it flagging up the memory debugging. A new function has been added to
perfrom all this cleanup, CRYPTO_cleanup_all_ex_data(). The "openssl"
command(s) have been changed to use this cleanup, as have the relevant test
programs. External application code may want to do so too - failure to
cleanup will not induce more memory leaking than was the case before, but
the memory debugging is not tricked into hiding it any more so it may
"appear" where it previously did not.
2001-09-01 19:56:46 +00:00
Bodo Möller
cb38052b3a Comment correction. 2000-12-18 09:18:22 +00:00
Bodo Möller
3ac82faae5 Locking issues. 2000-12-15 16:40:35 +00:00
Richard Levitte
bbbc96a87e Constification of CRYPTO_get_ex_data() needed for the sake of
RSA_get_ext_data().
2000-11-06 23:24:59 +00:00
Richard Levitte
0ded1638ba CRYPTO_get_ex_new_index would never return an error. 2000-10-16 06:01:41 +00:00
Richard Levitte
26a3a48d65 There have been a number of complaints from a number of sources that names
like Malloc, Realloc and especially Free conflict with already existing names
on some operating systems or other packages.  That is reason enough to change
the names of the OpenSSL memory allocation macros to something that has a
better chance of being unique, like prepending them with OPENSSL_.

This change includes all the name changes needed throughout all C files.
2000-06-01 22:19:21 +00:00
Dr. Stephen Henson
dd9d233e2a Tidy up CRYPTO_EX_DATA structures. 2000-01-23 23:41:49 +00:00
Ulf Möller
49b8142262 Make the perl module compile and eliminate some of the warnings.
Still doesn't work (the destructor on BIO and SSL is called immediately
after creating the object. Why that??)
1999-07-22 16:10:31 +00:00
Dr. Stephen Henson
e84240d422 New functions sk_set, sk_value and sk_num to replace existing macros: this is
to minimise the effects on existing code.
1999-05-19 12:45:16 +00:00
Bodo Möller
ec577822f9 Change #include filenames from <foo.h> to <openssl.h>.
Submitted by:
Reviewed by:
PR:
1999-04-23 22:13:45 +00:00
Ulf Möller
6b691a5c85 Change functions to ANSI C. 1999-04-19 21:31:43 +00:00
Ralf S. Engelschall
dfeab0689f Import of old SSLeay release: SSLeay 0.9.1b (unreleased) 1998-12-21 11:00:56 +00:00
Ralf S. Engelschall
58964a4922 Import of old SSLeay release: SSLeay 0.9.0b 1998-12-21 10:56:39 +00:00