Richard Levitte [Fri, 17 Aug 2001 04:35:58 +0000 (04:35 +0000)]
Make sure evil file name characters, like spaces or ampersands (!),
don't disturb the rehashing process.
Spotted and suggested patch from Rudo Thomas <rudo@internet.sk>
Richard Levitte [Mon, 13 Aug 2001 14:09:31 +0000 (14:09 +0000)]
gcc 3.0 tells me that -m486 is deprecated. The gcc 2.95 manual tells
me the same and that the correct option is -mcpu=i486. I'm assuming
-mcpu has been around for some time, and that it's therefore safe to
change all occurences of -m486 to -mcpu=i486.
Geoff Thorpe [Sun, 12 Aug 2001 17:14:35 +0000 (17:14 +0000)]
The indexes returned by ***_get_ex_new_index() functions are used when
setting stack (actually, array) values in ex_data. So only increment the
global counters if the underlying CRYPTO_get_ex_new_index() call succeeds.
This change doesn't make "ex_data" right (see the comment at the head of
ex_data.c to know why), but at least makes the source code marginally less
frustrating.
Geoff Thorpe [Sun, 12 Aug 2001 16:52:00 +0000 (16:52 +0000)]
The indexes returned by ***_get_ex_new_index() functions are used when
setting stack (actually, array) values in ex_data. So only increment the
global counters if the underlying CRYPTO_get_ex_new_index() call succeeds.
This change doesn't make "ex_data" right (see the comment at the head of
ex_data.c to know why), but at least makes the source code marginally less
frustrating.
Richard Levitte [Fri, 10 Aug 2001 15:26:21 +0000 (15:26 +0000)]
Apply the Tru64 patch from Tim Mooney <mooney@dogbert.cc.ndsu.NoDak.edu>
His comments are:
1) Changes all references for `True64' to be `Tru64', which is the correct
spelling for the OS name.
2) Makes `alpha-cc' be the same as `alpha164-cc', and adds an `alphaold-cc'
entry that is the same as the previous `alpha-cc'. The reason is that most
people these days are using the newer compiler, so it should be the default.
3) Adds a bit of commentary to Configure, regarding the name changes of
the OS over the years, so it's not so confusing to people that haven't been
with the OS for a while.
4) Adds an `alpha-cc-rpath' target (which is *not* selected automatically
by Configure under any circumstance) that builds an RPATH into the
shared libraries. This is explained in the comment in Configure. It's
very very useful for people that want it, and people that don't want it
just shouldn't choose that target.
5) Adds the `-pthread' flag as the best way to get POSIX thread support
from the newer compiler.
6) Updates the Makefile targets, so that when the `alpha164-cc', `alpha-cc',
or `alpha-cc-rpath' target is what Configure is set to use, it uses a Makefile
target that includes the `-msym' option when building the shared library.
This is a performance enhancement.
7) Updates `config' so that if it detects you're running version 4 or 5
of the OS, it automatically selects `alpha-cc', but uses `alphaold-cc'
for versions 1-3 of the OS.
8) Updates the comment in opensslv.h, fixing both the OS name typo and
adding a reference to IRIX 6.x, since the shared library semantics are
virtually identical there.
Lutz Jänicke [Wed, 1 Aug 2001 10:06:32 +0000 (10:06 +0000)]
Remove SSL_OP_NON_EXPORT_FIRST:
It did not work, it was deactivated by #if 0/#endif anyway _and_ we now have
the working SSL_OP_CIPHER_SERVER_PREFERENCE.
Richard Levitte [Tue, 31 Jul 2001 17:02:44 +0000 (17:02 +0000)]
Make sure the source file is included among the dependencies. This is
the norm for 'gcc -M' but not for 'makedepend', and is merely
introduced here to avoid commit wars.
Richard Levitte [Tue, 31 Jul 2001 07:21:06 +0000 (07:21 +0000)]
More Kerberos SSL changes from Jeffrey Altman <jaltman@columbia.edu>
His comments are:
First, it corrects a problem introduced in the last patch where the
kssl_map_enc() would intentionally return NULL for valid ENCTYPE
values. This was done to prevent verification of the kerberos 5
authenticator from being performed when Derived Key ciphers were
in use. Unfortunately, the authenticator verification routine was
not the only place that function was used. And it caused core dumps.
Second, it attempt to add to SSL_SESSION the Kerberos 5 Client
Principal Name.
Andy Polyakov [Mon, 30 Jul 2001 16:42:15 +0000 (16:42 +0000)]
Enhanced support for IA-64 Linux and HP-UX (as well as better support for
HP-UX in common in ./config). Note that for the moment of this writing
none of 64-bit platforms pass bntest. I'm committing this anyway as it's
too frustrating to patch snapshots over and over while 0.9.6 is known to
work.
Split private key PEM and normal PEM handling. Private key
handling needs to link in stuff like PKCS#8.
Relocate the ASN1 *_dup() functions, to the relevant ASN1
modules using new macro IMPLEMENT_ASN1_DUP_FUNCTION. Previously
these were all in crypto/x509/x_all.c along with every ASN1
BIO/fp function which linked in *every* ASN1 function if
a single dup was used.
Move the authority key id ASN1 structure to a separate file.
This is used in the X509 routines and its previous location
linked in all the v3 extension code.
Also move ASN1_tag2bit to avoid linking in a_bytes.c which
is now largely obsolete.
So far under Linux stripped binary with single PEM_read_X509
is now 238K compared to 380K before these changes.
Andy Polyakov [Wed, 25 Jul 2001 15:58:57 +0000 (15:58 +0000)]
Support for 64-bit Solaris build with GCC 3.0 and later. It should be
explicitely noted that 64-bit SPARCv9 ABI is not officially supported
by GCC 3.0 (support is scheduled for 3.1 release), but it appears to
work, at the very least 'make test' passes...
- New INSTALL document describing different ways to build "tunala" and
possible problems.
- New file breakage.c handles (so far) missing functions.
- Get rid of some signed/unsigned/const warnings thanks to solaris-cc
- Add autoconf/automake input files, and helper scripts to populate missing
(but auto-generated) files.
This change adds a configure.in and Makefile.am to build everything using
autoconf, automake, and libtool - and adds "gunk" scripts to generate the
various files those things need (and clean then up again after). This means
that "autogunk.sh" needs to be run first on a system with the autotools,
but the resulting directory should be "configure"able and compilable on
systems without those tools.
Ben Laurie [Sat, 21 Jul 2001 10:24:07 +0000 (10:24 +0000)]
Clean up EVP macros, rename DES EDE3 modes correctly, temporary support for
OpenBSD /dev/crypto (this will be revamped later when the appropriate machinery
is available).
Richard Levitte [Sat, 21 Jul 2001 09:43:43 +0000 (09:43 +0000)]
More Kerberos SSL patches from Vern Staats <staatsvr@asc.hpc.mil>.
His comments are:
This patch fixes the problem of modern Kerberos using "derived keys"
to encrypt the authenticator by disabling the authenticator check
for all derived keys enctypes.
I think I've got all the bugfixes that Jeffrey and I discussed rolled
into this. There were some problems with Jeffrey's code to convert
the authenticator's Kerberos timestring into struct tm (e.g. Z, -1900;
it helps to have an actual decryptable authenticator to play with).
So I've shamelessly pushed in my code, while stealing some bits from
Jeffrey.
Currently, RSA code, when using no padding scheme, simply checks that input
does not contain more bytes than the RSA modulus 'n' - it does not check
that the input is strictly *less* than 'n'. Whether this should be the
case or not is open to debate - however, due to security problems with
returning miscalculated CRT results, the 'rsa_mod_exp' implementation in
rsa_eay.c now performs a public-key exponentiation to verify the CRT result
and in the event of an error will instead recalculate and return a non-CRT
(more expensive) mod_exp calculation. As the mod_exp of 'I' is equivalent
to the mod_exp of 'I mod n', and the verify result is automatically between
0 and n-1 inclusive, the verify only matches the input if 'I' was less than
'n', otherwise even a correct CRT calculation is only congruent to 'I' (ie.
they differ by a multiple of 'n'). Rather than rejecting correct
calculations and doing redundant and slower ones instead, this changes the
equality check in the verification code to a congruence check.
Richard Levitte [Thu, 12 Jul 2001 09:11:14 +0000 (09:11 +0000)]
Add the possibility to specify the use of zlib compression and
decompression. It can be set up to link at link time or to load the
zlib library at run-time.
In ocsp_match_issuerid() we are passed the CA that signed the responder
certificate so need to match its subject with the certificate IDs in the
response.