crypto/rijndael. Additionally, I applied the AES integration patch
from Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> and fiddled it to work
properly with the normal EVP constructs (and incidently work the same
way as all other symmetric cipher implementations).
This results in an API that looks a lot like the rest of the OpenSSL
cipher suite.
libdes (which is still used out there) or other des implementations,
the OpenSSL DES functions are renamed to begin with DES_ instead of
des_. Compatibility routines are provided and declared by including
openssl/des_old.h. Those declarations are the same as were in des.h
when the OpenSSL project started, which is exactly how libdes looked
at that time, and hopefully still looks today.
The compatibility functions will be removed in some future release, at
the latest in version 1.0.
such cases, a flush should *not* attempt to finalise the encoding, as
the EVP_ENCODE_CTX structure will only be filled with garbage. For
the same reason, do the same check when a wpending is performed.
not implemented. (Bug reported by Martin Szotkowski)
This also changes the non-"_ex" versions to defer directly to
EVP_CipherInit_ex() rather than EVP_CipherInit() to avoid an unecessary
level of indirection.
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.
ENGINE surgery. DH, DSA, RAND, and RSA now use *both* "method" and ENGINE
pointers to manage their hooking with ENGINE. Previously their use of
"method" pointers was replaced by use of ENGINE references. See
crypto/engine/README for details.
Also, remove the ENGINE iterations from evp_test - even when the
cipher/digest code is committed in, this functionality would require a
different set of API calls.
distinction (which does not work well because if CRYPTO_MDEBUG is
defined at library compile time, it is not necessarily defined at
application compile time; and memory debugging now can be reconfigured
at run-time anyway). To get the intended semantics, we could just use
the EVP_DigestInit_dbg unconditionally (which uses the caller's
__FILE__ and __LINE__ for memory leak debugging), but this would make
memory debugging inconsistent. Instead, callers can use
CRYPTO_push_info() to track down memory leaks.
distinction (which does not work well because if CRYPTO_MDEBUG is
defined at library compile time, it is not necessarily defined at
application compile time; and memory debugging now can be reconfigured
at run-time anyway). To get the intended semantics, we could just use
the EVP_DigestInit_dbg unconditionally (which uses the caller's
__FILE__ and __LINE__ for memory leak debugging), but this would make
memory debugging inconsistent. Instead, callers can use
CRYPTO_push_info() to track down memory leaks.
Also fix indentation, and add OpenSSL copyright.
applications to use EVP. Add missing calls to HMAC_cleanup() and
don't assume HMAC_CTX can be copied using memcpy().
Note: this is almost identical to the patch submitted to openssl-dev
by Verdon Walker <VWalker@novell.com> except some redundant
EVP_add_digest_()/EVP_cleanup() calls were removed and some changes
made to avoid compiler warnings.
Only use trust settings if either trust or reject settings
are present, otherwise use compatibility mode. This stops
root CAs being rejected if they have alias of keyid set.
like des_read_password and friends (backward compatibility functions
using this new API are provided). The purpose is to remove prompting
functions from the DES code section as well as provide for prompting
through dialog boxes in a window system and the like.
and make all files the depend on it include it without prefixing it
with openssl/.
This means that all Makefiles will have $(TOP) as one of the include
directories.
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.