Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Benjamin
eee7306c72 Get bssl tool building on Windows.
This lets us run bssl speed at least. bssl client is currently compiled
out until we clean up our socket story on Windows and get it working.

Change-Id: Ib1dc0d0e0a6eed7544207e7bbe138503731fda67
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/2103
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2014-10-31 22:02:01 +00:00
Adam Langley
5f51c25303 Add -cipher option to bssl client.
Change-Id: I3da1af62de9a94317fa7f14fda00e230b32bf5d5
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/2081
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2014-10-29 20:48:23 +00:00
Ben Laurie
eba2384e53 Missing includes for FreeBSD.
Change-Id: I4ea02a41ed614047ecda156d0c572b04baa174e6
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/1852
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2014-09-30 19:15:15 +00:00
David Benjamin
859ec3cc09 Add SSL_CTX_set_keylog_bio.
Configures the SSL stack to log session information to a BIO. The intent is to
support NSS's SSLKEYLOGFILE environment variable. Add support for the same
environment variable to tool/client.cc.

Tested against Wireshark 1.12.0.

BUG=393477

Change-Id: I4c231f9abebf194eb2df4aaeeafa337516774c95
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/1699
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
2014-09-03 20:15:55 +00:00
Adam Langley
30eda1d2b8 Include some build fixes for OS X.
Apart from the obvious little issues, this also works around a
(seeming) libtool/linker:

a.c defines a symbol:

int kFoo;

b.c uses it:

extern int kFoo;

int f() {
  return kFoo;
}

compile them:

$ gcc -c a.c
$ gcc -c b.c

and create a dummy main in order to run it, main.c:

int f();

int main() {
  return f();
}

this works as expected:

$ gcc main.c a.o b.o

but, if we make an archive:

$ ar q lib.a a.o b.o

and use that:

$ gcc main.c lib.a
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64
  "_kFoo", referenced from:
    _f in lib.a(b.o)

(It doesn't matter what order the .o files are put into the .a)

Linux and Windows don't seem to have this problem.

nm on a.o shows that the symbol is of type "C", which is a "common symbol"[1].
Basically the linker will merge multiple common symbol definitions together.

If ones makes a.c read:

int kFoo = 0;

Then one gets a type "D" symbol - a "data section symbol" and everything works
just fine.

This might actually be a libtool bug instead of an ld bug: Looking at `xxd
lib.a | less`, the __.SYMDEF SORTED index at the beginning of the archive
doesn't contain an entry for kFoo unless initialised.

Change-Id: I4cdad9ba46e9919221c3cbd79637508959359427
2014-06-24 11:15:12 -07:00
Adam Langley
bbb42ffaf4 Silence spurious GCC warning.
Change-Id: Iae1d12a25184261fef175b39e5dbc84afb1c006c
2014-06-23 11:25:49 -07:00
Adam Langley
aacec17a63 Add client functionality to helper tool. 2014-06-20 13:17:37 -07:00