'ranlib' doesn't always run on some systems. That's actually
acceptable, since all that happens if it fails is a library with an
index, which makes linking slower, but still working correctly.
doesn't quite work on WinNT 4 earlier than SP6. It works fine on
Windows 98 and Windows 2000.
I'm disabling it for now. What's really needed is some kind of check
to see if GetCursorInfo is safe to call, or alternatively, GetCursor
or GetCursorPos could be used, according to Jeffrey.
- Make sure PCURSORINFO is defined even on systems that do not provide it.
- Change the reference to Peter Gutmann's paper.
- Make sure we don't walk the whole heap lists for performance reasons.
Jeffrey Altman suggests following Peter Gutmann's advice to keep it
to 50 heap entries per heap list.
it wants to stir the pool using ssleay_rand_add. This fix provides the
possibility to call ssleay_rand_add inside a locked state by simply telling
it not to do any locking through a static variable. This isn't the most
elegant way one could do this, but it does retain thread safety during the
stirring process.
This is mostly a work around for the old VC++ problem
that it treats func() as func(void).
Various prototypes had been added to 'compare' function
pointers that triggered this. This could be fixed by removing
the prototype, adding function pointer casts to every call or
changing the passed function to use the expected arguments.
I mostly did the latter.
The mkdef.pl script was modified to remove the typesafe
functions which no longer exist.
Oh and some functions called OPENSSL_freeLibrary() were
changed back to FreeLibrary(), wonder how that happened :-)
Also, "make update" has added some missing functions to libeay.num,
updated the TABLE for the alpha changes, and updated thousands of
dependancies that have changed from recent commits.
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.
"Jan Mikkelsen" <janm@transactionsite.com> correctly states that the
OpenSSL header files have #include's and extern "C"'s in an incorrect
order. Thusly fixed.