Blow away Makefile.ssl.
Don't use $(EXHEADER) directly in for loops, as most shells will break if $(EXHEADER) is empty. Notified by many, solution suggested by Carson Gaspar <carson@taltos.org>
make update
Use sh explicitely to run point.sh This is part of a large change submitted by Markus Friedl <markus@openbsd.org>
Use double dashes so makedepend doesn't misunderstand the flags we give it. For 0.9.7 and up, that means util/domd needs to remove those double dashes from the argument list when gcc is used to find the dependencies.
Pass CFLAG to dependency makers, so non-standard system include paths are handled properly. Part of PR 75
'make update'
"make update".
Start to reduce some of the header bloat.
Header bloat reduction for EVP_PKEY.
make update
Really add the EVP and all of the DES changes.
'make update'
Instead of telling both 'make' and the user that ranlib errors can be tolerated, hide the error from 'make'. This gives shorter output both if ranlib fails and if it works.
e_os.h does not belong with the exported headers. Do not put it there and make all files the depend on it include it without prefixing it with openssl/. This means that all Makefiles will have $(TOP) as one of the include directories.
Make all configuration macros available for application by making sure they are available in opensslconf.h, by giving them names starting with "OPENSSL_" to avoid conflicts with other packages and by making sure e_os2.h will cover all platform-specific cases together with opensslconf.h. I've checked fairly well that nothing breaks with this (apart from external software that will adapt if they have used something like NO_KRB5), but I can't guarantee it completely, so a review of this change would be a good thing.
Make depend.
in some new file names the first 8 characters were not unique
The experimental Rijndael code moved to the main trunk. make update done.
'ranlib' doesn't always run on some systems. That's actually acceptable, since all that happens if it fails is a library with an index, which makes linking slower, but still working correctly.