| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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has the intent of modularizing Botan's source code, and making it
much easier to add or remove various things at compile time.
In this first checkin:
Add support for nested directories in modules/ and move all the modules
into grouped directories like entropy/ or compression/
Currently this is not ideal, it will _only_ find code in
modules/*/*/modinfo.txt, while it would be much better to allow for
arbitrary nestings under modules (find modules -name modinfo.txt)
for more complicated setups.
This 'new' (OMG I've found directories!) structure allows for a more free
naming convention (no need for leading es_, ml_, etc to group names, though
some keep it for lack of a more meaningful name being obvious to me right
at the moment).
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the actual copyright holders. For rationale, see my post to botan-devel
on April 9, subject 'Changing license to directly reflect contributors'
(http://www.randombit.net/pipermail/botan-devel/2008-April/000527.html)
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updated dates on files that have actually changed this year. This makes
the diff across versions readable again.
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but might as well keep it up to date. And it's easier to do it once with
a 'perl -pi' command than to update each file over time.
Apologies to anyone looking at diffs.
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use the generic variable reading routines).
Instead of hardcoding the module sets (historically, 'unix', 'beos', and
'win32') into the script, have each module specify which group(s) (if any) it
should be considered a member of in its modinfo.txt file.
Add a new module set compression which contains (currently) the zlib and bzip2
modules.
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Now three classes are defined: 'request', 'auto', and 'asm_ok'. The 'auto'
class is loaded automatically if the platform support matches up with
what we are building for (this is the former default). The 'request' mode
means it is only loaded if specifically requested by name. The 'asm_ok'
module is marked for all modules that use any assembler (including inline
assembler). This normally functions like 'auto', unless --debug is passed
to configure, in which case it is treated as 'request'.
Modules which do not specify a load behavior are given a default of
'request'.
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Clean up how help output is produced a bit further.
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files into blocks; makes a bit more sense, since there are potentially
many arguments to each, and the current system was making it difficult to
write a generic reader for the files.
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(ie, a single function). This will, unfortunately, break GCC 2.95.x
support. Most of the operating systems that had shipped with 2.95.x,
like OpenBSD and QNX, have since upgraded. Anyone needing 2.95.x support
will have to continue using 1.4.x
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is going to be removed.
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