wolfssl has a fine grained feature and compatibility control
for compiling stunnel, lighthttp or (partly) openssl dropin
ustream-ssl uses features that require normally
HAVE_SNI, HAVE_STUNNEL and the openssl compatibility headers
ar71xx ipkg sizes of wolfssl 3.9.0:
- with stunnel: 144022
- this patch (w.o. stunnel): 131712
- without openssl(extra): 111104
- w.o openssl/sni:108515
- w.o openssl/sni/ecc: 93954
so patch 300 saves around 12k compressed ipkg size
v2: keep & rename patch 300 for clarity, fixes ustream-ssl/cyassl
that broke with v1
Signed-off-by: Dirk Neukirchen <dirkneukirchen@web.de>
The LNA improves the rx path. Within a simple test setup
it improved the signal from -60dbm to -40dbm.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Couzens <lynxis@fe80.eu>
This change switches ARC tools to the most recent arc-2016.03
version.
ARC GNU tools of version arc-2016.03 bring some quite significant
changes like:
* Binutils v2.26+ (upstream commit id 202ac19 with additional ARC
* patches)
* GCC v4.8.5
* GDB 7.10
More about changes, improvements and fixes could be found here:
https://github.com/foss-for-synopsys-dwc-arc-processors/toolchain/releases/tag/arc-2016.03
Signed-off-by: Alexey Brodkin <abrodkin@synopsys.com>
Typo, missing space before ] in previous commit caused shell syntax
failure and incorrect restoration of time.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Darbyshire-Bryant <kevin@darbyshire-bryant.me.uk>
fixes:
CVE-2016-3739: TLS certificate check bypass with mbedTLS/PolarSSL
- remove crypto auth compile fix
curl changelog of 7.46 states its fixed
- fix mbedtls and cyassl usability #19621 :
add path to certificate file (from Mozilla via curl) and
provide this in a new package
tested on ar71xx w. curl/mbedtls/wolfssl
Signed-off-by: Dirk Neukirchen <dirkneukirchen@web.de>
conditionally save dnsmasq.time across sysupgrade
dnsmasq uses /etc/dnsmasq.time as record of the last known good
system time to aid its validation of dnssec timestamps. dnsmasq
updates the timestamp on process start/stop once it considers the system
time as valid. The timestamp file should be preserved across system
upgrade but should not be included as part of normal configuration
backups to prevent restores corrupting the current timestamp.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Darbyshire-Bryant <kevin@darbyshire-bryant.me.uk>
dnsmasq maintains dnsmasq.time across reboots and uses it as a means of
determining if current time is good enough to validate dnssec time
stamps. By including /etc/dnsmasq.time as a time source for sysfixtime,
the mechanism was effectively defeated because time was set to the
last time that dnsmasq considered current even though that time is in
the past. Since that time is out of date, dns(sec) resolution would
fail thus defeating any ntp based mechanisms for setting the clock
correctly.
In theory the process is defeated by any files in /etc that are newer
than /etc/dnsmasq.time however dnsmasq now updates the file's timestamp
on process TERM so hopefully /etc/dnsmasq.time is the latest file
timestamp in /etc as part of LEDE shutdown/reboot.
Either way, including /etc/dnsmasq.time as a time source for
sysfixtime is not helpful.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Darbyshire-Bryant <kevin@darbyshire-bryant.me.uk>
When imagebuild sorts package lists it breaks opkg's ability to realize
that a providers for a Provides has already been installed, when the sort
results in the provider being later in the list of packages that a package
which depends on a Provides (and hence the provider is not yet installed
for opkg to realize the provider was available doesn't not handle the case
of a package that is to be installed satisfying a dependency, only one that
is already installed (or which it schedules to be installed, which in the
absence of an installed provider is whichever provider happens to be the
default)
Signed-off-by: Daniel Dickinson <openwrt@daniel.thecshore.com>
conditionally save dnsmasq.time across sysupgrade
dnsmasq uses /etc/dnsmasq.time as record of the last known good
system time to aid its validation of dnssec timestamps. dnsmasq
updates the timestamp on process start/stop once it considers the system
time as valid. The timestamp file should be preserved across system
upgrade but should not be included as part of normal configuration
backups to prevent restores corrupting the current timestamp.
dnsmasq maintains dnsmasq.time across reboots and uses it as a means of
determining if current time is good enough to validate dnssec time
stamps. By including /etc/dnsmasq.time as a time source for sysfixtime,
the mechanism was effectively defeated because time was set to the
last time that dnsmasq considered current even though that time is in
the past. Since that time is out of date, dns(sec) resolution would
fail thus defeating any ntp based mechanisms for setting the clock
correctly.
In theory the process is defeated by any files in /etc that are newer
than /etc/dnsmasq.time however dnsmasq now updates the file's timestamp
on process TERM so hopefully /etc/dnsmasq.time is the latest file
timestamp in /etc as part of LEDE shutdown/reboot.
Either way, including /etc/dnsmasq.time as a time source for
sysfixtime is not helpful.