d8e26bc5bb
All further instances of asprintf() or vasprintf() in our codebase are either in libcryb-test or in individual unit tests, and in all cases, the only consequence of a failed call is that the result will say "no description" instead of either a description of the test or an explanation of how it failed. Therefore, we can simply ignore the problem and cast the call to void to satisfy gcc. |
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include | ||
lib | ||
m4 | ||
t | ||
tools | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
autogen.des | ||
autogen.sh | ||
configure.ac | ||
CREDITS | ||
HISTORY | ||
INSTALL | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile.am | ||
mkpkgng.in | ||
README | ||
README.md | ||
RELNOTES |
The Cryb libraries
The Cryb libraries are a collection of cryptography- and security-related function libraries written with the following goals in mind:
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Comprehensive: Cryb aims to provide a rich and flexible set of building blocks for cryptographic applications.
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Self-contained and easily embeddable: the Cryb libraries have no external dependencies (apart from the toolchain) and few internal ones. Individual modules and algorithms can easily be extracted from Cryb and integrated into other codebases.
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Reliable: the libraries come with an extensive test suite with a long-term goal of 100% test coverage.
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Stable: guaranteed API and ABI stability.
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Documented: full API documentation in the form of Unix man pages.
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Consistently and permissively licensed: the entire collection is under the 3-clause BSD license.
Caveat
We aren't there yet. The Cryb libraries are still undeniably at the experimental stage. However, significant portions are already in production use as components in other projects (cf: easily embeddable), and we have great expectations for the future of Cryb.