openssl/crypto/err
Richard Levitte 9f15e5b911 VMS: fix collected error strings
It turns out that on VMS, strerror() returns messages with added
spaces at the end.

We wouldn't had noticed if it wasn't for perl trimming those spaces
off for its own sake and thereby having test/recipes/02-test_errstr.t
fail on VMS.

The safe fix is to do the same trimming ourselves.

Reviewed-by: Paul Dale <paul.dale@oracle.com>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/7701)
2018-11-24 13:08:56 +01:00
..
build.info unified build scheme: add build.info files 2016-02-01 12:46:58 +01:00
err.c VMS: fix collected error strings 2018-11-24 13:08:56 +01:00
err_all.c Update copyright year 2018-02-13 13:59:25 +00:00
err_prn.c Consistent formatting for sizeof(foo) 2017-12-07 19:11:49 -05:00
openssl.ec Fix some TLSv1.3 alert issues 2018-07-31 09:31:50 +01:00
openssl.txt KMAC implementation using EVP_MAC 2018-11-14 07:01:09 +10:00
README Clean up "generic" intro pod files. 2016-06-09 16:39:19 -04:00

Adding new libraries
--------------------

When adding a new sub-library to OpenSSL, assign it a library number
ERR_LIB_XXX, define a macro XXXerr() (both in err.h), add its
name to ERR_str_libraries[] (in crypto/err/err.c), and add
ERR_load_XXX_strings() to the ERR_load_crypto_strings() function
(in crypto/err/err_all.c). Finally, add an entry:

    L      XXX     xxx.h   xxx_err.c

to crypto/err/openssl.ec, and add xxx_err.c to the Makefile.
Running make errors will then generate a file xxx_err.c, and
add all error codes used in the library to xxx.h.

Additionally the library include file must have a certain form.
Typically it will initially look like this:

    #ifndef HEADER_XXX_H
    #define HEADER_XXX_H

    #ifdef __cplusplus
    extern "C" {
    #endif

    /* Include files */

    #include <openssl/bio.h>
    #include <openssl/x509.h>

    /* Macros, structures and function prototypes */


    /* BEGIN ERROR CODES */

The BEGIN ERROR CODES sequence is used by the error code
generation script as the point to place new error codes, any text
after this point will be overwritten when make errors is run.
The closing #endif etc will be automatically added by the script.

The generated C error code file xxx_err.c will load the header
files stdio.h, openssl/err.h and openssl/xxx.h so the
header file must load any additional header files containing any
definitions it uses.