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History of commit frequency

CVS Commit History:


   2014-10-09 16:07:17 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (1163)
Log message:
Remove pkgviews: don't set PKG_INSTALLATION_TYPES in Makefiles.
   2014-03-14 23:38:39 by Alistair G. Crooks | Files touched by this commit (1)
Log message:
Only 1 package in the tree uses a buildlink dependency on libtomcrypt
(security/dropbear), so bump the BUILDLINK_API_DEPENDS to reflect the
current value of the package.
   2014-01-16 14:32:10 by Matthias Drochner | Files touched by this commit (3)
Log message:
fix makefile.shared so that CFLAGS from the environment are added
bump PKGREV
   2013-04-07 22:49:45 by Blue Rats | Files touched by this commit (91)
Log message:
Edited DESCR in the case of:
 File too long (should be no more than 24 lines).
 Line too long (should be no more than 80 characters).
 Trailing empty lines.
 Trailing white-space.
Trucated the long files as best as possible while preserving the most info
contained in them.
   2012-10-23 20:17:02 by Aleksej Saushev | Files touched by this commit (368)
Log message:
Drop superfluous PKG_DESTDIR_SUPPORT, "user-destdir" is default these days.
   2011-03-10 11:02:34 by Matthias Drochner | Files touched by this commit (6)
Log message:
build shared lib, bump PKGREV
   2010-11-27 07:11:58 by Alistair G. Crooks | Files touched by this commit (6) | Imported package
Log message:
Import libtomcrypt (version 1.17) into the packages collection.

	LibTomCrypt is a fairly comprehensive, modular and portable
	cryptographic toolkit that provides developers with a vast array of
	well known published block ciphers, one-way hash functions, chaining
	modes, pseudo-random number generators, public key cryptography and a
	plethora of other routines.  LibTomCrypt has been designed from the
	ground up to be very simple to use.  It has a modular and standard API
	that allows new ciphers, hashes and PRNGs to be added or removed
	without change to the overall end application.  It features easy to
	use functions and a complete user manual which has many source snippet
	examples.

	* Block Ciphers
	    * Blowfish
	    * XTEA
	    * RC5
	    * RC6
	    * SAFER+
	    * Rijndael (aka AES)
	    * Twofish
	    * SAFER (K64, SK64, K128, SK128)
	    * RC2
	    * DES, 3DES
	    * CAST5
	    * Noekeon
	    * Skipjack
	    * Anubis (with optional tweak as proposed by the developers)
	    * Khazad
	    * KASUMI
	    * SEED
	* Chaining Modes
	    * ECB
	    * CBC
	    * OFB
	    * CFB
	    * CTR
	    * IEEE LRW mode
	    * F8 Chaining Mode
	* One-Way Hash Functions
	    * MD2
	    * MD4
	    * MD5
	    * SHA-1
	    * SHA-224/256/384/512
	    * TIGER-192
	    * RIPE-MD 128/160/256/320
	    * WHIRLPOOL
	* Message Authentication
	    * FIPS-198 HMAC (supports all hashes)
	    * CMAC, also known as OMAC1 (supports all ciphers)
	    * PMAC Authentication
	    * F9-MAC
	    * Pelican MAC
	* Message Encrypt+Authenticate Modes
	    * EAX Mode
	    * OCB Mode
	    * CCM Mode (NIST spec)
	    * GCM Mode (IEEE spec)
	* Pseudo-Random Number Generators
	    * Yarrow (based algorithm)
	    * RC4
	    * Support for /dev/random, /dev/urandom and the Win32 CSP RNG
	    * Fortuna
	    * SOBER-128
	* Public Key Algorithms
	    * RSA (using PKCS #1 v1.5 and v2.1)
	    * ECC (EC-DSA X9.62 signatures, X9.63 EC-DH)
		  o With fast Fixed Point ECC support as well
		  o X9.63 import/export of public keys
	    * DSA (Users make their own groups)
	    * The math routines are pluggable which means you can use your own
	      math provider if you want.
	* Other standards
	    * PKCS #1 (v1.5 and v2.1 padding)
	    * PKCS #5
	    * ASN.1 DER


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