DJGPP is a 3rd party configuration, we rely entirely on the OpenSSL to
help us fine tune and test. Therefore, it's moved to its own config.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
When compiling all other C files, rely on the compiler to
automatically pick up the name translation information from the header
files __DECC_INCLUDE_{PRO,EPI}LOGUE.H.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
This also restores the possibility to have ml used with VC-WIN32 with
no-asm, which was lost during the mk1mf -> unified transition.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Instead of absolute hard coding of the libz library name, have it use
the macro LIBZ, which is set to defaults we know in case it's
undefined.
This allows our configuration to set something that's sane on current
or older platforms, and allows the user to override it by defining
LIBZ themselves.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
The macros ZLIB and ZLIB_SHARED weren't appropriately defined,
deviating wrongly from how they worked in earlier OpenSSL versions.
So, restore it so that ZLIB is defined if configured "enable-zlib" and
so that ZLIB and ZLIB_SHARED are defined if configured
"enable-zlib-dynamic".
Additionally, correct the interpretation of the --with-zlib-lib value
on Windows and VMS, where it's used to indicate the actual zlib
zlib library file / logical name, as that can differ depending on zlib
version and packaging on those platforms.
Finally for Windows and VMS, we also define the macro LIBZ with that
file name / logical name when configured "zlib-dynamic", so the
compression unit can pick it up and use it.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Since NDEBUG is defined unconditionally on command line for release
builds, we can omit *_DEBUG options in favour of effective "all-on"
in debug builds exercised though CI.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Emilia Käsper <emilia@openssl.org>
Reverts commit 087ca80ad8
Instead of battling the odd format of argv given to main() in default
P64 mode, tell the compiler to make it an array of 64-bit pointers
when compiling in P64 mode.
A note is added in NOTES.VMS regarding minimum DEC C version.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
The warning MAYLOSEDATA3 is one you will always get when compiling
source that calculates the difference between two pointers with
/POINTER_SIZE=64.
The reason is quite simple, ptrdiff_t is always a 32-bit integer
regardless of pointer size, so the result of 'ptr1 - ptr2' can
potentially be larger than a 32-bit integer. The compiler simply
warns you of that possibility.
However, we only use pointer difference within objects and strings,
all of them well within 2^32 bytes in size, so that operation is
harmless with our source, and we can therefore safely turn off that
warning.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
On VMS, we downcase option names, which means that config names are
downcased as well, so they need to be downcased in the target table to
be found.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
utils/mkrc.pl was added a while ago as a better generator for the
Windows DLL resource file. Finalize the change by removing the
ms/version32.rc generator from Configure and adding resource file
support using mkrc.pl in Configurations/windows-makefile.pl
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
This introduces the settings loutflag and aroutflag, because different
Windows tools that do the same thing have different ways to specify
the output file.
The Borland C++ config is commented away for the monent, perhaps
permanently.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
When object files with common block symbols are added to static
libraries on Darwin, those symbols are invisible to the linker that
tries to use them. Our solution was to use -fno-common when compiling
C source.
Unfortunately, there is assembler code that defines OPENSSL_ia32cap_P
as a common block symbol, unconditionally, and in some cases, there is
no other definition. -fno-common doesn't help in this case.
However, 'ranlib -c' adds common block symbols to the index of the
static library, which makes them visible to the linker using it, and
that solves the problem we've seen.
The common conclusion is, either use -fno-common or ranlib -c on
Darwin. Since we have common block symbols unconditionally, choosing
the method for our source is easy.
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>
The thread_cflag setting filled a double role, as kinda sorta an
indicator of thread scheme, and as cflags. Some configs also added
lflags and ex_libs for multithreading regardless of if threading would
be enabled or not.
Instead of this, add threading cflags among in the cflag setting,
threading lflags in the lflag setting and so on if and only if threads
are enabled (which they are by default).
Also, for configs where there are no special cflags for threading (the
VMS configs are of that kind), this makes it possible to still clearly
mention what thread scheme is used.
The exact value of thread scheme is currently ignored except when it's
"(unknown)", and thereby only serves as a flag to tell if we know how
to build for multi-threading in a particular config. Yet, the
currently used values are "(unknown)", "pthreads", "uithreads" (a.k.a
solaris threads) and "winthreads".
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Instead, make the build type ("debug" or "release") available through
$config{build_type} and let the configs themselves figure out what the
usual settings (such as "cflags", "lflags" and so on) should be
accordingly.
The benefit with this is that we can now have debug and release
variants of any setting, not just those Configure supports, and may
also involve other factors (the MSVC flags /MD[d] and /MT[d] involve
both build type and whether threading is enabled or not)
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Configure had the Unix centric addition of -lz when linking with zlib
is enabled, which doesn't work on other platforms. Therefore, we move
it to the BASE_unix config template and add corresponding ones in the
other BASE_* config templates. The Windows one is probably incomplete,
but that doesn't matter for the moment, as mk1mf does it's own thing
anyway.
This required making the %withargs table global, so perl snippets in
the configs can use it.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
These BASE templates are intended to hold values that are common for
all configuration variants for whole families of configurations.
So far, three "families" are identified: Unix, Windows and VMS, mostly
characterised by the build system they currently use.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
This has no real meaning, except it gives Configure a hint that VC
targets are indeed capable of producing shared objects.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
They now default to " " as separator, but that can be overridden by
having a hash with parameters as last argument. The only currently
recognised parameter is `separator'.
The special separator `undef' will force the result to become a list
rather than a concatenated string.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
These flags are limitting needlessly, are often patched by packagers,
and should be specified on the configuration command line by anyone
who desires for it to be specific rather than forced by us.
This work was already done with mingw when those configs were worked
on, now it gets applied to the remaining configs.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
So far, MingW shared libraries were named like this
libeay32.dll + libeay32.dll.a
ssleay32.dll + ssleay32.dll.a
That naming scheme is antiquated, a reminicense of SSLeay. We're
therefore changing the scheme to something that's more like the rest
of OpenSSL.
There are two factors to remember:
- Windows libraries have no recorded SOvers, which means that the
shared library version must be encoded in the name. According to
some, it's unwise to encode extra periods in a Windows file name,
so we convert version number periods to underscores.
- MingW has multilib ability. However, DLLs need to reside with the
binaries that use them, so to allow both 32-bit and 64-bit DLLs to
reside in the same place, we add '-x64' in the name of the 64-bit
ones.
The resulting name scheme (for SOver 1.1) is this:
on x86:
libcrypto-1_1.dll + libcrypto.dll.a
libssl-1_1.dll + libssl.dll.a
on x86_64:
libcrypto-1_1-x64.dll + libcrypto.dll.a
libssl-1_1-x64.dll + libssl.dll.a
An observation is that the import lib is the same for both
architectures. Not to worry, though, as they will be installed in
PREFIX/lib/ for x86 and PREFIX/lib64/ for x86_64.
As a side effect, MingW got its own targets in Makefile.shared.
link_dso.mingw-shared and link_app.mingw-shared are aliases for the
corresponding cygwin-shared targets. link_shlib.mingw-shared is,
however, a target separated from the cygwin one.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Adding uplink and applink to some builds was done by "magic", the
configuration for "mingw" only had a macro definition, the Configure
would react to its presence by adding the uplink source files to
cpuid_asm_src, and crypto/build.info inherited dance to get it
compiled, and Makefile.shared made sure applink.o would be
appropriately linked in. That was a lot under the hood.
To replace this, we create a few template configurations in
Configurations/00-base-templates.conf, inherit one of them in the
"mingw" configuration, the rest is just about refering to the
$target{apps_aux_src} / $target{apps_obj} in the right places.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
As part of this, change util/mkdef.pl to stop adding libraries to
depend on in its output. mkdef.pl should ONLY output a symbol
vector.
Because symbol names can't be longer than 31 characters, we use the
compiler to shorten those that are longer down to 23 characters plus
an 8 character CRC. To make sure users of our header files will pick
up on that automatically, add the DEC C supported extra headers files
__decc_include_prologue.h and __decc_include_epilogue.h.
Furthermore, we add a config.com, so VMS people can configure just as
comfortably as any Unix folks, thusly:
@config
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Cygwin and Mingw name their libraries a bit differently from the rest
of the POSIXly universe, we need to adapt to that.
In Makefile.tmpl, it means that some hunks will only be output
conditionally.
This also means that shared_extension for the Cygwin and Mingw
configurations in Configurations/10-main.conf are changing from .dll.a
to .dll. Makefile.shared does a fine job without having them
specified, and it's much easier to work with tucking an extra .a at
the end of files in the installation recipes than any amount of name
rewrites, especially with the support of the SHARED_NAME in the top
build.info.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Some time ago, we had a ex_libs configuration setting that could be
divided into lflags and ex_libs. These got divided in two settings,
lflags and ex_libs, and the former was interpreted to be general
linking flags.
Unfortunately, that conclusion wasn't entirely accurate. Most of
those linking were meant to end up in a very precise position on the
linking command line, just before the spec of libraries the linking
depends on.
Back to the drawing board, we're diving things further, now having
lflags, which are linking flags that aren't depending on command line
position, plib_lflags, which are linking flags that should show up just
before the spec of libraries to depend on, and finally ex_libs, which
is the spec of extra libraries to depend on.
Also, documentation is changed in Configurations/README. This was
previously forgotten.
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>
The lflags configuration had a weird syntax with a % as separator. If
it was present, whatever came before ended up as PEX_LIBS in Makefile
(usually, this is LDFLAGS), while whatever came after ended up as
EX_LIBS.
This change splits that item into lflags and ex_libs, making their use
more explicit.
Also, PEX_LIBS in all the Makefiles are renamed to LDFLAGS.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Many options for supporting optimizations for legacy crypto on legacy
platforms have been removed. This simplifies the source code and
does not really penalize anyone.
DES_PTR (always on)
DES_RISC1, DES_RISC2 (always off)
DES_INT (always 'unsigned int')
DES_UNROLL (always on)
BF_PTR (always on) BF_PTR2 (removed)
MD2_CHAR, MD2_LONG (always 'unsigned char')
IDEA_SHORT, IDEA_LONG (always 'unsigned int')
RC2_SHORT, RC2_LONG (always 'unsigned int')
RC4_LONG (only int and char (for assembler) are supported)
RC4_CHUNK (always long), RC_CHUNK_LL (removed)
RC4_INDEX (always on)
And also make D_ENCRYPT macro more clear (@appro)
This is done in consultation with Andy.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Time to get rid of @MK1MF_Builds and introduce a more flexible
'build_scheme' configuration key. Its value may be a string or an
array of strings, meaning we need to teach resolve_config how to
handle ARRAY referenses.
The build scheme is a word that selects a function to create the
appropriate result files for a certain configuration. Currently valid
build schemes aer "mk1mf" and "unixmake", the plan is however to add
at least one other for a more universal build scheme.
Incidently, this also adds the functions 'add' and 'add_before', which
can be used in a configuration, so instead of having to repeatedly
write a sub like this:
key1 => sub { join(" ", @_, "myvalues"); },
key2 => sub { join(" ", "myvalues", @_); },
one could write this:
key1 => add(" ", "myvalues"),
key2 => add_before(" ", "myvalues"),
The good point with 'add' and 'add_before' is that they handle
inheritances where the values are a misture of scalars and ARRAYs. If
there are any ARRAY to be found, the resulting value will be an ARRAY,
otherwise it will be a scalar with all the incoming valued joined
together with the separator given as first argument to add/add_before.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Cygwin was used for x86 before, so let's keep it around for those who
still use it (it make Configure reconf possible).
Cygwin-i[3456]86 for those that might generate and pass a target name
directly to Configure.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
This patch allows to recognize the architectures supported by Cygwin
and to choose the right configuration from there. Drop -march to
use default architecture on 32 bit x86.
Drop pre-Cygwin-1.3 recognition since it's long gone and there's no
valid configuration for this anymore.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <vinschen@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Create Makefile's from Makefile.in
Rename Makefile.org to Makefile.in
Rename Makefiles to Makefile.in
Address review feedback from Viktor and Richard
Reviewed-by: Viktor Dukhovni <viktor@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
Only two macros CRYPTO_MDEBUG and CRYPTO_MDEBUG_ABORT to control this.
If CRYPTO_MDEBUG is not set, #ifdef out the whole debug machinery.
(Thanks to Jakob Bohm for the suggestion!)
Make the "change wrapper functions" be the only paradigm.
Wrote documentation!
Format the 'set func' functions so their paramlists are legible.
Format some multi-line comments.
Remove ability to get/set the "memory debug" functions at runtme.
Remove MemCheck_* and CRYPTO_malloc_debug_init macros.
Add CRYPTO_mem_debug(int flag) function.
Add test/memleaktest.
Rename CRYPTO_malloc_init to OPENSSL_malloc_init; remove needless calls.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
The forthcoming async code needs to use pthread thread local variables. This
updates the various Configurations to add the necessary flags. In many cases
this is an educated guess as I don't have access to most of these
environments! There is likely to be some tweaking needed.
Reviewed-by: Kurt Roeckx <kurt@openssl.org>
-Allow mingw debug builds to fail on Travis CI
-Fix Travis email notifications config
-Rename a variable to avoid a bogus warning with old GCC
error: declaration of ``dup'' shadows a global declaration [-Werror=shadow]
-Disable pedantic ms-format warnings with mingw
-Properly define const DH parameters
-Restore --debug flag in Travis CI builds; -d would get incorrectly passed
to ./Configure in mingw debug builds.
Signed-off-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Otherwise the ./config script fails with errors like:
> Operating system: x86_64-whatever-linux2
> This system (linux-x86_64) is not supported. See file INSTALL for details.
The failure was introduced by a93d3e0.
RT#4062
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
This provides support for building in the EDK II reference implementation
of UEFI. Most UEFI firmware in existence uses OpenSSL for implementing
the core cryptographic functionality needed for Secure Boot.
This has always previously been handled with external patches to OpenSSL
but we are now making a concerted effort to eliminate those.
In this mode, we don't actually use the OpenSSL makefiles; we process
the MINFO file generated by 'make files' and incorporate it into the
EDK2 build system.
Since EDK II builds for various targets with varying word size and we
need to have a single prepackaged configuration, we deliberately don't
hard-code the setting of SIXTY_FOUR_BIT vs. THIRTY_TWO_BIT in
opensslconf.h. We bypass that for OPENSSL_SYS_UEFI and allow EDK II
itself to set those, depending on the architecture.
For x86_64, EDK II sets SIXTY_FOUR_BIT and thus uses 'long long' for the
64-bit type, even when building with GCC where 'long' is also 64-bit. We
do this because the Microsoft toolchain has 32-bit 'long'.
Signed-off-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@akamai.com>
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
The disabled set of -Weverything is hard to maintain across versions.
Use -Wall -Wextra but also document other useful warnings that currently trigger.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Configure would load the glob "Configurations*". The problem with
this is that it also loads all kinds of backups of those
configurations that some editors do, like emacs' classic
'Configurations~'. The solution is to give them an extension, such as
'.conf', and make sure to end the glob with that.
Also, because 'Configurations.conf' makes for a silly name, and
because a possibly large number of configurations will become clutter,
move them to a subdirectory 'Configurations/', and rename them to
something more expressive, as well as something that sets up some form
of sorting order. Thus:
Configurations -> Configurations/10-main.conf
Configurations.team -> Configurations/90-team.conf
Finally, make sure that Configure sorts the list of files that 'glob'
produces, and adapt Makefile.org.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>