This gets rid of the BEGINRAW..ENDRAW sections in crypto/des/build.info.
This also moves the assembler generating perl scripts to take the
output file name as last command line argument, where necessary.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Make all scripts produce .S, make interpretation of $(CFLAGS)
pre-processor's responsibility, start accepting $(PERLASM_SCHEME).
[$(PERLASM_SCHEME) is redundant in this case, because there are
no deviataions between Solaris and Linux assemblers. This is
purely to unify .pl->.S handling across all targets.]
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
pre-processor controls cleanup. It doesn't mean that it no longer
works on UltraSPARC, only that it doesn't utilize sparcv9-specific
features like branch prediction hints and load in little-endian byte
order anymore. This "costs" ~3% in EDE3 performance regression on
UltraSPARC.
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
Rename OPENSSL_SYSNAME_xxx to OPENSSL_SYS_xxx
Remove MS_STATIC; it's a relic from platforms <32 bits.
Reviewed-by: Andy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org>
The problem is that OpenSSH calls EVP_Cipher, which is not as
protective as EVP_CipherUpdate. Formally speaking we ought to
do more checks in *_cipher methods, including rejecting
lengths not divisible by block size (unless ciphertext stealing
is in place). But for now I implement check for zero length in
low-level based on precedent.
PR: 3087, 2775
It was not accepted because code is not PIC, too UltraSPARC-specific when
it doesn't have to and 32-bit only. I'm committing the original version
mostly for reference purposes. 64, PIC, blended CPU tune-up follows shortly.
Obtained from: http://inet.uni2.dk/~svolaf/des.htm
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.