There is no real reason to keep the include directory a multi-level
recursion, so instead declare everything within include (so that we
can use proper nobase_ declarations) and be it.
Please note that since we removed the sub-Makefile.am, ./configure
will not create the directory structure for us on out-of-tree builds,
so we have to make sure the directory we're generating to exists first.
Signed-off-by: Diego Elio Pettenò <flameeyes@flameeyes.eu>
Instead of using a ./configure parameter to decide whehter to build
tests or not, use the check_PROGRAMS variable so that the tests are
only built when running `make check`.
To avoid slowing down the test phase itself, collapse the declaration
of the test targets in the tests/Makefile.am file, this way they can
be built and linked in parallel before the testsuite is executed.
Signed-off-by: Diego Elio Pettenò <flameeyes@flameeyes.eu>
If you want to use eap-sim-file with strongswan, you need a triplets.dat
file in a specific format. osmo-auc-gen can now generate the respective
format automatically.
like in libosmogsm, we separate between header files that are just
reflecting information in the respective specs, and header files that
related to our specific implementation.
Instead of direct function calls to individual functions, we now
generate primitives (osmo_prim) and send them to one
application-provided function "bssgp_prim_cb()"
The old method used raw writes to the telnet FD, which is bad for
several reasons:
a) we don't know if we can actually write that many bytes to the
socket at the given time
b) the socket is still in blocking mode, so we could stall the entire
process
c) there may be weird interaction with the buffered writes of the
vty_out
Now, the print_welcome() functionality has moved to vty_hello() instead,
where we can use normal vty_out() in buffered mode.
This commit is expected to fix the garbled welcome message on arm-eglibc
targets.
It might still be a good idea to migrate the entire telnet interface to
libtelnet - but at some later time ;)
There is now a "libosmogsm.map" file containing an explicit list of
to-be-exported symbols. This should prevent us from leaking non-static
symbols into the global namespace.
A similar scheme should be adopted by all other osmocom libraries