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| apps/ | H | - | - | 32,860 | 25,950 |
| crypto/ | H | - | - | 228,650 | 153,143 |
| doc/ | H | - | - | 31,438 | 21,149 |
| ssl/ | H | - | - | 40,458 | 28,649 |
| CHANGES | H A D | 07-Jun-2006 | 322.5 KiB | 7,567 | 6,061 |
| FAQ | H A D | 07-Jun-2006 | 36.6 KiB | 844 | 611 |
| LICENSE | H A D | 07-Jun-2006 | 6.1 KiB | 128 | 120 |
| LICENSE.descrip | H A D | 03-May-2007 | 17 | 2 | 1 |
| NEWS | H A D | 07-Jun-2006 | 18.2 KiB | 413 | 355 |
| README | H A D | 07-Jun-2006 | 7.7 KiB | 197 | 154 |
| README.ENGINE | H A D | 14-Jun-2005 | 15.7 KiB | 290 | 255 |
| README.SUNW | H A D | 14-Jan-2009 | 3.8 KiB | 151 | 112 |
| e_os.h | H A D | 07-Jun-2006 | 21 KiB | 688 | 474 |
| e_os2.h | H A D | 07-Jun-2006 | 9.2 KiB | 273 | 143 |
README
1
2 OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005
3
4 Copyright (c) 1998-2005 The OpenSSL Project
5 Copyright (c) 1995-1998 Eric A. Young, Tim J. Hudson
6 All rights reserved.
7
8 DESCRIPTION
9 -----------
10
11 The OpenSSL Project is a collaborative effort to develop a robust,
12 commercial-grade, fully featured, and Open Source toolkit implementing the
13 Secure Sockets Layer (SSL v2/v3) and Transport Layer Security (TLS v1)
14 protocols as well as a full-strength general purpose cryptography library.
15 The project is managed by a worldwide community of volunteers that use the
16 Internet to communicate, plan, and develop the OpenSSL toolkit and its
17 related documentation.
18
19 OpenSSL is based on the excellent SSLeay library developed from Eric A. Young
20 and Tim J. Hudson. The OpenSSL toolkit is licensed under a dual-license (the
21 OpenSSL license plus the SSLeay license) situation, which basically means
22 that you are free to get and use it for commercial and non-commercial
23 purposes as long as you fulfill the conditions of both licenses.
24
25 OVERVIEW
26 --------
27
28 The OpenSSL toolkit includes:
29
30 libssl.a:
31 Implementation of SSLv2, SSLv3, TLSv1 and the required code to support
32 both SSLv2, SSLv3 and TLSv1 in the one server and client.
33
34 libcrypto.a:
35 General encryption and X.509 v1/v3 stuff needed by SSL/TLS but not
36 actually logically part of it. It includes routines for the following:
37
38 Ciphers
39 libdes - EAY's libdes DES encryption package which has been floating
40 around the net for a few years. It includes 15
41 'modes/variations' of DES (1, 2 and 3 key versions of ecb,
42 cbc, cfb and ofb; pcbc and a more general form of cfb and
43 ofb) including desx in cbc mode, a fast crypt(3), and
44 routines to read passwords from the keyboard.
45 RC4 encryption,
46 RC2 encryption - 4 different modes, ecb, cbc, cfb and ofb.
47 Blowfish encryption - 4 different modes, ecb, cbc, cfb and ofb.
48 IDEA encryption - 4 different modes, ecb, cbc, cfb and ofb.
49
50 Digests
51 MD5 and MD2 message digest algorithms, fast implementations,
52 SHA (SHA-0) and SHA-1 message digest algorithms,
53 MDC2 message digest. A DES based hash that is popular on smart cards.
54
55 Public Key
56 RSA encryption/decryption/generation.
57 There is no limit on the number of bits.
58 DSA encryption/decryption/generation.
59 There is no limit on the number of bits.
60 Diffie-Hellman key-exchange/key generation.
61 There is no limit on the number of bits.
62
63 X.509v3 certificates
64 X509 encoding/decoding into/from binary ASN1 and a PEM
65 based ASCII-binary encoding which supports encryption with a
66 private key. Program to generate RSA and DSA certificate
67 requests and to generate RSA and DSA certificates.
68
69 Systems
70 The normal digital envelope routines and base64 encoding. Higher
71 level access to ciphers and digests by name. New ciphers can be
72 loaded at run time. The BIO io system which is a simple non-blocking
73 IO abstraction. Current methods supported are file descriptors,
74 sockets, socket accept, socket connect, memory buffer, buffering, SSL
75 client/server, file pointer, encryption, digest, non-blocking testing
76 and null.
77
78 Data structures
79 A dynamically growing hashing system
80 A simple stack.
81 A Configuration loader that uses a format similar to MS .ini files.
82
83 openssl:
84 A command line tool that can be used for:
85 Creation of RSA, DH and DSA key parameters
86 Creation of X.509 certificates, CSRs and CRLs
87 Calculation of Message Digests
88 Encryption and Decryption with Ciphers
89 SSL/TLS Client and Server Tests
90 Handling of S/MIME signed or encrypted mail
91
92
93 PATENTS
94 -------
95
96 Various companies hold various patents for various algorithms in various
97 locations around the world. _YOU_ are responsible for ensuring that your use
98 of any algorithms is legal by checking if there are any patents in your
99 country. The file contains some of the patents that we know about or are
100 rumored to exist. This is not a definitive list.
101
102 RSA Security holds software patents on the RC5 algorithm. If you
103 intend to use this cipher, you must contact RSA Security for
104 licensing conditions. Their web page is http://www.rsasecurity.com/.
105
106 RC4 is a trademark of RSA Security, so use of this label should perhaps
107 only be used with RSA Security's permission.
108
109 The IDEA algorithm is patented by Ascom in Austria, France, Germany, Italy,
110 Japan, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, UK and the USA. They
111 should be contacted if that algorithm is to be used; their web page is
112 http://www.ascom.ch/.
113
114 The MDC2 algorithm is patented by IBM.
115
116 INSTALLATION
117 ------------
118
119 To install this package under a Unix derivative, read the INSTALL file. For
120 a Win32 platform, read the INSTALL.W32 file. For OpenVMS systems, read
121 INSTALL.VMS.
122
123 Read the documentation in the doc/ directory. It is quite rough, but it
124 lists the functions; you will probably have to look at the code to work out
125 how to use them. Look at the example programs.
126
127 PROBLEMS
128 --------
129
130 For some platforms, there are some known problems that may affect the user
131 or application author. We try to collect those in doc/PROBLEMS, with current
132 thoughts on how they should be solved in a future of OpenSSL.
133
134 SUPPORT
135 -------
136
137 If you have any problems with OpenSSL then please take the following steps
138 first:
139
140 - Download the current snapshot from ftp://ftp.openssl.org/snapshot/
141 to see if the problem has already been addressed
142 - Remove ASM versions of libraries
143 - Remove compiler optimisation flags
144
145 If you wish to report a bug then please include the following information in
146 any bug report:
147
148 - On Unix systems:
149 Self-test report generated by 'make report'
150 - On other systems:
151 OpenSSL version: output of 'openssl version -a'
152 OS Name, Version, Hardware platform
153 Compiler Details (name, version)
154 - Application Details (name, version)
155 - Problem Description (steps that will reproduce the problem, if known)
156 - Stack Traceback (if the application dumps core)
157
158 Report the bug to the OpenSSL project via the Request Tracker
159 (http://www.openssl.org/support/rt2.html) by mail to:
160
161 openssl-bugs@openssl.org
162
163 Note that mail to openssl-bugs@openssl.org is recorded in the publicly
164 readable request tracker database and is forwarded to a public
165 mailing list. Confidential mail may be sent to openssl-security@openssl.org
166 (PGP key available from the key servers).
167
168 HOW TO CONTRIBUTE TO OpenSSL
169 ----------------------------
170
171 Development is coordinated on the openssl-dev mailing list (see
172 http://www.openssl.org for information on subscribing). If you
173 would like to submit a patch, send it to openssl-dev@openssl.org with
174 the string "[PATCH]" in the subject. Please be sure to include a
175 textual explanation of what your patch does.
176
177 Note: For legal reasons, contributions from the US can be accepted only
178 if a TSU notification and a copy of the patch are sent to crypt@bis.doc.gov
179 (formerly BXA) with a copy to the ENC Encryption Request Coordinator;
180 please take some time to look at
181 http://www.bis.doc.gov/Encryption/PubAvailEncSourceCodeNofify.html [sic]
182 and
183 http://w3.access.gpo.gov/bis/ear/pdf/740.pdf (EAR Section 740.13(e))
184 for the details. If "your encryption source code is too large to serve as
185 an email attachment", they are glad to receive it by fax instead; hope you
186 have a cheap long-distance plan.
187
188 Our preferred format for changes is "diff -u" output. You might
189 generate it like this:
190
191 # cd openssl-work
192 # [your changes]
193 # ./Configure dist; make clean
194 # cd ..
195 # diff -ur openssl-orig openssl-work > mydiffs.patch
196
197
README.ENGINE
1 ENGINE
2 ======
3
4 With OpenSSL 0.9.6, a new component was added to support alternative
5 cryptography implementations, most commonly for interfacing with external
6 crypto devices (eg. accelerator cards). This component is called ENGINE,
7 and its presence in OpenSSL 0.9.6 (and subsequent bug-fix releases)
8 caused a little confusion as 0.9.6** releases were rolled in two
9 versions, a "standard" and an "engine" version. In development for 0.9.7,
10 the ENGINE code has been merged into the main branch and will be present
11 in the standard releases from 0.9.7 forwards.
12
13 There are currently built-in ENGINE implementations for the following
14 crypto devices:
15
16 o CryptoSwift
17 o Compaq Atalla
18 o nCipher CHIL
19 o Nuron
20 o Broadcom uBSec
21
22 In addition, dynamic binding to external ENGINE implementations is now
23 provided by a special ENGINE called "dynamic". See the "DYNAMIC ENGINE"
24 section below for details.
25
26 At this stage, a number of things are still needed and are being worked on:
27
28 1 Integration of EVP support.
29 2 Configuration support.
30 3 Documentation!
31
321 With respect to EVP, this relates to support for ciphers and digests in
33 the ENGINE model so that alternative implementations of existing
34 algorithms/modes (or previously unimplemented ones) can be provided by
35 ENGINE implementations.
36
372 Configuration support currently exists in the ENGINE API itself, in the
38 form of "control commands". These allow an application to expose to the
39 user/admin the set of commands and parameter types a given ENGINE
40 implementation supports, and for an application to directly feed string
41 based input to those ENGINEs, in the form of name-value pairs. This is an
42 extensible way for ENGINEs to define their own "configuration" mechanisms
43 that are specific to a given ENGINE (eg. for a particular hardware
44 device) but that should be consistent across *all* OpenSSL-based
45 applications when they use that ENGINE. Work is in progress (or at least
46 in planning) for supporting these control commands from the CONF (or
47 NCONF) code so that applications using OpenSSL's existing configuration
48 file format can have ENGINE settings specified in much the same way.
49 Presently however, applications must use the ENGINE API itself to provide
50 such functionality. To see first hand the types of commands available
51 with the various compiled-in ENGINEs (see further down for dynamic
52 ENGINEs), use the "engine" openssl utility with full verbosity, ie;
53 openssl engine -vvvv
54
553 Documentation? Volunteers welcome! The source code is reasonably well
56 self-documenting, but some summaries and usage instructions are needed -
57 moreover, they are needed in the same POD format the existing OpenSSL
58 documentation is provided in. Any complete or incomplete contributions
59 would help make this happen.
60
61 STABILITY & BUG-REPORTS
62 =======================
63
64 What already exists is fairly stable as far as it has been tested, but
65 the test base has been a bit small most of the time. For the most part,
66 the vendors of the devices these ENGINEs support have contributed to the
67 development and/or testing of the implementations, and *usually* (with no
68 guarantees) have experience in using the ENGINE support to drive their
69 devices from common OpenSSL-based applications. Bugs and/or inexplicable
70 behaviour in using a specific ENGINE implementation should be sent to the
71 author of that implementation (if it is mentioned in the corresponding C
72 file), and in the case of implementations for commercial hardware
73 devices, also through whatever vendor support channels are available. If
74 none of this is possible, or the problem seems to be something about the
75 ENGINE API itself (ie. not necessarily specific to a particular ENGINE
76 implementation) then you should mail complete details to the relevant
77 OpenSSL mailing list. For a definition of "complete details", refer to
78 the OpenSSL "README" file. As for which list to send it to;
79
80 openssl-users: if you are *using* the ENGINE abstraction, either in an
81 pre-compiled application or in your own application code.
82
83 openssl-dev: if you are discussing problems with OpenSSL source code.
84
85 USAGE
86 =====
87
88 The default "openssl" ENGINE is always chosen when performing crypto
89 operations unless you specify otherwise. You must actively tell the
90 openssl utility commands to use anything else through a new command line
91 switch called "-engine". Also, if you want to use the ENGINE support in
92 your own code to do something similar, you must likewise explicitly
93 select the ENGINE implementation you want.
94
95 Depending on the type of hardware, system, and configuration, "settings"
96 may need to be applied to an ENGINE for it to function as expected/hoped.
97 The recommended way of doing this is for the application to support
98 ENGINE "control commands" so that each ENGINE implementation can provide
99 whatever configuration primitives it might require and the application
100 can allow the user/admin (and thus the hardware vendor's support desk
101 also) to provide any such input directly to the ENGINE implementation.
102 This way, applications do not need to know anything specific to any
103 device, they only need to provide the means to carry such user/admin
104 input through to the ENGINE in question. Ie. this connects *you* (and
105 your helpdesk) to the specific ENGINE implementation (and device), and
106 allows application authors to not get buried in hassle supporting
107 arbitrary devices they know (and care) nothing about.
108
109 A new "openssl" utility, "openssl engine", has been added in that allows
110 for testing and examination of ENGINE implementations. Basic usage
111 instructions are available by specifying the "-?" command line switch.
112
113 DYNAMIC ENGINES
114 ===============
115
116 The new "dynamic" ENGINE provides a low-overhead way to support ENGINE
117 implementations that aren't pre-compiled and linked into OpenSSL-based
118 applications. This could be because existing compiled-in implementations
119 have known problems and you wish to use a newer version with an existing
120 application. It could equally be because the application (or OpenSSL
121 library) you are using simply doesn't have support for the ENGINE you
122 wish to use, and the ENGINE provider (eg. hardware vendor) is providing
123 you with a self-contained implementation in the form of a shared-library.
124 The other use-case for "dynamic" is with applications that wish to
125 maintain the smallest foot-print possible and so do not link in various
126 ENGINE implementations from OpenSSL, but instead leaves you to provide
127 them, if you want them, in the form of "dynamic"-loadable
128 shared-libraries. It should be possible for hardware vendors to provide
129 their own shared-libraries to support arbitrary hardware to work with
130 applications based on OpenSSL 0.9.7 or later. If you're using an
131 application based on 0.9.7 (or later) and the support you desire is only
132 announced for versions later than the one you need, ask the vendor to
133 backport their ENGINE to the version you need.
134
135 How does "dynamic" work?
136 ------------------------
137 The dynamic ENGINE has a special flag in its implementation such that
138 every time application code asks for the 'dynamic' ENGINE, it in fact
139 gets its own copy of it. As such, multi-threaded code (or code that
140 multiplexes multiple uses of 'dynamic' in a single application in any
141 way at all) does not get confused by 'dynamic' being used to do many
142 independent things. Other ENGINEs typically don't do this so there is
143 only ever 1 ENGINE structure of its type (and reference counts are used
144 to keep order). The dynamic ENGINE itself provides absolutely no
145 cryptographic functionality, and any attempt to "initialise" the ENGINE
146 automatically fails. All it does provide are a few "control commands"
147 that can be used to control how it will load an external ENGINE
148 implementation from a shared-library. To see these control commands,
149 use the command-line;
150
151 openssl engine -vvvv dynamic
152
153 The "SO_PATH" control command should be used to identify the
154 shared-library that contains the ENGINE implementation, and "NO_VCHECK"
155 might possibly be useful if there is a minor version conflict and you
156 (or a vendor helpdesk) is convinced you can safely ignore it.
157 "ID" is probably only needed if a shared-library implements
158 multiple ENGINEs, but if you know the engine id you expect to be using,
159 it doesn't hurt to specify it (and this provides a sanity check if
160 nothing else). "LIST_ADD" is only required if you actually wish the
161 loaded ENGINE to be discoverable by application code later on using the
162 ENGINE's "id". For most applications, this isn't necessary - but some
163 application authors may have nifty reasons for using it. The "LOAD"
164 command is the only one that takes no parameters and is the command
165 that uses the settings from any previous commands to actually *load*
166 the shared-library ENGINE implementation. If this command succeeds, the
167 (copy of the) 'dynamic' ENGINE will magically morph into the ENGINE
168 that has been loaded from the shared-library. As such, any control
169 commands supported by the loaded ENGINE could then be executed as per
170 normal. Eg. if ENGINE "foo" is implemented in the shared-library
171 "libfoo.so" and it supports some special control command "CMD_FOO", the
172 following code would load and use it (NB: obviously this code has no
173 error checking);
174
175 ENGINE *e = ENGINE_by_id("dynamic");
176 ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(e, "SO_PATH", "/lib/libfoo.so", 0);
177 ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(e, "ID", "foo", 0);
178 ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(e, "LOAD", NULL, 0);
179 ENGINE_ctrl_cmd_string(e, "CMD_FOO", "some input data", 0);
180
181 For testing, the "openssl engine" utility can be useful for this sort
182 of thing. For example the above code excerpt would achieve much the
183 same result as;
184
185 openssl engine dynamic \
186 -pre SO_PATH:/lib/libfoo.so \
187 -pre ID:foo \
188 -pre LOAD \
189 -pre "CMD_FOO:some input data"
190
191 Or to simply see the list of commands supported by the "foo" ENGINE;
192
193 openssl engine -vvvv dynamic \
194 -pre SO_PATH:/lib/libfoo.so \
195 -pre ID:foo \
196 -pre LOAD
197
198 Applications that support the ENGINE API and more specifically, the
199 "control commands" mechanism, will provide some way for you to pass
200 such commands through to ENGINEs. As such, you would select "dynamic"
201 as the ENGINE to use, and the parameters/commands you pass would
202 control the *actual* ENGINE used. Each command is actually a name-value
203 pair and the value can sometimes be omitted (eg. the "LOAD" command).
204 Whilst the syntax demonstrated in "openssl engine" uses a colon to
205 separate the command name from the value, applications may provide
206 their own syntax for making that separation (eg. a win32 registry
207 key-value pair may be used by some applications). The reason for the
208 "-pre" syntax in the "openssl engine" utility is that some commands
209 might be issued to an ENGINE *after* it has been initialised for use.
210 Eg. if an ENGINE implementation requires a smart-card to be inserted
211 during initialisation (or a PIN to be typed, or whatever), there may be
212 a control command you can issue afterwards to "forget" the smart-card
213 so that additional initialisation is no longer possible. In
214 applications such as web-servers, where potentially volatile code may
215 run on the same host system, this may provide some arguable security
216 value. In such a case, the command would be passed to the ENGINE after
217 it has been initialised for use, and so the "-post" switch would be
218 used instead. Applications may provide a different syntax for
219 supporting this distinction, and some may simply not provide it at all
220 ("-pre" is almost always what you're after, in reality).
221
222 How do I build a "dynamic" ENGINE?
223 ----------------------------------
224 This question is trickier - currently OpenSSL bundles various ENGINE
225 implementations that are statically built in, and any application that
226 calls the "ENGINE_load_builtin_engines()" function will automatically
227 have all such ENGINEs available (and occupying memory). Applications
228 that don't call that function have no ENGINEs available like that and
229 would have to use "dynamic" to load any such ENGINE - but on the other
230 hand such applications would only have the memory footprint of any
231 ENGINEs explicitly loaded using user/admin provided control commands.
232 The main advantage of not statically linking ENGINEs and only using
233 "dynamic" for hardware support is that any installation using no
234 "external" ENGINE suffers no unnecessary memory footprint from unused
235 ENGINEs. Likewise, installations that do require an ENGINE incur the
236 overheads from only *that* ENGINE once it has been loaded.
237
238 Sounds good? Maybe, but currently building an ENGINE implementation as
239 a shared-library that can be loaded by "dynamic" isn't automated in
240 OpenSSL's build process. It can be done manually quite easily however.
241 Such a shared-library can either be built with any OpenSSL code it
242 needs statically linked in, or it can link dynamically against OpenSSL
243 if OpenSSL itself is built as a shared library. The instructions are
244 the same in each case, but in the former (statically linked any
245 dependencies on OpenSSL) you must ensure OpenSSL is built with
246 position-independent code ("PIC"). The default OpenSSL compilation may
247 already specify the relevant flags to do this, but you should consult
248 with your compiler documentation if you are in any doubt.
249
250 This example will show building the "atalla" ENGINE in the
251 crypto/engine/ directory as a shared-library for use via the "dynamic"
252 ENGINE.
253 1) "cd" to the crypto/engine/ directory of a pre-compiled OpenSSL
254 source tree.
255 2) Recompile at least one source file so you can see all the compiler
256 flags (and syntax) being used to build normally. Eg;
257 touch hw_atalla.c ; make
258 will rebuild "hw_atalla.o" using all such flags.
259 3) Manually enter the same compilation line to compile the
260 "hw_atalla.c" file but with the following two changes;
261 (a) add "-DENGINE_DYNAMIC_SUPPORT" to the command line switches,
262 (b) change the output file from "hw_atalla.o" to something new,
263 eg. "tmp_atalla.o"
264 4) Link "tmp_atalla.o" into a shared-library using the top-level
265 OpenSSL libraries to resolve any dependencies. The syntax for doing
266 this depends heavily on your system/compiler and is a nightmare
267 known well to anyone who has worked with shared-library portability
268 before. 'gcc' on Linux, for example, would use the following syntax;
269 gcc -shared -o dyn_atalla.so tmp_atalla.o -L../.. -lcrypto
270 5) Test your shared library using "openssl engine" as explained in the
271 previous section. Eg. from the top-level directory, you might try;
272 apps/openssl engine -vvvv dynamic \
273 -pre SO_PATH:./crypto/engine/dyn_atalla.so -pre LOAD
274 If the shared-library loads successfully, you will see both "-pre"
275 commands marked as "SUCCESS" and the list of control commands
276 displayed (because of "-vvvv") will be the control commands for the
277 *atalla* ENGINE (ie. *not* the 'dynamic' ENGINE). You can also add
278 the "-t" switch to the utility if you want it to try and initialise
279 the atalla ENGINE for use to test any possible hardware/driver
280 issues.
281
282 PROBLEMS
283 ========
284
285 It seems like the ENGINE part doesn't work too well with CryptoSwift on Win32.
286 A quick test done right before the release showed that trying "openssl speed
287 -engine cswift" generated errors. If the DSO gets enabled, an attempt is made
288 to write at memory address 0x00000002.
289
290
README.SUNW
1#
2# Copyright 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
3# Use is subject to license terms.
4#
5
6The version of OpenSSL found in this directory was created by taking the
7stock version of OpenSSL 0.9.8a from www.openssl.org and modifying some of
8the files to conform to Sun standards.
9
10This work is based on previous work done on stock version of OpenSSL 0.9.7d
11shipped with Solaris 10.
12
13===================
14Configure options
15===================
16
17Below are the options and the targets given to the Configure script.
18
19To build shared objects,
20
21 ./Configure \
22 no-ec \
23 no-ecdh \
24 no-ecdsa \
25 no-rc3 \
26 no-rc5 \
27 no-mdc2 \
28 no-idea \
29 no-hw_cswift \
30 no-hw_ncipher \
31 no-hw_atalla \
32 no-hw_nuron \
33 no-hw_ubsec \
34 no-hw_aep \
35 no-hw_sureware \
36 no-hw_4758-cca \
37 no-hw_chil \
38 no-hw_gmp \
39 threads \
40 shared \
41 $TARGET
42
43, where TARGET is one of the three, depending on the target architecture:
44
45 solaris-sparcv8-cc (sparc)
46 solaris64-sparcv9-cc (sparcv9)
47 solaris-x86-cc (i386)
48
49
50For libcrypto.a and libssl.a used by wanboot,
51
52 ./Configure \
53 no-aes \
54 no-cast \
55 no-dso \
56 no-ec \
57 no-ecdh \
58 no-ecdsa \
59 no-mdc2 \
60 no-rc3 \
61 no-rc4 \
62 no-rc5 \
63 no-ripemd \
64 no-idea \
65 no-hw \
66 no-threads \
67 solaris64-sparcv9-cc
68
69
70===============================================
71The files differ from the original distribution
72===============================================
73
74The following files are different from the OpenSSL 0.9.8a release.
75
761. This header file is generated by Configure. We combined four versions of
77 this file generated by four runs of Configure.
78
79 crypto/opensslconf.h
80
812. Solaris OpenSSL supports PKCS#11 engine.
82 This code may go back to the open-source community in the future.
83
84 The following files were created.
85
86 crypto/engine/hw_pk11_err.h
87 crypto/engine/hw_pk11.c
88 crypto/engine/hw_pk11_err.c
89 crypto/engine/hw_pk11_pub.c
90
91 The following files were modified.
92
93 crypto/engine/engine.h
94
953. These files were modified to load the PKCS#11 engine.
96 Added code is surrounded by "#ifdef SOLARIS_OPENSSL".
97
98 crypto/engine/eng_cnf.c
99 crypto/engine/hw_pk11.c
100
101
1024. We have a special case where OpenSSL is used by the "wanboot" binary
103 program, that is run to boot the wanboot client.
104 The following files are modified for this purpose. Added code is
105 surrounded by "#ifdef _BOOT".
106
107 crypto/opensslconf.h
108 crypto/err/err_all.c
109 crypto/evp/evp_key.c
110 crypto/rand/rand_unix.c
111 crypto/rand/randfile.c
112 crypto/x509v3/v3_utl.c
113 e_os.h
114
115
1165. The configuration file was modified to ship with Solaris defaults.
117
118 $SRC/cmd/openssl/openssl.cnf
119 (Note: apps/openssl.cnf is unused.)
120
121
1226. Two files were added for a clean ON build even though the majority
123 if OpenSSL code itself is not subject to lint checks (with the exception
124 of crypto/engine/hw_pk11*.[ch] files).
125
126 crypto/llib-lcrypto
127 ssl/llib-lssl
128
1297. OpenSSL version string was modified. Due to the fact that we don't upgrade
130 OpenSSL frequently we are forced to patch the currently shipped version. The
131 problem with this aproach is that normally, every security vulnerability fix
132 triggers a new release of OpenSSL so people can easily check whether their
133 currently installed version is vulnerable or not. That is not possible with a
134 patched older version. So, we decided to put the security bug tags into the
135 version string, like this:
136
137 OpenSSL 0.9.8a 11 Oct 2005 (+ security fixes for: CAN-2005-2969 CVE-2006-3738
138 CVE-2006-4343 CVE-2007-3108 CVE-2007-5135 CVE-2008-5077)
139
140 Note that actually it's all on the same line because we want to avoid
141 problems with Configure scripts that might rely on the fact that the original
142 OpenSSL version string consists of one line only.
143
144 Be aware that the version string is not considered a stable interface and
145 that all security vulnerability reports are available via SunAlert
146 notifications.
147
1488. And, finally, this file was added.
149
150 README.SUNW
151