#ifndef HEADER_OPENSSLV_H
-#define HEADER_OPENSSLV_H
+# define HEADER_OPENSSLV_H
-/* Numeric release version identifier:
- * MMNNFFPPS: major minor fix patch status
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+extern "C" {
+#endif
+
+/*-
+ * Numeric release version identifier:
+ * MNNFFPPS: major minor fix patch status
* The status nibble has one of the values 0 for development, 1 to e for betas
* 1 to 14, and f for release. The patch level is exactly that.
* For example:
- * 0.9.3-dev 0x00903000
- * 0.9.3-beta1 0x00903001
+ * 0.9.3-dev 0x00903000
+ * 0.9.3-beta1 0x00903001
* 0.9.3-beta2-dev 0x00903002
* 0.9.3-beta2 0x00903002 (same as ...beta2-dev)
- * 0.9.3 0x0090300f
- * 0.9.3a 0x0090301f
- * 0.9.4 0x0090400f
- * 1.2.3z 0x102031af
+ * 0.9.3 0x0090300f
+ * 0.9.3a 0x0090301f
+ * 0.9.4 0x0090400f
+ * 1.2.3z 0x102031af
*
* For continuity reasons (because 0.9.5 is already out, and is coded
* 0x00905100), between 0.9.5 and 0.9.6 the coding of the patch level
* (Prior to 0.9.5a beta1, a different scheme was used: MMNNFFRBB for
* major minor fix final patch/beta)
*/
-#define OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER 0x00906001L
-#define OPENSSL_VERSION_TEXT "OpenSSL 0.9.6-beta1 11 Sep 2000"
-#define OPENSSL_VERSION_PTEXT " part of " OPENSSL_VERSION_TEXT
-
+# define OPENSSL_VERSION_NUMBER 0x10002150L
+# ifdef OPENSSL_FIPS
+# define OPENSSL_VERSION_TEXT "OpenSSL 1.0.2u-fips-dev xx XXX xxxx"
+# else
+# define OPENSSL_VERSION_TEXT "OpenSSL 1.0.2u-dev xx XXX xxxx"
+# endif
+# define OPENSSL_VERSION_PTEXT " part of " OPENSSL_VERSION_TEXT
-/* The macros below are to be used for shared library (.so, .dll, ...)
+/*-
+ * The macros below are to be used for shared library (.so, .dll, ...)
* versioning. That kind of versioning works a bit differently between
* operating systems. The most usual scheme is to set a major and a minor
* number, and have the runtime loader check that the major number is equal
* be greater or equal to what it was at application link time. With this
* scheme, the version number is usually part of the file name, like this:
*
- * libcrypto.so.0.9
+ * libcrypto.so.0.9
*
* Some unixen also make a softlink with the major verson number only:
*
- * libcrypto.so.0
+ * libcrypto.so.0
*
- * On True64 it works a little bit differently. There, the shared library
- * version is stored in the file, and is actually a series of versions,
- * separated by colons. The rightmost version present in the library when
- * linking an application is stored in the application to be matched at
- * run time. When the application is run, a check is done to see if the
- * library version stored in the application matches any of the versions
- * in the version string of the library itself.
+ * On Tru64 and IRIX 6.x it works a little bit differently. There, the
+ * shared library version is stored in the file, and is actually a series
+ * of versions, separated by colons. The rightmost version present in the
+ * library when linking an application is stored in the application to be
+ * matched at run time. When the application is run, a check is done to
+ * see if the library version stored in the application matches any of the
+ * versions in the version string of the library itself.
* This version string can be constructed in any way, depending on what
* kind of matching is desired. However, to implement the same scheme as
* the one used in the other unixen, all compatible versions, from lowest
* to highest, should be part of the string. Consecutive builds would
* give the following versions strings:
*
- * 3.0
- * 3.0:3.1
- * 3.0:3.1:3.2
- * 4.0
- * 4.0:4.1
+ * 3.0
+ * 3.0:3.1
+ * 3.0:3.1:3.2
+ * 4.0
+ * 4.0:4.1
*
* Notice how version 4 is completely incompatible with version, and
* therefore give the breach you can see.
* However, it's nice and more understandable if it actually does.
* The current library version is stored in the macro SHLIB_VERSION_NUMBER,
* which is just a piece of text in the format "M.m.e" (Major, minor, edit).
- * For the sake of True64 and any other OS that behaves in similar ways,
+ * For the sake of Tru64, IRIX, and any other OS that behaves in similar ways,
* we need to keep a history of version numbers, which is done in the
* macro SHLIB_VERSION_HISTORY. The numbers are separated by colons and
* should only keep the versions that are binary compatible with the current.
*/
-#define SHLIB_VERSION_HISTORY ""
-#define SHLIB_VERSION_NUMBER "0.9.6"
+# define SHLIB_VERSION_HISTORY ""
+# define SHLIB_VERSION_NUMBER "1.0.0"
-#endif /* HEADER_OPENSSLV_H */
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+}
+#endif
+#endif /* HEADER_OPENSSLV_H */