Also, the "to" variable used in cleanup is never non-NULL and is entirely
unused. As such, the cleanup might have been missed under genuine error
conditions and caused leaks and/or returned invalid pointers.
patches taken from Red Hat Linux 7.2. Original code from Broadcom with
patches and backport by Nalin, more backport to fix warnings and const
changes by Mark
Submitted by: Mark Cox
Reviewed by:
PR:
for acceleration only at the moment, but full key management is being
worked on for the future. This code has been compiled cross-platform but
not extensively tested
Submitted by: Mark Cox, Baltimore Technologies
Reviewed by: Mark Cox
PR:
7.2 and been given extensive testing; it also compiles okay on our selection
of random machines (including 64-bit)
Submitted by: AEP, Mark Cox
Reviewed by: Mark Cox
PR:
sooner and the programs get built against the shared libraries.
This requires a bit more work. Things like -rpath and the possibility
to still link the programs statically should be included. Some
cleanup is also needed. This will be worked on.
libdes (which is still used out there) or other des implementations,
the OpenSSL DES functions are renamed to begin with DES_ instead of
des_. Compatibility routines are provided and declared by including
openssl/des_old.h. Those declarations are the same as were in des.h
when the OpenSSL project started, which is exactly how libdes looked
at that time, and hopefully still looks today.
The compatibility functions will be removed in some future release, at
the latest in version 1.0.
such cases, a flush should *not* attempt to finalise the encoding, as
the EVP_ENCODE_CTX structure will only be filled with garbage. For
the same reason, do the same check when a wpending is performed.
not implemented. (Bug reported by Martin Szotkowski)
This also changes the non-"_ex" versions to defer directly to
EVP_CipherInit_ex() rather than EVP_CipherInit() to avoid an unecessary
level of indirection.
it to be defined on all platforms whether or not it is of any practical
use on them. This also resolves linker problems on "special" platforms,
such as win32.