Building for the Cygwin distro requires to be able to build debuginfo
files. This in turn requires to build object files without stripping.
The stripping is performed by the next step after building which creates
the debuginfo files.
Signed-off-by: Corinna Vinschen <vinschen@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
On Linux when creating the .so file we were exporting all symbols. We should
only be exporting public symbols. This commit fixes the issue. It is only
applicable to linux currently although the same technique may work for other
platforms (e.g. Solaris should work the same way).
This also adds symbol version information to our exported symbols.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
This commit removes NCR, Tandem, Cray.
Regenerates TABLE.
Removes another missing BEOS fluff.
The last platform remaining on this ticket is WIN16.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org>
perfectly safe [compiler driver adds it] and in some situation even
perfectly appropriate [mixing -pthread and -lc on FreeBSD can have
lethal effect on apps/openssl]. I'd say we should get rid of more,
but I remove those I can test myself...
Makefile.shared was a bit overcomplicated.
Make the shell variables LDFLAGS and SHAREDFLAGS in Makefile.shared
get the values of $(CFLAGS) or $(LDFLAGS) as appropriate depending on
the value the shell variables LDCMD and SHAREDCMD get. That leaves
much less chance of confusion, since those pairs of shell variables
always are defined together.
"remaining relocations" in assembler modules. The latter seems to
be new behaviour, elder as/ld managed to resolve this relocations
as internal. It's possible to address this problem differently,
but I settle for -Bsymbolic...
PR: 546
COFF and a.out targets [similar to ELF targets]. You might notice some
rudementary support for shared mingw builds under cygwin. It works (it
produces cryptoeay32.dll and ssleay32.dll with everything exported by
name), but it's primarily for testing/debugging purposes, at least for
now...