SSL is implemented by devssl. It's extremely
obsolete by now, and is not used anywhere but
cpu, import, and oexportfs.
This change strips out the devssl bits, but
does not (yet) remove the code from libsec.
There are a number of alphabets in common use for base32
and base64 encoding, such as url-safe encodings.
This adds support for passing a function to encode into
arbitary alphabets.
The current date and time APIs on Plan 9 are not good. They're
inflexible, non-threadsafe, and don't expose timezone information.
This commit adds new time APIs that allow parsing arbitrary
dates, work from multiple threads, and can handle timezones
effectively.
this breaks the sample from the seconds manpage, and overall
produces funky results. this needs alot more testing.
term% seconds '23 may 2011'
seconds: tmparse: invalid date 23 may 2011 near 'may 2011'
term% seconds '2019-01-01 00:00:00'
-118370073600
Redo date handling in libc almost entirely. This allows
handling dates and times from outside your timezones,
fixes timezone loading in multithreaded applications,
and allows parsing and formatting using custom format
strings.
As a test of the APIs, we replace the formatting code in
seconds(1), shrinking it massively.
The last commit missed a few removals, and made it
unnecessarily hard to do an update.
Redo date handling in libc almost entirely. This allows
handling dates and times from outside your timezones,
fixes timezone loading in multithreaded applications,
and allows parsing and formatting using custom format
strings.
As a test of the APIs, we replace the formatting code in
seconds(1), shrinking it massively.
the string encoding functions touch secret key material
in a bunch of places (devtls, devcap), so make sure we do
not leak information by cache timing side channels, making
the encoding and decoding routines constant time.
we also expose the alphabets through encXchr()/decXchr()
functions so caller can find the end of a encoded string
before calling decode function (for libmp).
the base32 encoding was broken in several ways. inputs
lengths of len%5 == [2,3,4] had output truncated and
it was using non-standard alphabet. documenting the alphabet
change in the manpage.
the QLp structure used to occupy 24 bytes on amd64.
with some rearranging the fields we can get it to 16 bytes,
saving 8K in the data section for the 1024 preallocated
structs in the ql arena.
the rest of the changes are of cosmetic nature:
- getqlp() zeros the next pointer, so there is no need to set
it when queueing the entry.
- always explicitely compare pointers to nil.
- delete unused code from ape's qlock.c
semaphore locks have much higher overhead than initially presented
in the "Semaphores in Plan9" paper. until the reason for it has been
found out i will revert the changes.