Instead of building in the source tree, put most object
files into the build/ folder at the root, and put each
thing that's being built into a separate folder.
This then allows us to build hostapd and wpa_supplicant
(or other combinations) without "make clean" inbetween.
For the tests keep the objects in place for now (and to
do that, add the build rule) so that we don't have to
rewrite all of that with $(call BUILDOBJS,...) which is
just noise there.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Clean up in a more common fashion as well, initially for ../src/.
Also add $(Q) to the clean target in src/
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
Some things are used by most of the binaries, pull them
into a common rule fragment that we can use properly.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Berg <johannes.berg@intel.com>
eap_example is now using src/crypto/libcrypto.a and src/tls/libtls.a
instead of providing own rules for building the files for these
components. TLS library selection is temporarily disabled for
eap_example (it will be built using internal crypto/TLS), but the
configuration option for this will eventually be restored with a new
libcrypto.a configuration option.
This allows libeap.a and libeap.so to be built by merging in multiple
libraries from src subdirectories. In addition, this avoids wasting
extra space and time for local builds.
The following defines are not really needed in most places, so
remove them to clean up source code and build scripts:
EAP_TLS_FUNCS
EAP_TLS_OPENSSL
EAP_TLS_GNUTLS
CONFIG_TLS_INTERNAL
In addition, start ordering header file includes to be in more
consistent order: system header files, src/utils, src/*, same
directory as the *.c file.
1e5839e06f renamed the defines for EAP
server, but did not update the eap_example Makefile to match. This
broke the server side of the EAP example (no methods were actually
enabled).