| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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the parameters of the key length. Instead define a new function which
returns a simple object which contains this information.
This definitely breaks backwards compatability, though only with code
that directly manipulates low level objects like BlockCipher*s
directly, which is probably relatively rare.
Also remove some deprecated accessor functions from lookup.h. It turns
out block_size_of and output_size_of are being used in the TLS code; I
need to remove them from there before I can delete these entirely.
Really that didn't make much sense, because they assumed all
implementations of a particular algorithm will have the same
specifications, which is definitely not necessarily true, especially
WRT key length. It is much safer (and probably simpler) to first
retrieve an instance of the actual object you are going to use and
then ask it directly.
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sets the block size statically and also creates an enum with the
size. Use the enum instead of calling block_size() where possible,
since that uses two virtual function calls per block which is quite
unfortunate. The real advantages here as compared to the previous
version which kept the block size as a per-object u32bit:
- The compiler can inline the constant as an immediate operand
(previously it would load the value via an indirection on this)
- Removes 32 bits per object overhead (except in cases with actually
variable block sizes, which are very few and rarely used)
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harmonising MemoryRegion with std::vector:
The MemoryRegion::clear() function would zeroise the buffer, but keep
the memory allocated and the size unchanged. This is very different
from STL's clear(), which is basically the equivalent to what is
called destroy() in MemoryRegion. So to be able to replace MemoryRegion
with a std::vector, we have to rename destroy() to clear() and we have
to expose the current functionality of clear() in some other way, since
vector doesn't support this operation. Do so by adding a global function
named zeroise() which takes a MemoryRegion which is zeroed. Remove clear()
to ensure all callers are updated.
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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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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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enc/dec functions it replaces, these are public interfaces.
Add the first bits of a SSE2 implementation of Serpent. Currently incomplete.
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decryption. Currently only used for counter mode. Doesn't offer much
advantage as-is (though might help slightly, in terms of cache effects),
but allows for SIMD implementations to process multiple blocks in parallel
when possible. Particularly thinking here of Serpent; TEA/XTEA also seem
promising in this sense, as is Threefish once that is implemented as a
standalone block cipher.
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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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conflicts/collisions
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