functions in ui_compat. This gave reason to rework that part more
thoroughly, so here are the changes made:
1. Add DES_read_password() and DES_read_2passwords() with the same
functionality as the corresponding old des_ functions, as a
convenience to the users.
2. Add UI_UTIL_read_pw_string() and UI_UTIL_read_pw() with the
functionality from des_read_pw_string() and des_read_pw(), again as
a concenience to the users.
3. Rename des_read_password(), des_read_2passwords(),
des_read_pw_string() and des_read_pw() by changing des_ to
_ossl_old_des_, and add the usual mapping macros.
4. Move the implementation of des_read_password() and
des_read_2passwords() to the des directory, since they are tightly
tied to DES anyway.
This change was inspired by a patch from Assar Westerlund <assar@sics.se>:
There are some functions that didn't get the kick-away-old-des-and-
replace-des-with-DES action. Here's a patch that adds DES_ and des_
(in des_old.h) versions of des_read_pw_string et al. This patch
includes some of the first des_old.h semi-colon macro fixes that I've
already sent.
This patch makes the macros in des_old.h actually pretend to be
functions.
There's no reason not to define _ossl_old_crypt when using
PERL5/FreeBSD/darwin/Next, since it makes using crypt and including
des.h break. Here's a trivial patch.
This patch fixes some of the typos used in macro names in des_old.h
and the number of arguments for some of them.
[See
Message-ID: <3BB07999.30432AD2@celocom.com>
Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2001 13:33:29 +0100
From: Dr S N Henson <drh@celocom.com>
To: openssl-dev@openssl.org
Subject: Re: Error in v3_purp.c
]
required as well as a default implementation (when no ENGINE provides a
replacement implementation). This change makes sure the correct
implementation's "init()" handler is used rather than assuming 'type'.
crypto/rijndael. Additionally, I applied the AES integration patch
from Stephen Sprunk <stephen@sprunk.org> and fiddled it to work
properly with the normal EVP constructs (and incidently work the same
way as all other symmetric cipher implementations).
This results in an API that looks a lot like the rest of the OpenSSL
cipher suite.