Previously, public headers lived next to the respective code and there
were symlinks from include/openssl to them.
This doesn't work on Windows.
This change moves the headers to live in include/openssl. In cases where
some symlinks pointed to the same header, I've added a file that just
includes the intended target. These cases are all for backwards-compat.
Change-Id: I6e285b74caf621c644b5168a4877db226b07fd92
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/1180
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
This change adds the stitched RC4-MD5 code from upstream OpenSSL but
exposes it as an AEAD. It's not a normal AEAD (it's stateful thus
doesn't take an nonce) but forcing pre-AEAD cipher suites in the AEAD
interface is less painful than forcing AEADs into the EVP_CIPHER
interface. Over time, more and more cipher suites will be exposed as
TLS-specific AEADs and then ssl/ can drop support for EVP_CIPHER.
See original code from upstream:
https://github.com/openssl/openssl/blob/master/crypto/evp/e_rc4_hmac_md5.c
Change-Id: Ia9267b224747f02be6b934ea0b2b50e1f529fab9
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/1043
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Regression test against CVE-2014-0160 (Heartbleed).
More info: http://mike-bland.com/tags/heartbleed.html
(Imported from upstream's 2312a84ca17c5ac133581552df7024957cf15bc8)
Initial fork from f2d678e6e89b6508147086610e985d4e8416e867 (1.0.2 beta).
(This change contains substantial changes from the original and
effectively starts a new history.)