- Update VS project templates to use the OpenSSL lib names and include
directories for OpenSSL 1.1.x.
This change means the VS project files will now build only with OpenSSL
1.1.x when an OpenSSL configuration is chosen. Prior to this change the
project files built only with OpenSSL 1.0.x (end-of-life) when an
OpenSSL configuration was chosen.
The template changes in this commit were made by script:
libeay32.lib => libcrypto.lib
ssleay32.lib => libssl.lib
..\..\..\..\..\openssl\inc32 => ..\..\..\..\..\openssl\include
And since the output directory now contains the includes it's prepended:
..\..\..\..\..\openssl\build\Win{32,64}\VC{6..15}\{DLL,LIB}
{Debug,Release}\include
- Change build-openssl.bat to copy the build's include directory to the
output directory (as seen above).
Each build has its own opensslconf.h which is different so we can't just
include the source include directory any longer.
Note the include directory in the output directory is a full copy from
the build so technically we don't need to include the OpenSSL source
include directory in the template. However, I left it last in case the
user made a custom OpenSSL build using the old method which would put
opensslconf in the OpenSSL source include directory.
- Change build-openssl.bat to use a temporary install directory that is
different from the temporary build directory.
For OpenSSL 1.1.x the temporary paths must be separate not a descendant
of the other, otherwise pdb files will be lost between builds.
Ref: https://curl.se/mail/lib-2018-10/0049.html
Ref: https://gist.github.com/jay/125191c35bbeb894444eff827651f755
Ref; https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues/10005
Fixes https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/984
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/6675
- s/USE_CYASSL/USE_WOLFSSL/
- Remove old compatibility macros.
Follow-up to 1c6c59a from several months ago when CyaSSL named symbols
were renamed to wolfSSL. The wolfSSL library was formerly named CyaSSL
and we kept using their old name for compatibility reasons, until
earlier this year.
All Windows APIs have been natively UTF-16 since Windows 2000 and the
non-Unicode variants are just wrappers around them. Only Windows 9x
doesn't understand Unicode without the UnicoWS DLL. As later Visual
Studio versions cannot target Windows 9x anyway, using the ANSI API
doesn't really have any benefit there.
This avoids issues like KNOWN_BUGS 6.5.
Ref: https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/2120
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/3720
The Visual Studio builds didn't use IPv6. Add it to all projects since
Visual Studio 2008, which is verified to build via AppVeyor.
Closes https://github.com/curl/curl/pull/3137
After squashing most of our compiler warnings, up'ed the default
warning level from 3 to 4 in order to increase the likelyhood of
catching future warnings.
Updated the makefiles and Visual Studio project files to support moving
the authentication code to the new lib/vauth directory that was started
in commit 0d04e859e1.
As these files don't need to contain references to the source files,
although typically do, added basic files which only include three
filters and don't require the project file generator to be modified.
These files allow the source code to be viewed in the Solution Explorer
in versions of Visual Studio from 2010 onwards in the same manner as
previous versions did rather than one large view of files.