| INSTALLATION ON THE UNIX PLATFORM | |
| --------------------------------- | |
| [Installation on DOS (with djgpp), Windows, OpenVMS, MacOS (before MacOS X) | |
| and NetWare is described in INSTALL.DJGPP, INSTALL.W32, INSTALL.VMS, | |
| INSTALL.MacOS and INSTALL.NW. | |
| This document describes installation on operating systems in the Unix | |
| family.] | |
| To install OpenSSL, you will need: | |
| * make | |
| * Perl 5 | |
| * an ANSI C compiler | |
| * a development environment in form of development libraries and C | |
| header files | |
| * a supported Unix operating system | |
| Quick Start | |
| ----------- | |
| If you want to just get on with it, do: | |
| $ ./config | |
| $ make | |
| $ make test | |
| $ make install | |
| [If any of these steps fails, see section Installation in Detail below.] | |
| This will build and install OpenSSL in the default location, which is (for | |
| historical reasons) /usr/local/ssl. If you want to install it anywhere else, | |
| run config like this: | |
| $ ./config --prefix=/usr/local --openssldir=/usr/local/openssl | |
| Configuration Options | |
| --------------------- | |
| There are several options to ./config (or ./Configure) to customize | |
| the build: | |
| --prefix=DIR Install in DIR/bin, DIR/lib, DIR/include/openssl. | |
| Configuration files used by OpenSSL will be in DIR/ssl | |
| or the directory specified by --openssldir. | |
| --openssldir=DIR Directory for OpenSSL files. If no prefix is specified, | |
| the library files and binaries are also installed there. | |
| no-threads Don't try to build with support for multi-threaded | |
| applications. | |
| threads Build with support for multi-threaded applications. | |
| This will usually require additional system-dependent options! | |
| See "Note on multi-threading" below. | |
| no-zlib Don't try to build with support for zlib compression and | |
| decompression. | |
| zlib Build with support for zlib compression/decompression. | |
| zlib-dynamic Like "zlib", but has OpenSSL load the zlib library dynamically | |
| when needed. This is only supported on systems where loading | |
| of shared libraries is supported. This is the default choice. | |
| no-shared Don't try to create shared libraries. | |
| shared In addition to the usual static libraries, create shared | |
| libraries on platforms where it's supported. See "Note on | |
| shared libraries" below. | |
| no-asm Do not use assembler code. | |
| 386 Use the 80386 instruction set only (the default x86 code is | |
| more efficient, but requires at least a 486). Note: Use | |
| compiler flags for any other CPU specific configuration, | |
| e.g. "-m32" to build x86 code on an x64 system. | |
| no-sse2 Exclude SSE2 code pathes. Normally SSE2 extension is | |
| detected at run-time, but the decision whether or not the | |
| machine code will be executed is taken solely on CPU | |
| capability vector. This means that if you happen to run OS | |
| kernel which does not support SSE2 extension on Intel P4 | |
| processor, then your application might be exposed to | |
| "illegal instruction" exception. There might be a way | |
| to enable support in kernel, e.g. FreeBSD kernel can be | |
| compiled with CPU_ENABLE_SSE, and there is a way to | |
| disengage SSE2 code pathes upon application start-up, | |
| but if you aim for wider "audience" running such kernel, | |
| consider no-sse2. Both 386 and no-asm options above imply | |
| no-sse2. | |
| no-<cipher> Build without the specified cipher (bf, cast, des, dh, dsa, | |
| hmac, md2, md5, mdc2, rc2, rc4, rc5, rsa, sha). | |
| The crypto/<cipher> directory can be removed after running | |
| "make depend". | |
| -Dxxx, -lxxx, -Lxxx, -fxxx, -mXXX, -Kxxx These system specific options will | |
| be passed through to the compiler to allow you to | |
| define preprocessor symbols, specify additional libraries, | |
| library directories or other compiler options. | |
| Installation in Detail | |
| ---------------------- | |
| 1a. Configure OpenSSL for your operation system automatically: | |
| $ ./config [options] | |
| This guesses at your operating system (and compiler, if necessary) and | |
| configures OpenSSL based on this guess. Run ./config -t to see | |
| if it guessed correctly. If you want to use a different compiler, you | |
| are cross-compiling for another platform, or the ./config guess was | |
| wrong for other reasons, go to step 1b. Otherwise go to step 2. | |
| On some systems, you can include debugging information as follows: | |
| $ ./config -d [options] | |
| 1b. Configure OpenSSL for your operating system manually | |
| OpenSSL knows about a range of different operating system, hardware and | |
| compiler combinations. To see the ones it knows about, run | |
| $ ./Configure | |
| Pick a suitable name from the list that matches your system. For most | |
| operating systems there is a choice between using "cc" or "gcc". When | |
| you have identified your system (and if necessary compiler) use this name | |
| as the argument to ./Configure. For example, a "linux-elf" user would | |
| run: | |
| $ ./Configure linux-elf [options] | |
| If your system is not available, you will have to edit the Configure | |
| program and add the correct configuration for your system. The | |
| generic configurations "cc" or "gcc" should usually work on 32 bit | |
| systems. | |
| Configure creates the file Makefile.ssl from Makefile.org and | |
| defines various macros in crypto/opensslconf.h (generated from | |
| crypto/opensslconf.h.in). | |
| 2. Build OpenSSL by running: | |
| $ make | |
| This will build the OpenSSL libraries (libcrypto.a and libssl.a) and the | |
| OpenSSL binary ("openssl"). The libraries will be built in the top-level | |
| directory, and the binary will be in the "apps" directory. | |
| If "make" fails, look at the output. There may be reasons for | |
| the failure that aren't problems in OpenSSL itself (like missing | |
| standard headers). If it is a problem with OpenSSL itself, please | |
| report the problem to <openssl-bugs@openssl.org> (note that your | |
| message will be recorded in the request tracker publicly readable | |
| via http://www.openssl.org/support/rt.html and will be forwarded to a | |
| public mailing list). Include the output of "make report" in your message. | |
| Please check out the request tracker. Maybe the bug was already | |
| reported or has already been fixed. | |
| [If you encounter assembler error messages, try the "no-asm" | |
| configuration option as an immediate fix.] | |
| Compiling parts of OpenSSL with gcc and others with the system | |
| compiler will result in unresolved symbols on some systems. | |
| 3. After a successful build, the libraries should be tested. Run: | |
| $ make test | |
| If a test fails, look at the output. There may be reasons for | |
| the failure that isn't a problem in OpenSSL itself (like a missing | |
| or malfunctioning bc). If it is a problem with OpenSSL itself, | |
| try removing any compiler optimization flags from the CFLAG line | |
| in Makefile.ssl and run "make clean; make". Please send a bug | |
| report to <openssl-bugs@openssl.org>, including the output of | |
| "make report" in order to be added to the request tracker at | |
| http://www.openssl.org/support/rt.html. | |
| 4. If everything tests ok, install OpenSSL with | |
| $ make install | |
| This will create the installation directory (if it does not exist) and | |
| then the following subdirectories: | |
| certs Initially empty, this is the default location | |
| for certificate files. | |
| man/man1 Manual pages for the 'openssl' command line tool | |
| man/man3 Manual pages for the libraries (very incomplete) | |
| misc Various scripts. | |
| private Initially empty, this is the default location | |
| for private key files. | |
| If you didn't choose a different installation prefix, the | |
| following additional subdirectories will be created: | |
| bin Contains the openssl binary and a few other | |
| utility programs. | |
| include/openssl Contains the header files needed if you want to | |
| compile programs with libcrypto or libssl. | |
| lib Contains the OpenSSL library files themselves. | |
| Use "make install_sw" to install the software without documentation, | |
| and "install_docs_html" to install HTML renditions of the manual | |
| pages. | |
| Package builders who want to configure the library for standard | |
| locations, but have the package installed somewhere else so that | |
| it can easily be packaged, can use | |
| $ make INSTALL_PREFIX=/tmp/package-root install | |
| (or specify "--install_prefix=/tmp/package-root" as a configure | |
| option). The specified prefix will be prepended to all | |
| installation target filenames. | |
| NOTE: The header files used to reside directly in the include | |
| directory, but have now been moved to include/openssl so that | |
| OpenSSL can co-exist with other libraries which use some of the | |
| same filenames. This means that applications that use OpenSSL | |
| should now use C preprocessor directives of the form | |
| #include <openssl/ssl.h> | |
| instead of "#include <ssl.h>", which was used with library versions | |
| up to OpenSSL 0.9.2b. | |
| If you install a new version of OpenSSL over an old library version, | |
| you should delete the old header files in the include directory. | |
| Compatibility issues: | |
| * COMPILING existing applications | |
| To compile an application that uses old filenames -- e.g. | |
| "#include <ssl.h>" --, it will usually be enough to find | |
| the CFLAGS definition in the application's Makefile and | |
| add a C option such as | |
| -I/usr/local/ssl/include/openssl | |
| to it. | |
| But don't delete the existing -I option that points to | |
| the ..../include directory! Otherwise, OpenSSL header files | |
| could not #include each other. | |
| * WRITING applications | |
| To write an application that is able to handle both the new | |
| and the old directory layout, so that it can still be compiled | |
| with library versions up to OpenSSL 0.9.2b without bothering | |
| the user, you can proceed as follows: | |
| - Always use the new filename of OpenSSL header files, | |
| e.g. #include <openssl/ssl.h>. | |
| - Create a directory "incl" that contains only a symbolic | |
| link named "openssl", which points to the "include" directory | |
| of OpenSSL. | |
| For example, your application's Makefile might contain the | |
| following rule, if OPENSSLDIR is a pathname (absolute or | |
| relative) of the directory where OpenSSL resides: | |
| incl/openssl: | |
| -mkdir incl | |
| cd $(OPENSSLDIR) # Check whether the directory really exists | |
| -ln -s `cd $(OPENSSLDIR); pwd`/include incl/openssl | |
| You will have to add "incl/openssl" to the dependencies | |
| of those C files that include some OpenSSL header file. | |
| - Add "-Iincl" to your CFLAGS. | |
| With these additions, the OpenSSL header files will be available | |
| under both name variants if an old library version is used: | |
| Your application can reach them under names like <openssl/foo.h>, | |
| while the header files still are able to #include each other | |
| with names of the form <foo.h>. | |
| Note on multi-threading | |
| ----------------------- | |
| For some systems, the OpenSSL Configure script knows what compiler options | |
| are needed to generate a library that is suitable for multi-threaded | |
| applications. On these systems, support for multi-threading is enabled | |
| by default; use the "no-threads" option to disable (this should never be | |
| necessary). | |
| On other systems, to enable support for multi-threading, you will have | |
| to specify at least two options: "threads", and a system-dependent option. | |
| (The latter is "-D_REENTRANT" on various systems.) The default in this | |
| case, obviously, is not to include support for multi-threading (but | |
| you can still use "no-threads" to suppress an annoying warning message | |
| from the Configure script.) | |
| Note on shared libraries | |
| ------------------------ | |
| Shared libraries have certain caveats. Binary backward compatibility | |
| can't be guaranteed before OpenSSL version 1.0. The only reason to | |
| use them would be to conserve memory on systems where several programs | |
| are using OpenSSL. | |
| For some systems, the OpenSSL Configure script knows what is needed to | |
| build shared libraries for libcrypto and libssl. On these systems, | |
| the shared libraries are currently not created by default, but giving | |
| the option "shared" will get them created. This method supports Makefile | |
| targets for shared library creation, like linux-shared. Those targets | |
| can currently be used on their own just as well, but this is expected | |
| to change in future versions of OpenSSL. | |
| Note on random number generation | |
| -------------------------------- | |
| Availability of cryptographically secure random numbers is required for | |
| secret key generation. OpenSSL provides several options to seed the | |
| internal PRNG. If not properly seeded, the internal PRNG will refuse | |
| to deliver random bytes and a "PRNG not seeded error" will occur. | |
| On systems without /dev/urandom (or similar) device, it may be necessary | |
| to install additional support software to obtain random seed. | |
| Please check out the manual pages for RAND_add(), RAND_bytes(), RAND_egd(), | |
| and the FAQ for more information. | |
| Note on support for multiple builds | |
| ----------------------------------- | |
| OpenSSL is usually built in its source tree. Unfortunately, this doesn't | |
| support building for multiple platforms from the same source tree very well. | |
| It is however possible to build in a separate tree through the use of lots | |
| of symbolic links, which should be prepared like this: | |
| mkdir -p objtree/"`uname -s`-`uname -r`-`uname -m`" | |
| cd objtree/"`uname -s`-`uname -r`-`uname -m`" | |
| (cd $OPENSSL_SOURCE; find . -type f) | while read F; do | |
| mkdir -p `dirname $F` | |
| rm -f $F; ln -s $OPENSSL_SOURCE/$F $F | |
| echo $F '->' $OPENSSL_SOURCE/$F | |
| done | |
| make -f Makefile.org clean | |
| OPENSSL_SOURCE is an environment variable that contains the absolute (this | |
| is important!) path to the OpenSSL source tree. | |
| Also, operations like 'make update' should still be made in the source tree. |