wasn't respected when using it to build different parts of OpenSSL.
1.269 was an attempt to correct that, but unfortunately meant that we
built every part that was given i $(DIRS) 7 times. This change puts
back the original intent with BUILD_CMD via the new macro
BUILD_ONE_CMD while keeping the intent with RECURSIVE_BUILD_CMD.
called whrlpool is not a typo, but a way to keep the names shorter than
8 characters. Remaining TODO list comprises adding OID, EVP, corresponding
flag to apps/openssl dgst, benchmark, engage assembler...
- eliminate ambiguities between GNU-ish and SysV-ish make flavors;
- switch [back] to -e;
- fold/unify rules;
This is follow-up to the patch introducing common BUILDENV. Idea is
to collect as much parameters in $(TOP) as possible and "strip" lower
Makefiles for most variables [and thus makes them more readable].
during "make errors" and thus during "make update".
Fix lots of bugs that util/ck_errf.pl can detect automatically.
Various others of these are still left to fix; that's why
"make update" will complain loudly when run now.
is to have a placeholder to small routines, which can be written only
in assembler. In IA-32 case this includes processor capability
identification and access to Time-Stamp Counter. As discussed earlier
OPENSSL_ia32cap is introduced to control recently added SSE2 code
pathes (see docs/crypto/OPENSSL_ia32cap.pod). For the moment the
code is operational on ELF platforms only. I haven't checked it yet,
but I have all reasons to believe that Windows build should fail to
link too. I'll be looking into it shortly...
install to a different location than it had created. (BTW, VMS will need a
matching fix in eng_list.c.) Note, these aren't ssl-specific, so I'm
putting "engines/" into the libs directory rather than at the "--prefix"
level or inside "ssl/".
dependencies of the OPENSSL_NO_DEPRECATED mode. This prevents dependencies
being reproduced for "deprecated" header behaviour when a developer doesn't
define the symbol (with the subsequent CVS wars that can ensue).
that gets built before objects barfs all over the place because it
uses a new NID that hasn't had a chance of getting defined yet (in
this case, it was about a couple of new EC curves, and therefore a
couple of new corresponding NIDs).
I'm placing objects first in SDIRS! There.