around the callbacks required in the LHASH code for the "doall" functions.
Also - fix the evil function pointer casting in the two lh_doall functions
by deferring to a static utility function. Previously lh_doall() was
invoking lh_doall_arg() by casting the callback to the 2-parameter
prototype and passing in a NULL argument. This appears to have been working
thus far but it's not a hot idea. If the extra level of indirection becomes
a performance hit, we can just provide two virtually identical
implementations for each variant later on.
LHASH code, this evil was uncovered. The cast was obscuring the fact that
the function was prototyped to take 2 parameters when in fact it is being
used as a callback that should take only one. Anyway, the function itself
ignores the second parameter (thankfully). A proper cure is on the way but
for now this corrects the inconsistency.
them for a short period of time (actually, poll them with select(),
then read() whatever is there), which is about 10ms (hard-coded value)
each.
Separate Windows and Unixly code, and start on a VMS variant that
currently just returns 0.
Set correct type in ASN1_STRING for
INTEGER and ENUMERATED types.
Make ASN1_INTEGER_get() and ASN1_ENUMERATED_get()
return -1 for invalid type rather than 0 (which is
often valid). -1 may also be valid but this is less
likely.
Load OCSP error strings in ERR_load_crypto_strings().
Remove extensions argument from various functions
because it is not needed with the new extension
code.
New function OCSP_cert_to_id() to convert a pair
of certificates into an OCSP_CERTID.
New simple OCSP HTTP function. This is rather primitive
but just about adequate to send OCSP requests and
parse the response.
Fix typo in CRL distribution points extension.
Fix ASN1 code so it adds a final null to constructed
strings.
I've no idea were the KRB5 header files and libraries are placed on
Win32. When there's better knowledge, we might be able to process the
other KRB5-related arguments as well...
horrible macros.
Fix two evil ASN1 bugs. Attempt to use 'ctx' when
NULL if input is indefinite length constructed
in asn1_check_tlen() and invalid pointer to ASN1_TYPE
when reusing existing structure (this took *ages* to
find because the new PKCS#12 code triggered it).
objects) or OPENSSL_BUILD_SHLIBSSL (for files that end up as libssl
objects) is defined, redefine OPENSSL_EXTERN to be OPENSSL_EXPORT.
This is actually only important on Win32, and can safely be ignored in
all other cases, at least for now.
most of the old wrappers. A few of the old versions remain
because they are non standard and the corresponding ASN1
code has not been reimplemented yet.
* detect "unknown" algorithms (any C macro starting with NO_ that is
not explicitely mentioned in mkdef.pl as a known algorithm) and
report.
* add a number of algorithms that can be deselected.
* look in ssl/kssl.h as well.
* accept multiple whitespace (not just one SPC) in preprocessor lines.
currently OpenSSL itself wont compile with this set
because some old style stuff remains.
Change old functions X509_sign(), X509_verify() etc
to use new item based functions.
Replace OCSP function declarations with DECLARE macros.
Win32 but it is getting there...
Update mkdef.pl to handle ASN1_ANY and fix headers.
Stop various VC++ warnings.
Include some fixes from "Peter 'Luna' Runestig"
<peter@runestig.com>
Remove external declaration for des_set_weak_key_flag:
it doesn't exist.
will not support EDH cipher suites). The parameters can either be loaded
from a file (via "-dh_file"), generated by the application on start-up
("-dh_special generate"), or be standard DH parameters (as used in
s_server, etc).
* Seal off some buffer functions so that only the higher-level IO functions
are exposed.
* Using the above change to buffer, add support to tunala for displaying
traffic totals when a tunnel closes. Useful in debugging and analysis -
you get to see the total encrypted traffic versus the total tunneled
traffic. This shows not only how much expansion your data suffers from
SSL (a lot if you send/receive a few bytes at a time), but also the
overhead of SSL handshaking relative to the payload sent through the
tunnel. This is controlled by the "-out_totals" switch to tunala.
* Fix and tweak some bits in the README.
Eg. sample output of "-out_totals" from a tunnel client when tunneling a brief
"telnet" session.
Tunnel closing, traffic stats follow
SSL (network) traffic to/from server; 7305 bytes in, 3475 bytes out
tunnelled data to/from server; 4295 bytes in, 186 bytes out