| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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the name at all; instead unlink it at the end of the constructor,
so by the time it is fully constructed it is purely an anonymous
file descriptor.
mkstemp has a weird interface and returns the final name of the
file in its template argument. This prevented us from using a
std::string, since c_str's return is const (and we can't use
&string[0], because that might not be NULL-terminated). This
previously required doing nasty things like explicit new/delete
and using strcpy (the strcpy was what got me started on looking
at this; OpenBSD complains about it, so I was trying to figure
out a good way to remove it).
Instead, use the idea from http://www.gotw.ca/gotw/042.htm, and
use a std::vector to hold the mkstemp argument/result. That works
consistently everywhere, and we don't need to rely on strcpy, and
don't have to worry about memory leaks either. Only minor nit is
having to add an explicit NULL terminator as the std::string
doesn't contain it.
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that enable botan to be built under the clang C++ compiler.
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to meaning
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Add a second template param to SecureVector which specifies the initial
length.
Change all callers to be SecureVector instead of SecureBuffer.
This can go away in C++0x, once compilers implement N2712 ("Non-static
data member initializers"), and we can just write code as
SecureVector<byte> P{18};
instead
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pointer was actually set. Otherwise, the following problem could occur
if an allocator could not be found:
init() will call Allocator::get, which throws an exception
init() is called from the constructor of the subclasses (MemoryVector, etc)
Since the constructor of MemoryRegion has already finished, its destructor
will be called.
~MemoryRegion will call deallocate()
deallocate() will then access a NULL pointer
By guarding the call, the exception is propagated correctly.
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Invalid_Argument just a typedef for std::invalid_argument. Make
Botan::Exception a typedef for std::runtime_error. Make Memory_Exhaustion
a public exception, and use it in other places where memory allocations
can fail.
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Fixes for the amalgamation generator for internal headers.
Remove BOTAN_DLL exporting macros from all internal-only headers;
the classes/functions there don't need to be exported, and
avoiding the PIC/GOT indirection can be a big win.
Add missing BOTAN_DLLs where necessary, mostly gfpmath and cvc
For GCC, use -fvisibility=hidden and set BOTAN_DLL to the
visibility __attribute__ to export those classes/functions.
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Remove support for (unused) modset settings.
Move tss, fpe, cryptobox, and aont to new dir constructs
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containers (specifically vector).
Rename is_empty to empty
Remove has_items
Rename create to resize
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Pretty much useless and unused, except for listing the module names in
build.h and the short versions totally suffice for that.
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just too fragile and not that useful. Something like Java's checked exceptions
might be nice, but simply killing the process entirely if an unexpected
exception is thrown is not exactly useful for something trying to be robust.
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- rounding.h (round_up, round_down)
- workfactor.h (dl_work_factor)
- timer.h (system_time)
And update all users of the previous util.h
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Inline round_up and round_down
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Contributed by Patrick Georgi
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the info.txt files with the right module dependencies.
Apply it across the codebase.
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up during the Fedora submission review, that each source file include some
text about the license. One handy Perl script later and each file now has
the line
Distributed under the terms of the Botan license
after the copyright notices.
While I was in there modifying every file anyway, I also stripped out the
remainder of the block comments (lots of astericks before and after the
text); this is stylistic thing I picked up when I was first learning C++
but in retrospect it is not a good style as the structure makes it harder
to modify comments (with the result that comments become fewer, shorter and
are less likely to be updated, which are not good things).
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on Solaris 10 with GCC 3.4.3.
First, remove the definition of _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED=1 in mmap_mem.cpp
and unix_cmd.cpp, because apparently on Solaris defining this macro breaks
C++ compilation entirely with GCC:
http://bugs.opensolaris.org/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=6395191
In es_egd.cpp and es_dev.cpp, include <fcntl.h> to get the declaration of
open(), which is apparently where open(2) lives on Solaris - this matches
the include the *BSD man pages for open(2) show, though AFAIK the BSDs
all compiled fine without it (probably due to greater efforts to be
source-compatible with Linux systems by *BSD developers).
I have not been able to test these changes personally on Solaris but
Rickard reports that with these changes everything compiles OK.
Update lib version to 1.8.0-pre. ZOMG. Finally.
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avoid a potential integer overflow in the multiplication. Fixes bugid 27
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Add some missing info.txts
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code to alloc/ subdirs
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