This way all the qualifiers (`const`, `volatile`, `mutable`) are grouped
together, e.g. `T const* const x` vs. `const T* const x`. Also helps reading
types right-to-left, e.g. "constant pointer to constant T" vs. "constant
pointer to T which is constant".
There're places where manual intervention is still required as uncrustify
is not ideal (unfortunately), but at least one may rely on it to do the
right thing most of the time (e.g. when sending in a patch).
The style itself is quite different from what we had before but making it
uniform across all the codebase is the key. I also hope that it'll make the
code more readable (YMMV) and less sensitive to further changes.
On a way to factoring out OpenSSL support to a standalone file to ease
addition of other crypto libraries support in the future, move helpers
providing random numbers/data generation to crypto-utils.{c,h}. OpenSSL-
related functionality (generation of cryptographically strong random
data) is moved to crypto-utils-openssl.c.
Rename functions to follow currently accepted style:
* tr_cryptoRandBuf -> tr_rand_buffer
* tr_cryptoRandInt -> tr_rand_int
* tr_cryptoWeakRandInt -> tr_rand_int_weak
Fix rare case of invalid value being returned from tr_rand_int. Return
value for abs(INT_MIN) may be undefined and thus negative, and so
tr_rand_int will return negative value which is incorrect (out of
requested and expected range).
1. add the option the code to be used under GPLv2 or GPLv3; previously only GPLv2 was allowed
2. add the "proxy option" as described in GPLv3 so we can add future licenses without having to bulk-edit everything again :)
3. remove the awkward "exception for MIT code in Mac client" clause; it was unnecessary and confusing.