This change marks public symbols as dynamically exported. This means
that it becomes viable to build a shared library of libcrypto and libssl
with -fvisibility=hidden.
On Windows, one not only needs to mark functions for export in a
component, but also for import when using them from a different
component. Because of this we have to build with
|BORINGSSL_IMPLEMENTATION| defined when building the code. Other
components, when including our headers, won't have that defined and then
the |OPENSSL_EXPORT| tag becomes an import tag instead. See the #defines
in base.h
In the asm code, symbols are now hidden by default and those that need
to be exported are wrapped by a C function.
In order to support Chromium, a couple of libssl functions were moved to
ssl.h from ssl_locl.h: ssl_get_new_session and ssl_update_cache.
Change-Id: Ib4b76e2f1983ee066e7806c24721e8626d08a261
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/1350
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
(Imported from upstream's 912f08dd5ed4f68fb275f3b2db828349fcffba14,
52f856526c46ee80ef4c8c37844f084423a3eff7 and
377551b9c4e12aa7846f4d80cf3604f2e396c964)
Change-Id: Ic2bf93371f6d246818729810e7a45b3f0021845a
This ensures high performance is situations when assembler supports
AVX2, but not AD*X.
(Imported from upstream's 82a9dafe32e1e39b5adff18f9061e43d8df3d3c5)
Change-Id: Ie67f49a1c5467807139b6a8a0d4e62162d8a974f
(This appears to be the case with upstream too, it's not that BoringSSL
is missing optimisations from what I can see.)
Change-Id: I0e54762ef0d09e60994ec82c5cca1ff0b3b23ea4
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/1080
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
(The issue was reported by Shay Gueron.)
The final reduction in Montgomery multiplication computes if (X >= m) then X =
X - m else X = X
In OpenSSL, this was done by computing T = X - m, doing a constant-time
selection of the *addresses* of X and T, and loading from the resulting
address. But this is not cache-neutral.
This patch changes the behaviour by loading both X and T into registers, and
doing a constant-time selection of the *values*.
TODO(fork): only some of the fixes from the original patch still apply to
the 1.0.2 code.
Initial fork from f2d678e6e89b6508147086610e985d4e8416e867 (1.0.2 beta).
(This change contains substantial changes from the original and
effectively starts a new history.)