New member keeps the value of the PKCS#15 DATA object.
Internal pkcs15 procedure that reads DATA object is modified
to check if requested data are already vailable in 'data-info',
an only then try to read the content of dedicated on-card file.
For some emulated PKCS#15 systems value of DATA object is kept as 'direct' value
in a proprietary attribute files and so the common read procedure could not be used.
; some efforts to unify layout of code source.
Introduce some usefull define macros, error code 'inconsistent configuration'.
Introduce procedure to calculate CRC32 digest,
to be used in minidriver to calculate the 'freshness' values.
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malloc#Casting_and_type_safety
" Casting and type safety
malloc returns a void pointer (void *), which indicates that it is a
pointer to a region of unknown data type. One may "cast" (see type
conversion) this pointer to a specific type, as in
int *ptr = (int*)malloc(10 * sizeof (int));
When using C, this is considered bad practice; it is redundant under the
C standard. Moreover, putting in a cast may mask failure to include the
header stdlib.h, in which the prototype for malloc is found. In the
absence of a prototype for malloc, the C compiler will assume that
malloc returns an int, and will issue a warning in a context such as the
above, provided the error is not masked by a cast. On certain
architectures and data models (such as LP64 on 64 bit systems, where
long and pointers are 64 bit and int is 32 bit), this error can actually
result in undefined behavior, as the implicitly declared malloc returns
a 32 bit value whereas the actually defined function returns a 64 bit
value. Depending on calling conventions and memory layout, this may
result in stack smashing.
The returned pointer need not be explicitly cast to a more specific
pointer type, since ANSI C defines an implicit conversion between the
void pointer type and other pointers to objects. An explicit cast of
malloc's return value is sometimes performed because malloc originally
returned a char *, but this cast is unnecessary in standard C
code.[4][5] Omitting the cast, however, creates an incompatibility with
C++, which does require it.
The lack of a specific pointer type returned from malloc is type-unsafe
behaviour: malloc allocates based on byte count but not on type. This
distinguishes it from the C++ new operator that returns a pointer whose
type relies on the operand. (see C Type Safety). "
See also
http://www.opensc-project.org/pipermail/opensc-devel/2010-August/014586.html
git-svn-id: https://www.opensc-project.org/svnp/opensc/trunk@4636 c6295689-39f2-0310-b995-f0e70906c6a9
* reduce to a few, supported functions.
* change all functions to take the debug level as parameter.
* use symbolic names for the debug levels.
* fix tools to pass "verbose"/"opt_debug" as ctx->debug.
git-svn-id: https://www.opensc-project.org/svnp/opensc/trunk@4118 c6295689-39f2-0310-b995-f0e70906c6a9
building PC/SC, OpenCT or USBToken support,
use ifdef's directly in source.
- Because of above, add HAVE_PCSCLITE for winconfig.h
- Remove unnecessary includes for log.h, opensc.h and
errors.h in libopensc sources, they're already taken
care by internal.h.
git-svn-id: https://www.opensc-project.org/svnp/opensc/trunk@1406 c6295689-39f2-0310-b995-f0e70906c6a9