On Windows a long integer is always 32-bits, even when the target
architecture uses 64-bit pointers.
PR-URL: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/pull/124
Reviewed-By: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl>
This reverts commit 878cc3e532.
Reverted for breaking the x86_64 Linux build:
In file included from ../deps/openssl/openssl/include/openssl/bn.h:1:0,
from ../deps/openssl/openssl/crypto/bn/asm/../bn_lcl.h:115,
from ../deps/openssl/openssl/crypto/bn/asm/x86_64-gcc.c:1:
../deps/openssl/openssl/include/openssl/../../crypto/bn/bn.h:813:20: note: previous declaration of 'bn_add_words' was here
BN_ULONG bn_add_words(BN_ULONG *rp, const BN_ULONG *ap, const BN_ULONG *bp,int num);
^
../deps/openssl/openssl/crypto/bn/asm/x86_64-gcc.c:210:15: error: conflicting types for 'bn_sub_words'
BN_ULONG bn_sub_words (BN_ULONG *rp, const BN_ULONG *ap, const BN_ULONG *bp,int n)
On Windows (and potentially other LP64 platforms), a long integer is
always 32-bits, even when the target architecture uses 64-bit pointers.
Signed-off-by: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
After much investigation it turns out that the affected servers are
buggy. user-service.condenastdigital.com:443 in particular seems to
reject large TLS handshake records. Cutting down the number of
advertised ciphers or disabling SNI fixes the issue.
Similarly, passing { secureOptions: constants.SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1_2 }
seems to fix most connection issues with IIS servers.
Having to work around buggy servers is annoying for our users but not
a reason to downgrade OpenSSL. Therefore, revert it.
This reverts commit 4fdb8acdae.
This commit undoes the downgrade from OpenSSL v1.0.1e to v1.0.0f,
effectively upgrading OpenSSL to v1.0.1e again. The reason for the
downgrade was to work around compatibility issues with certain TLS
servers in the stable branch. See the commit log of 4fdb8ac and the
linked issue for details. We're going to revisit that in the master
branch.
This reverts commit 4fdb8acdae.
Several people have reported issues with IIS and Resin servers (or maybe
SSL terminators sitting in front of those servers) that are fixed by
downgrading OpenSSL. The AESNI performance improvements were nice but
stability is more important. Downgrade OpenSSL from 1.0.1e to 1.0.0f.
Fixes#5360 (and others).
This patch brings the openssl library that is built with gyp closer
to what the standard build system produces.
All opensslconf.h versions are now merged into a single file, which
makes it easier for compiled addons to locate this file.
Removed NO_CAST, NO_MD2 and NO_STORE because otherwise there were build errors.
Added NO_CAMELLIA, NO_MDC2, and NO_CMS because otherwise there were linker errors.