From: Richard Levitte Date: Wed, 24 Jun 2020 09:55:16 +0000 (+0200) Subject: INSTALL.md: Restore $ as command prompt indicator X-Git-Url: https://git.librecmc.org/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=HEAD;p=oweals%2Fopenssl.git INSTALL.md: Restore $ as command prompt indicator We have a notational convention in INSTALL.md, which says this among others: > Any line starting with a dollar sign is a command line. > > $ command > > The dollar sign indicates the shell prompt and is not to be entered as > part of the command. That notation exists to make it clear what is a command line and what's output from that command line. Reviewed-by: Matt Caswell Reviewed-by: Matthias St. Pierre (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/12257) --- diff --git a/INSTALL.md b/INSTALL.md index 0b93ccd98b..445c28b127 100644 --- a/INSTALL.md +++ b/INSTALL.md @@ -1026,7 +1026,7 @@ configuration. The following variables are supported: These cannot be mixed with compiling/linking flags given on the command line. In other words, something like this isn't permitted. - ./config -DFOO CPPFLAGS=-DBAR -DCOOKIE + $ ./config -DFOO CPPFLAGS=-DBAR -DCOOKIE Backward compatibility note: @@ -1038,11 +1038,11 @@ for the following: For example, the following command will not see -DBAR: - CPPFLAGS=-DBAR ./config -DCOOKIE + $ CPPFLAGS=-DBAR ./config -DCOOKIE However, the following will see both set variables: - CC=gcc CROSS_COMPILE=x86_64-w64-mingw32- ./config -DCOOKIE + $ CC=gcc CROSS_COMPILE=x86_64-w64-mingw32- ./config -DCOOKIE If CC is set, it is advisable to also set CXX to ensure both the C and C++ compiler are in the same "family". This becomes relevant with @@ -1344,7 +1344,7 @@ With the default OpenSSL installation comes a FIPS provider module, which needs some post-installation attention, without which it will not be usable. This involves using the following command: - openssl fipsinstall + $ openssl fipsinstall See the openssl-fipsinstall(1) manual for details and examples. @@ -1560,7 +1560,7 @@ Configuration Problems The `./config` script tries hard to guess your operating system, but in some cases it does not succeed. You will see a message like the following: - ./config + $ ./config Operating system: x86-whatever-minix This system (minix) is not supported. See file INSTALL for details. @@ -1638,9 +1638,9 @@ If the build succeeded previously, but fails after a source or configuration change, it might be helpful to clean the build tree before attempting another build. Use this command: - make clean # Unix - mms clean ! (or mmk) OpenVMS - nmake clean # Windows + $ make clean # Unix + $ mms clean ! (or mmk) OpenVMS + $ nmake clean # Windows Assembler error messages can sometimes be sidestepped by using the "no-asm" configuration option. @@ -1663,40 +1663,40 @@ You may want increased verbosity, that can be accomplished like this: Full verbosity (`make` macro `VERBOSE` or `V`): - make V=1 test # Unix - mms /macro=(V=1) test ! OpenVMS - nmake V=1 test # Windows + $ make V=1 test # Unix + $ mms /macro=(V=1) test ! OpenVMS + $ nmake V=1 test # Windows Verbosity on test failure (`VERBOSE_FAILURE` or `VF´, Unix example shown): - make test VF=1 + $ make test VF=1 Verbosity on failed (sub-)tests only (`VERBOSE_FAILURES_ONLY` or `VFO`): - make test VFO=1 + $ make test VFO=1 Verbosity on failed (sub-)tests, in addition progress on succeeded (sub-)tests (`VERBOSE_FAILURES_PROGRESS` or `VFP`): - make test VFP=1 + $ make test VFP=1 If you want to run just one or a few specific tests, you can use the make variable TESTS to specify them, like this: - make TESTS='test_rsa test_dsa' test # Unix - mms/macro="TESTS=test_rsa test_dsa" test ! OpenVMS - nmake TESTS='test_rsa test_dsa' test # Windows + $ make TESTS='test_rsa test_dsa' test # Unix + $ mms/macro="TESTS=test_rsa test_dsa" test ! OpenVMS + $ nmake TESTS='test_rsa test_dsa' test # Windows And of course, you can combine (Unix examples shown): - make test TESTS='test_rsa test_dsa' VF=1 - make test TESTS="test_cmp_*" VFO=1 + $ make test TESTS='test_rsa test_dsa' VF=1 + $ make test TESTS="test_cmp_*" VFO=1 You can find the list of available tests like this: - make list-tests # Unix - mms list-tests ! OpenVMS - nmake list-tests # Windows + $ make list-tests # Unix + $ mms list-tests ! OpenVMS + $ nmake list-tests # Windows Have a look at the manual for the perl module Test::Harness to see what other HARNESS_* variables there are.