compiler supports it. Otherwise, there are warnings about it lacking
everywhere, which is quite tedious to read through while trying to check
for other warnings.
A client reference identity of ".example.com" matches a server
certificate presented identity that is any sub-domain of "example.com"
(e.g. "www.sub.example.com).
With the X509_CHECK_FLAG_SINGLE_LABEL_SUBDOMAINS flag, it matches
only direct child sub-domains (e.g. "www.sub.example.com").
(cherry picked from commit e52c52f10bb8e34aaf8f28f3e5b56939e8f6b357)
armcap.c is shared between 32- and 64-bit builds and features link-time
detection of getauxval.
Submitted by: Ard Biesheuvel.
(cherry picked from commit e8d93e342b4b7d43c73e955e81e227c514d389d9)
Because of a missing include <fcntl.h> we don't have O_CREATE and don't create
the file with open() using mode 0600 but fall back to using fopen() with the
default umask followed by a chmod().
Problem found by Jakub Wilk <jwilk@debian.org>.
Fixes to host checking wild card support and add support for
setting host checking flags when verifying a certificate
chain.
(cherry picked from commit 397a8e747dc3f964196caed5ca4e08d4b598362a)
If the key type does not match any CMS recipient type return
an error instead of using a random key (MMA mitigation). This
does not leak any useful information to an attacker.
PR#3348
(cherry picked from commit bd43b4cf778a53ffa5d77510ecd408a009dc00d2)
Even though the meat of dso_vms.c is compiled out on non-VMS builds,
the (pre-)compiler still traverses some of the macro handling. This
trips up at least one non-VMS build configuration, so this commit
makes the skip-VMS case more robust.
Signed-off-by: Geoff Thorpe <geoff@openssl.org>
This patch resolves RT ticket #2608.
Thanks to Robert Dugal for originally spotting this, and to David
Ramos for noticing that the ball had been dropped.
Signed-off-by: Geoff Thorpe <geoff@openssl.org>
The lazy-initialisation of BN_MONT_CTX was serialising all threads, as
noted by Daniel Sands and co at Sandia. This was to handle the case that
2 or more threads race to lazy-init the same context, but stunted all
scalability in the case where 2 or more threads are doing unrelated
things! We favour the latter case by punishing the former. The init work
gets done by each thread that finds the context to be uninitialised, and
we then lock the "set" logic after that work is done - the winning
thread's work gets used, the losing threads throw away what they've done.
Signed-off-by: Geoff Thorpe <geoff@openssl.org>