From 27594eeae6f40a402bc3110f06d57975168e74e3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Parm=C3=A9nides=20GV?= Date: Thu, 4 Jun 2015 19:20:15 +0200 Subject: ics-openvpn as a submodule! beautiful ics-openvpn is now officially on GitHub, and they track openssl and openvpn as submodules, so it's easier to update everything. Just a git submodule update --recursive. I've also set up soft links to native modules from ics-openvpn in app, so that we don't copy files in Gradle (which was causing problems with the submodules .git* files, not being copied). That makes the repo cleaner. --- app/lzo/asm/i386/00README.TXT | 45 ------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 45 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 app/lzo/asm/i386/00README.TXT (limited to 'app/lzo/asm/i386/00README.TXT') diff --git a/app/lzo/asm/i386/00README.TXT b/app/lzo/asm/i386/00README.TXT deleted file mode 100644 index 81b01423..00000000 --- a/app/lzo/asm/i386/00README.TXT +++ /dev/null @@ -1,45 +0,0 @@ - -Directory overview: -=================== - -As writing portable assembler sources supporting different operating -systems, compilers and assemblers has proven to be extremely painful, -the assembler sources have been converted into a more portable 'db' -format. Use these whenever possible. - - src_gas sources converted for portable gcc/gas syntax - src_masm sources converted for portable masm/tasm/wasm syntax - src_nasm sources converted for portable nasm syntax - - src assembler sources (you need the OpenSource nasm assembler) - - obj pre-assembled object files - -Also look 'src_XXX/all/asm_all.asm' which contains all assembler -functions conveniently arranged into a single file. - - -Notes: -====== - -- The assembler sources are designed for a flat 32-bit memory model - running in protected mode - they should work with all i386 - 32-bit compilers around. - -- All functions expect a 'cdecl' (C stack based) calling convention. - The function return value will be placed into 'eax'. - All other registers are preserved. - -- Prototypes for the assembler functions can be found in . - -- For reasons of speed all fast assembler decompressors (having '_fast' - in their name) can access (write to) up to 3 bytes past the end of - the decompressed (output) block. Data past the end of the compressed - (input) block is never accessed (read from). - [ technical note: because data is transferred in 32-bit units ] - -- Finally you should test if the assembler versions are actually faster - than the C version on your machine - some compilers can do a very good - optimization job, and they also can optimize the code for a specific - processor type. - -- cgit v1.2.3