NetBSD/usr.sbin/puffs/Makefile
riastradh ef315f7931 Remove MKCRYPTO option.
Originally, MKCRYPTO was introduced because the United States
classified cryptography as a munition and restricted its export.  The
export controls were substantially relaxed fifteen years ago, and are
essentially irrelevant for software with published source code.

In the intervening time, nobody bothered to remove the option after
its motivation -- the US export restriction -- was eliminated.  I'm
not aware of any other operating system that has a similar option; I
expect it is mainly out of apathy for churn that we still have it.
Today, cryptography is an essential part of modern computing -- you
can't use the internet responsibly without cryptography.

The position of the TNF board of directors is that TNF makes no
representation that MKCRYPTO=no satisfies any country's cryptography
regulations.

My personal position is that the availability of cryptography is a
basic human right; that any local laws restricting it to a privileged
few are fundamentally immoral; and that it is wrong for developers to
spend effort crippling cryptography to work around such laws.

As proposed on tech-crypto, tech-security, and tech-userlevel to no
objections:

https://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-crypto/2017/05/06/msg000719.html
https://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-security/2017/05/06/msg000928.html
https://mail-index.netbsd.org/tech-userlevel/2017/05/06/msg010547.html

P.S.  Reviewing all the uses of MKCRYPTO in src revealed a lot of
*bad* crypto that was conditional on it, e.g. DES in telnet...  That
should probably be removed too, but on the grounds that it is bad,
not on the grounds that it is (nominally) crypto.
2017-05-21 15:28:36 +00:00

34 lines
806 B
Makefile

# $NetBSD: Makefile,v 1.18 2017/05/21 15:28:43 riastradh Exp $
.include <bsd.own.mk>
SUBDIR= mount_9p mount_psshfs mount_sysctlfs
.if (${MKRUMP} != "no")
SUBDIR+=rump_cd9660 rump_efs rump_ext2fs rump_ffs rump_hfs rump_lfs
SUBDIR+=rump_msdos rump_nfs rump_ntfs rump_syspuffs rump_sysvbfs
SUBDIR+=rump_tmpfs rump_udf rump_v7fs
SUBDIR+=rump_smbfs
#
# The following are not built by default
#
# userspace fdesc server cannot grope the fd info from the kernel,
# and is therefore not useful for the average user
#SUBDIR+=rump_fdesc
# ditto for kernfs
#SUBDIR+=rump_kernfs
# rump_mqmfs is just another ffs, useful mainly for debugging
#SUBDIR+=rump_nqmfs
# rump_au-naturel presents lets you access '/' for a rump kernel.
# mostly for debugging.
#SUBDIR+=rump_au-naturel
.endif
.include <bsd.subdir.mk>