- Sep 13, 1999
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Bodo Möller authored
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- Sep 11, 1999
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Andy Polyakov authored
This will soon be complemented with MacOS specific source code files and INSTALL.MacOS. I (Andy) have decided to get rid of a number of #include <sys/types.h>. I've verified it's ok (both by examining /usr/include/*.h and compiling) on a number of Unix platforms. Unfortunately I don't have Windows box to verify this on. I really appreciate if somebody could try to compile it and contact me a.s.a.p. in case a problem occurs. Submitted by: Roy Wood <roy@centricsystems.ca> Reviewed by: Andy Polyakov <appro@fy.chalmers.se>
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Bodo Möller authored
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- Sep 10, 1999
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Bodo Möller authored
tls1 did not survive to restarts, so get rid of it.
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Ulf Möller authored
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Bodo Möller authored
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Bodo Möller authored
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Bodo Möller authored
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Ulf Möller authored
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Bodo Möller authored
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- Sep 09, 1999
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Bodo Möller authored
because various programs are not updated that often and hence still expect header files names without the openssl/ prefix.
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Ben Laurie authored
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- Sep 08, 1999
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Bodo Möller authored
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Dr. Stephen Henson authored
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Dr. Stephen Henson authored
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Dr. Stephen Henson authored
OpenSSL is compiled with NO_RSA, no RSA operations can be used: including key generation storage and display of RSA keys. Since these operations are not covered by the RSA patent (my understanding is it only covers encrypt, decrypt, sign and verify) they can be included: this is an often requested feature, attempts to use the patented operations return an error code. This is enabled by setting RSA_NULL. This means that if a particular application has its own legal US RSA implementation then it can use that instead by setting it as the default RSA method. Still experimental and needs some fiddling of the other libraries so they have some options that don't attempt to use RSA if it isn't allowed.
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Ulf Möller authored
on Solaris)
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- Sep 07, 1999
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Bodo Möller authored
It's still totally untested ...
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Ulf Möller authored
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Ulf Möller authored
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Ulf Möller authored
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Dr. Stephen Henson authored
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- Sep 06, 1999
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Ben Laurie authored
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Ben Laurie authored
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- Sep 05, 1999
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Bodo Möller authored
Submitted by: Lennart Bang
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Andy Polyakov authored
I've chosen to nest two functions in order to save about 4K. As a result s1-win32.asm doesn't look right (nested PROC/ENDP SEGMENT/ENDS) and it's probably impossible to compile. I assume I have to reconsider... But not today...
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Andy Polyakov authored
"Clean-up" stands for the fact that it's using common message digest template ../md32_common.h and sha[1_]dgst.c are reduced down to '#define SHA_[01]' and then '#include "sha_locl.h"'. It stands "(LP64)" there because it's 64 bit platforms which benefit most from the tune-up. The updated code exhibits 40% performance improvement on IRIX64 (sounds too good, huh? I probably should double check if it's not some cache trashing that was holding it back before), 28% - on Alpha Linux and 12% - Solaris 7/64.
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- Sep 04, 1999
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Dr. Stephen Henson authored
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- Sep 03, 1999
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Bodo Möller authored
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Bodo Möller authored
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Bodo Möller authored
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Bodo Möller authored
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Bodo Möller authored
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Bodo Möller authored
portability. Submitted by: Lennart Bång
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Bodo Möller authored
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Dr. Stephen Henson authored
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- Sep 01, 1999
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Dr. Stephen Henson authored
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- Aug 28, 1999
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Andy Polyakov authored
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Andy Polyakov authored
went down from 1050 to 921 cycles on Pentium II. I haven't checked the figures on Pentium yet.
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Andy Polyakov authored
now and I'm putting it back to 'make test' later today.
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