5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Fabio Berton 2c21aa8633 libsodium: Extend recipe for native and nativesdk usage
Signed-off-by: Fabio Berton <fabio.berton@ossystems.com.br>
Signed-off-by: Martin Jansa <Martin.Jansa@gmail.com>
2017-04-24 11:02:39 +02:00
Derek Straka 1872a8a114 libsodium: update to version 1.0.11
* Verified license remains the same (copyright updated)

Signed-off-by: Derek Straka <derek@asterius.io>
Signed-off-by: Martin Jansa <Martin.Jansa@gmail.com>
2016-10-25 15:31:16 +02:00
Philip Balister 74466fce30 libsodium: Update to 1.0.10.
The LICENSE file checksum changed due to copyright year update. See:
https://github.com/jedisct1/libsodium/commit/78d07701229d94ce48c74048f47e378937582ba5#diff-9879d6db96fd29134fc802214163b95a

Signed-off-by: Philip Balister <philip@balister.org>
Signed-off-by: Martin Jansa <Martin.Jansa@gmail.com>
2016-07-29 11:00:55 +02:00
Philip Balister 95a3094ddc libsodium: Update to version 1.0.8.
Signed-off-by: Philip Balister <philip@balister.org>
Signed-off-by: Martin Jansa <Martin.Jansa@gmail.com>
2016-02-25 17:45:42 +01:00
Roy Li c02b9e8c8c libsodium: create recipe
zeromq 4.1.3 requires libsodium

Sodium is a new, easy-to-use software library for encryption, decryption,
signatures, password hashing and more. It is a portable, cross-compilable,
installable, packageable fork of NaCl, with a compatible API, and an extended
API to improve usability even further. Its goal is to provide all of the core
operations needed to build higher-level cryptographic tools. The design
choices emphasize security, and "magic constants" have clear rationales.

The same cannot be said of NIST curves, where the specific origins of certain
constants are not described by the standards. And despite the emphasis on
higher security, primitives are faster across-the-board than most
implementations of the NIST standards.

Signed-off-by: Roy Li <rongqing.li@windriver.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Jansa <Martin.Jansa@gmail.com>
2015-08-31 19:43:44 +02:00