openssl/crypto/dso
Dr. Stephen Henson 3c1ee6c147 Fix from HEAD.
2006-02-04 01:50:41 +00:00
..
.cvsignore Add emacs cache files to .cvsignore. 2005-04-11 14:18:14 +00:00
dso.h formatting consistency 2001-12-17 19:28:05 +00:00
dso_dl.c Eliminate gcc -pedantic warnings. 2005-06-09 21:37:30 +00:00
dso_dlfcn.c Eliminate gcc -pedantic warnings. 2005-06-09 21:37:30 +00:00
dso_err.c Rebuild error codes. 2005-04-12 13:47:58 +00:00
dso_lib.c Use BUF_strlcpy() instead of strcpy(). 2003-12-27 14:40:57 +00:00
dso_null.c Currently the DSO_METHOD interface has one entry point to bind all 2000-06-16 10:45:36 +00:00
dso_openssl.c A DSO method for VMS was missing, and I had the code lying around... 2000-09-15 21:22:50 +00:00
dso_vms.c On VMS, the norm is still that symbols are uppercased, so for now it's better 2001-11-16 13:12:19 +00:00
dso_win32.c Eliminate dependency on UNICODE macro. 2005-06-27 21:14:15 +00:00
Makefile Fix from HEAD. 2006-02-04 01:50:41 +00:00
README This changes the behaviour of the DSO mechanism for determining an 2000-10-26 17:38:59 +00:00

NOTES
-----

I've checked out HPUX (well, version 11 at least) and shl_t is
a pointer type so it's safe to use in the way it has been in
dso_dl.c. On the other hand, HPUX11 support dlfcn too and
according to their man page, prefer developers to move to that.
I'll leave Richard's changes there as I guess dso_dl is needed
for HPUX10.20.

There is now a callback scheme in place where filename conversion can
(a) be turned off altogether through the use of the
    DSO_FLAG_NO_NAME_TRANSLATION flag,
(b) be handled by default using the default DSO_METHOD's converter
(c) overriden per-DSO by setting the override callback
(d) a mix of (b) and (c) - eg. implement an override callback that;
    (i) checks if we're win32 (if(strstr(dso->meth->name, "win32")....)
        and if so, convert "blah" into "blah32.dll" (the default is
	otherwise to make it "blah.dll").
    (ii) default to the normal behaviour - we're not on win32, eg.
         finish with (return dso->meth->dso_name_converter(dso,NULL)).