Commit Graph

17 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Michal Nowak
2f9f6f1fac Revert "Drop bigkey"
This reverts commit ef6703351a.

It is believed that the bigkey test is still useful.
2020-11-10 17:34:05 +01:00
Ondřej Surý
127ba7e930 Add libssl libraries to Windows build
This commit extends the perl Configure script to also check for libssl
in addition to libcrypto and change the vcxproj source files to link
with both libcrypto and libssl.
2020-11-09 16:00:28 +01:00
Michal Nowak
ef6703351a Drop bigkey
The 'bigkey' binary is not used anywhere, therefor it's sources should
be removed.
2020-11-05 17:17:14 +01:00
Evan Hunt
ba52377b37 use 'tsig-keygen' as the primary name for the tool
'ddns-confgen' is now an alias for 'tsig-keygen', rather than
the other way around.
2020-07-06 01:41:52 -07:00
Ondřej Surý
4c23724c97 Move the dependencies from sln to vcxproj files 2020-05-28 08:08:30 +02:00
Ondřej Surý
bfd87e453d Restore the GSSAPI compilation on Windows (but we should really switch to SSPI/Kerberos) 2020-05-28 08:07:57 +02:00
Ondřej Surý
b6c2012d93 Disable MSB8028 warning
All our MSVS Project files share the same intermediate directory.  We
know that this doesn't cause any problems, so we can just disable the
detection in the project files.

Example of the warning:

  warning MSB8028: The intermediate directory (.\Release\) contains files shared from another project (dnssectool.vcxproj).  This can lead to incorrect clean and rebuild behavior.
2020-04-15 13:37:12 +02:00
Ondřej Surý
789d253e3d Set WarningLevel to Level1 for Release, treat warnings as errors
Our vcxproj files set the WarningLevel to Level3, which is too verbose
for a code that needs to be portable.  That basically leads to ignoring
all the errors that MSVC produces.  This commits downgrades the
WarningLevel to Level1 and enables treating warnings as errors for
Release builds.  For the Debug builds the WarningLevel got upgraded to
Level4, and treating warnings as errors is explicitly disabled.

We should eventually make the code clean of all MSVC warnings, but it's
a long way to go for Level4, so it's more reasonable to start at Level1.

For reference[1], these are the warning levels as described by MSVC
documentation:

  * /W0 suppresses all warnings. It's equivalent to /w.
  * /W1 displays level 1 (severe) warnings. /W1 is the default setting
    in the command-line compiler.
  * /W2 displays level 1 and level 2 (significant) warnings.
  * /W3 displays level 1, level 2, and level 3 (production quality)
    warnings. /W3 is the default setting in the IDE.
  * /W4 displays level 1, level 2, and level 3 warnings, and all level 4
    (informational) warnings that aren't off by default. We recommend
    that you use this option to provide lint-like warnings. For a new
    project, it may be best to use /W4 in all compilations. This option
    helps ensure the fewest possible hard-to-find code defects.
  * /Wall displays all warnings displayed by /W4 and all other warnings
    that /W4 doesn't include — for example, warnings that are off by
    default.
  * /WX treats all compiler warnings as errors. For a new project, it
    may be best to use /WX in all compilations; resolving all warnings
    ensures the fewest possible hard-to-find code defects.

1. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/compiler-option-warning-level?view=vs-2019
2020-04-15 12:45:05 +02:00
Michał Kępień
0476e8f1ac Make VS solution upgrading unnecessary
Until now, the build process for BIND on Windows involved upgrading the
solution file to the version of Visual Studio used on the build host.
Unfortunately, the executable used for that (devenv.exe) is not part of
Visual Studio Build Tools and thus there is no clean way to make that
executable part of a Windows Server container.

Luckily, the solution upgrade process boils down to just adding XML tags
to Visual Studio project files and modifying certain XML attributes - in
files which we pregenerate anyway using win32utils/Configure.  Thus,
extend win32utils/Configure with three new command line parameters that
enable it to mimic what "devenv.exe bind9.sln /upgrade" does.  This
makes the devenv.exe build step redundant and thus facilitates building
BIND in Windows Server containers.
2019-09-26 15:11:15 +02:00
Ondřej Surý
c5040e5c9e Add @OPENSSL_LIB@ to Windows project files as needed 2018-08-10 16:45:00 +02:00
Ondřej Surý
83cde08522 Introduce USE_OPENSSL define to Windows build, remove CRYPTO and AES conditions. 2018-07-19 16:54:53 -04:00
Mark Andrews
8090ceb932 4363. [port] Turn off triggering UAC when running BINDInstall
temporarily.
2016-05-09 19:07:07 +10:00
Evan Hunt
d82b18a552 [master] fix uiAccess for win64 build 2016-03-22 17:28:12 -07:00
Evan Hunt
30370d905e [master] removed /Gy- from VS project files
4302.	[port]		win32: fixed a build error in VS 2015. [RT #41426]
2016-01-27 15:27:57 -08:00
Mark Andrews
3b83676e07 *.vcxproj.in should use CRLF as EOL 2015-08-27 21:57:18 +00:00
Evan Hunt
ba751492fc [master] native PKCS#11 support
3705.	[func]		"configure --enable-native-pkcs11" enables BIND
			to use the PKCS#11 API for all cryptographic
			functions, so that it can drive a hardware service
			module directly without the need to use a modified
			OpenSSL as intermediary (so long as the HSM's vendor
			provides a complete-enough implementation of the
			PKCS#11 interface). This has been tested successfully
			with the Thales nShield HSM and with SoftHSMv2 from
			the OpenDNSSEC project. [RT #29031]
2014-01-14 15:40:56 -08:00
Mark Andrews
c3c8823fed 3681. [port] Update the Windows build system to support feature
selection and WIN64 builds.  This is a work in
                        progress. [RT #34160]
2013-12-04 12:47:23 +11:00