INSTALL.W32 9.5 KB
Newer Older
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227
 
 INSTALLATION ON THE WIN32 PLATFORM
 ----------------------------------

 [Instructions for building for Windows CE can be found in INSTALL.WCE]

 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.  Unless you will build on Cygwin, you will need
 ActiveState Perl, available from http://www.activestate.com/ActivePerl.

 and one of the following C compilers:

  * Visual C++
  * Borland C
  * GNU C (Cygwin or MinGW)

 If you are compiling from a tarball or a CVS snapshot then the Win32 files
 may well be not up to date. This may mean that some "tweaking" is required to
 get it all to work. See the trouble shooting section later on for if (when?)
 it goes wrong.

 Visual C++
 ----------

 If you want to compile in the assembly language routines with Visual C++ then
 you will need an assembler. This is worth doing because it will result in
 faster code: for example it will typically result in a 2 times speedup in the
 RSA routines. Currently the following assemblers are supported:

  * Microsoft MASM (aka "ml")
  * Free Netwide Assembler NASM.

 MASM is distributed with most versions of VC++. For the versions where it is
 not included in VC++, it is also distributed with some Microsoft DDKs, for
 example the Windows NT 4.0 DDK and the Windows 98 DDK. If you do not have
 either of these DDKs then you can just download the binaries for the Windows
 98 DDK and extract and rename the two files XXXXXml.exe and XXXXXml.err, to
 ml.exe and ml.err and install somewhere on your PATH. Both DDKs can be
 downloaded from the Microsoft developers site www.msdn.com.

 NASM is freely available. Version 0.98 was used during testing: other versions
 may also work. It is available from many places, see for example:
 http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/devel/nasm/binaries/win32/
 The NASM binary nasmw.exe needs to be installed anywhere on your PATH.

 Firstly you should run Configure:

 > perl Configure VC-WIN32

 Next you need to build the Makefiles and optionally the assembly language
 files:

 - If you are using MASM then run:

   > ms\do_masm

 - If you are using NASM then run:

   > ms\do_nasm

 - If you don't want to use the assembly language files at all then run:

   > ms\do_ms

 If you get errors about things not having numbers assigned then check the
 troubleshooting section: you probably won't be able to compile it as it
 stands.

 Then from the VC++ environment at a prompt do:

 > nmake -f ms\ntdll.mak

 If all is well it should compile and you will have some DLLs and executables
 in out32dll. If you want to try the tests then do:
 
 > cd out32dll
 > ..\ms\test

 Tweaks:

 There are various changes you can make to the Win32 compile environment. By
 default the library is not compiled with debugging symbols. If you add 'debug'
 to the mk1mf.pl lines in the do_* batch file then debugging symbols will be
 compiled in. Note that mk1mf.pl expects the platform to be the last argument
 on the command line, so 'debug' must appear before that, as all other options.

 The default Win32 environment is to leave out any Windows NT specific
 features.

 If you want to enable the NT specific features of OpenSSL (currently only the
 logging BIO) follow the instructions above but call the batch file do_nt.bat
 instead of do_ms.bat.

 You can also build a static version of the library using the Makefile
 ms\nt.mak

 Borland C++ builder 5
 ---------------------

 * Configure for building with Borland Builder:
   > perl Configure BC-32

 * Create the appropriate makefile
   > ms\do_nasm

 * Build
   > make -f ms\bcb.mak

 Borland C++ builder 3 and 4
 ---------------------------

 * Setup PATH. First must be GNU make then bcb4/bin 

 * Run ms\bcb4.bat

 * Run make:
   > make -f bcb.mak

 GNU C (Cygwin)
 --------------

 Cygwin provides a bash shell and GNU tools environment running
 on NT 4.0, Windows 9x, Windows ME, Windows 2000, and Windows XP.
 Consequently, a make of OpenSSL with Cygwin is closer to a GNU
 bash environment such as Linux than to other the other Win32
 makes.

 Cygwin implements a Posix/Unix runtime system (cygwin1.dll).
 It is also possible to create Win32 binaries that only use the
 Microsoft C runtime system (msvcrt.dll or crtdll.dll) using
 MinGW. MinGW can be used in the Cygwin development environment
 or in a standalone setup as described in the following section.

 To build OpenSSL using Cygwin:

 * Install Cygwin (see http://cygwin.com/)

 * Install Perl and ensure it is in the path. Both Cygwin perl
   (5.6.1-2 or newer) and ActivePerl work.

 * Run the Cygwin bash shell

 * $ tar zxvf openssl-x.x.x.tar.gz
   $ cd openssl-x.x.x

   To build the Cygwin version of OpenSSL:

   $ ./config
   [...]
   $ make
   [...]
   $ make test
   $ make install

   This will create a default install in /usr/local/ssl.

   To build the MinGW version (native Windows) in Cygwin:

   $ ./Configure mingw
   [...]
   $ make
   [...]
   $ make test
   $ make install

 Cygwin Notes:

 "make test" and normal file operations may fail in directories
 mounted as text (i.e. mount -t c:\somewhere /home) due to Cygwin
 stripping of carriage returns. To avoid this ensure that a binary
 mount is used, e.g. mount -b c:\somewhere /home.

 "bc" is not provided in older Cygwin distribution.  This causes a
 non-fatal error in "make test" but is otherwise harmless.  If
 desired and needed, GNU bc can be built with Cygwin without change.

 GNU C (MinGW)
 -------------

 * Compiler installation:

   MinGW is available from http://www.mingw.org. Run the installer and
   set the MinGW bin directory to the PATH in "System Properties" or
   autoexec.bat.

 * Compile OpenSSL:

   > ms\mingw32

   This will create the library and binaries in out. In case any problems
   occur, try
   > ms\mingw32 no-asm
   instead.

   libcrypto.a and libssl.a are the static libraries. To use the DLLs,
   link with libeay32.a and libssl32.a instead.

   See troubleshooting if you get error messages about functions not having
   a number assigned.

 * You can now try the tests:

   > cd out
   > ..\ms\test


 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
228
	$ copy /b inc32\openssl\*       c:\openssl\include\openssl
229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288
	$ 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
 ---------------

 Since the Win32 build is only occasionally tested it may not always compile
 cleanly.  If you get an error about functions not having numbers assigned
 when you run ms\do_ms then this means the Win32 ordinal files are not up to
 date. You can do:

 > perl util\mkdef.pl crypto ssl update

 then ms\do_XXX should not give a warning any more. However the numbers that
 get assigned by this technique may not match those that eventually get
 assigned in the CVS tree: so anything linked against this version of the
 library may need to be recompiled.

 If you get errors about unresolved symbols there are several possible
 causes.

 If this happens when the DLL is being linked and you have disabled some
 ciphers then it is possible the DEF file generator hasn't removed all
 the disabled symbols: the easiest solution is to edit the DEF files manually
 to delete them. The DEF files are ms\libeay32.def ms\ssleay32.def.

 Another cause is if you missed or ignored the errors about missing numbers
 mentioned above.

 If you get warnings in the code then the compilation will halt.

 The default Makefile for Win32 halts whenever any warnings occur. Since VC++
 has its own ideas about warnings which don't always match up to other
 environments this can happen. The best fix is to edit the file with the
 warning in and fix it. Alternatively you can turn off the halt on warnings by
 editing the CFLAG line in the Makefile and deleting the /WX option.

 You might get compilation errors. Again you will have to fix these or report
 them.

 One final comment about compiling applications linked to the OpenSSL library.
 If you don't use the multithreaded DLL runtime library (/MD option) your
 program will almost certainly crash because malloc gets confused -- the
 OpenSSL DLLs are statically linked to one version, the application must
 not use a different one.  You might be able to work around such problems
 by adding CRYPTO_malloc_init() to your program before any calls to the
 OpenSSL libraries: This tells the OpenSSL libraries to use the same
 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 CRYPTO_malloc_init() solving your problem, and you should
 consistently use the multithreaded library.