This patch lets libwebsockets use the lastest version of wolfSSL (the new name for CyaSSL).
The reason for the patch is that allthough wolfSSL provides compatibility headers for (old) projects using CyaSSL,
these are incomplete and do not work for libwebsockets.
The patch also fixes a typo in CMakeLists.txt where CYASSL_LIBRARIES was added to include_directories() instead of CYASSL_INCLUDE_DIRS.
Signed-off-by: ABruines <alexander.bruines@gmail.com>
AG: added changelog and documentation comment
Signed-off-by: Gadkari Mugdha <mugdha.gadkari@siemens.com>
Reviewed-by: Roger Meier <r.meier@siemens.com>
HTTP reject error code returned by server during HTTP handshake is extracted and sent to the client application.
With this fix, the Connection error callback will include the HTTP reject status code and response frame received from server. This string passed in Connection error callback can be read or ignored by client application based on client application requirement
This replaces gethostbyname in libwebsockets_get_peer_addresses and
in the client handshake path.
There's one left in lws-plat-win but that can be done another time.
Let's see how much damage that did to the cross-platform and option
builds...
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
In some situations the private key is not directly available via
filesystem (for example, when stored on a smartcard). If this is
the case, the user can set the private key filepath to NULL and
expect this callback reason to set the key directly via openSSL
library calls.
- added options to minilex.c
- regenerated lextable.h
- added WSI_TOKEN_OPTIONS_URI to libwebsockets.h
- tweaked parsers.c to accommodate OPTIONS token
- tweaked server.c to set uri_ptr and uri_len for HTTP callback on OPTIONS as well
Help user code be compatible with multiple LWS versions by
providing #ifdef -testable flags for API changes
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>
This gets rid of all the platform-dependent #ifdef stuff and
migrates it into the new lws-plat-xxx.c files.
These are then included in a one-time test in libwebsockets.c
according basically to Windows or not.
The idea is from now on, all Windows-specific code should go in
lws-plat-win.c, where any kind of Windows perversion like DWORD
is fine.
Any new functions going in there should be named lws_plat_...
and be defined in all the lws-plat-xxx.c file (currently just
win32 and unix platforms are supported).
Signed-off-by: Andy Green <andy.green@linaro.org>