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explicit.
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In some cases this can offer better optimization, via devirtualization.
And it lets the user know the class is not intended for derivation.
Some discussion in GH #402
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Previously we were hanging on the type destructors to pull in
the relevant objects. However that fails in many simple cases
where the object is never deleted.
For every type involved in the algo registry add static create
and providers functions to access the algo registry. Modify
lookup.h to be inline and call those functions, and move
a few to sub-headers (eg, get_pbkdf going to pbkdf.h). So
accessing the registry involves going through the same file
that handles the initialization, so there is no way to end up
with missing objs.
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The support problems from having static libraries not work in the
obvious way will be endless trouble. Instead have each set of
registrations tag along in a source file for the basic type, at the
cost of some extra ifdefs. On shared libs this is harmless -
everything is going into the shared object anyway. With static libs,
this means pulling in a single block cipher pulls in the text of all
the them. But that's still strictly better than the amalgamation
(which is really pulling in everything), and it works (unlike status quo).
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Fix two memory leaks (in TLS and modes) caused by calling get_foo and
then cloning the result before saving it (leaking the original object),
a holdover from the conversion between construction techniques in 1.11.14
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ctypes Python wrapper that uses it. The API is intentionally designed
to have a very simple ABI (extern "C", all structs are opaque, no
memory ownership passing the FFI boundary, limited set of simple types
as args) so the ctypes wrapper is quite simple.
Currently ffi provides ciphers, hashes, MACs, RNGs, PBKDF, KDF,
bcrypt, and most public key operations.
Remove the old boost.python wrapper and all the build code for it.
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