We used to link both libraries at once, but now that I'm working on
TLS, there's nothing left to keep OpenSSL around for when NSS is
enabled.
Note that this patch causes a couple of places that still assumed
OpenSSL to be disabled when NSS is enabled
- tor-gencert
- pbkdf2
I hope that the debian clang maintainers will look at debian bug
903709 soon. But until they do, this should keep our users and our
CI happy on sid with clang.
Closes ticket 26779.
If we're building for Windows, we want to use windows threads no
matter what, and we don't want to link a pthread library even if it
is present. Fixes bug 27081; bugfix on 1790dc6760 in 0.1.0.1-rc.
Based on a patch from Hello71 on ticket 20424.
This patch additionally fixes openbsd-malloc support, switches
our tcmalloc support to use pkgconfig, and tells the compiler to
omit system malloc implementations as appropriate.
squash! Add a --with-malloc option.
Edit changelog file to fix a typo and credit Alex Xu in preferred format.
Conditionalize the pragma that temporarily disables
-Wunused-const-variable. Some versions of gcc don't support it. We
need to do this because of an apparent bug in some libzstd headers.
Fixes bug 26785; bugfix on 0.3.2.11.
Work around two different bugs in the OS X 10.10 and later SDKs that would
prevent us from successfully targeting earlier versions of OS X.
Fixes bug 26876; bugfix on 0.3.3.1-alpha.
We have to check for ERR_load_KDF_strings() here, since that's the
only one that's actually a function rather than a macro.
Fixes compilation with LibreSSL. Fixes bug 26712; bug not in
any released Tor.
When we do redefine them, use inline functions instead of #define.
This fixes a latent code problem in our redefinition of these
functions, which was exposed by our refactoring: Previously, we
would #define strcasecmp after string.h was included, so nothing bad
would happen. But when we refactored, we would sometimes #define it
first, which was a problem on mingw, whose headers contain
(approximately):
inline int strcasecmp (const char *a, const char *b)
{ return _stricmp(a,b); }
Our define turned this into:
inline int _stricmp(const char *a, const char *b)
{ return _stricmp(a,b); }
And GCC would correctly infer that this function would loop forever,
rather than actually comparing anything. This caused bug 26594.
Fixes bug 26594; bug not in any released version of Tor.