CRYPTO_set_mem_debug_options() instead of CRYPTO_dbg_set_options(),
which is the default implementation of the former and should usually
not be directly used by applications (at least if we assume that the
options accepted by the default implementation will also be meaningful
to any other implementations).
Also fix apps/openssl.c and ssl/ssltest such that environment variable
setting 'OPENSSL_DEBUG_MEMORY=off' actively disables the compiled-in
library defaults (i.e. such that CRYPTO_MDEBUG is ignored in this
case).
See the commit log message for that for more information.
NB: X509_STORE_CTX's use of "ex_data" support was actually misimplemented
(initialisation by "memset" won't/can't/doesn't work). This fixes that but
requires that X509_STORE_CTX_init() be able to handle errors - so its
prototype has been changed to return 'int' rather than 'void'. All uses of
that function throughout the source code have been tracked down and
adjusted.
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.
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.
don't dynamically create them. This allows using ssltest
for approximate performance comparisons:
$ time ./ssltest -num 50 -tls1 -cert ../apps/server2.pem \
[-no_dhe|-dhe1024dsa|-dhe1024]
(server2.pem contains a 1024 bit RSA key, the default has only
512 bits.) Note that these timings contain both the server's and
the client's computations, they are not a good indicator for
server workload in different configurations.
as a shared library without RSA. Use #ifndef NO_SSL2 instead of
NO_RSA in ssl/s2*.c.
Submitted by: Kris Kennaway <kris@hub.freebsd.org>
Modified by Ulf Möller
in cryptlib.h (which is often included as "../cryptlib.h"), then the
question remains relative to which directory this is to be interpreted.
gcc went one further directory up, as intended; but makedepend thinks
differently, and so probably do some C compilers. So the ../ must go away;
thus e_os.h goes back into include/openssl (but I now use
#include "openssl/e_os.h" instead of <openssl/e_os.h> to make the point) --
and we have another huge bunch of dependency changes. Argh.