INSTALLATION ON THE WIN32 PLATFORM
----------------------------------
- Heres a few comments about building OpenSSL in Windows environments. Most of
- this is tested on Win32 but it may also work in Win 3.1 with some
+ Heres a few comments about building OpenSSL in Windows environments. Most
+ of this is tested on Win32 but it may also work in Win 3.1 with some
modification.
- You need Perl for Win32 (available from http://www.activestate.com/ActivePerl)
+ You need Perl for Win32. Unless you will build on CygWin32, you will need
+ ActiveState Perl, available from http://www.activestate.com/ActivePerl.
+ For CygWin32 users, there's more info in the CygWin32 section.
+
and one of the following C compilers:
* Visual C++
* Compiler installation:
- Mingw32 is available from <ftp://ftp.xraylith.wisc.edu/pub/khan/gnu-win32/
- mingw32/egcs-1.1.2/egcs-1.1.2-mingw32.zip>. GNU make is at
+ Mingw32 is available from <ftp://ftp.xraylith.wisc.edu/pub/khan/
+ gnu-win32/mingw32/gcc-2.95.2/gcc-2.95.2-msvcrt.exe>. GNU make is at
<ftp://agnes.dida.physik.uni-essen.de/home/janjaap/mingw32/binaries/
make-3.76.1.zip>. Install both of them in C:\egcs-1.1.2 and run
C:\egcs-1.1.2\mingw32.bat to set the PATH.
* Install CygWin32 (see http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin)
- * Install Perl and ensure it is in the path
+ * Install Perl and ensure it is in the path (recent Cygwin perl
+ (version 5.6.1-2 of the latter has been reported to work) or
+ ActivePerl)
* Run the CygWin bash shell
desired, GNU bc can be built with CygWin32 without change.
+ Installation
+ ------------
+
+ If you used the CygWin procedure above, you have already installed and
+ can skip this section. For all other procedures, there's currently no real
+ installation procedure for Win32. There are, however, some suggestions:
+
+ - do nothing. The include files are found in the inc32/ subdirectory,
+ all binaries are found in out32dll/ or out32/ depending if you built
+ dynamic or static libraries.
+
+ - do as is written in INSTALL.Win32 that comes with modssl:
+
+ $ md c:\openssl
+ $ md c:\openssl\bin
+ $ md c:\openssl\lib
+ $ md c:\openssl\include
+ $ md c:\openssl\include\openssl
+ $ copy /b inc32\* c:\openssl\include\openssl
+ $ copy /b out32dll\ssleay32.lib c:\openssl\lib
+ $ copy /b out32dll\libeay32.lib c:\openssl\lib
+ $ copy /b out32dll\ssleay32.dll c:\openssl\bin
+ $ copy /b out32dll\libeay32.dll c:\openssl\bin
+ $ copy /b out32dll\openssl.exe c:\openssl\bin
+
+ Of course, you can choose another device than c:. C: is used here
+ because that's usually the first (and often only) harddisk device.
+ Note: in the modssl INSTALL.Win32, p: is used rather than c:.
+
+
Troubleshooting
---------------
malloc(), free() and realloc() as the application. However there are many
standard library functions used by OpenSSL that call malloc() internally
(e.g. fopen()), and OpenSSL cannot change these; so in general you cannot
- rely on CYRPTO_malloc_init() solving your problem, and you should
+ rely on CRYPTO_malloc_init() solving your problem, and you should
consistently use the multithreaded library.