A generator in a `GENERATE[generated]=generator` build.info statement may
itself be generated. That needs to be taken into account.
This was always meant to be, but we missed the spot, for lack of use cases.
Now we have one.
Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell <matt@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Tomas Mraz <tomas@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/18263)
The FIPS module checksum needs to know that configuration.h is
generated from configuration.h.in, so that information is conserved.
To make this possible, it's now possible to have attributes with the
GENERATE keyword, and the attribute "skip" is added to make a keyword
a no-op, which makes it informative only.
Reviewed-by: Tomas Mraz <tomas@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Todd Short <todd.short@me.com>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/16378)
The memory footprint of how we produced the Makefile was quite...
important, because we have all the processing in one perl snippet, and
generate the details of the build file by appending to the "magic"
variable $OUT. The result is that this variable gets to hold the
majority of the build file text, and depending on memory reallocation
strategies for strings, the heap may hold multiple (possibly not just
a few) copies of this string, almost all of them "freed" but still
taking up space. This has resulted in memory exhaustion.
We therefore change strategy, and generate the build file in two
phases, where the first phase generates the full template using small
perl snippets for each detail, and the second phase processes this
template. This is much kinder to process memory.
Reviewed-by: Tomas Mraz <tomas@openssl.org>
(Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/15310)