INSTALL.W32 11 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308
  1. INSTALLATION ON THE WIN32 PLATFORM
  2. ----------------------------------
  3. [Instructions for building for Windows CE can be found in INSTALL.WCE]
  4. [Instructions for building for Win64 can be found in INSTALL.W64]
  5. Here are a few comments about building OpenSSL for Win32 environments,
  6. such as Windows NT and Windows 9x. It should be noted though that
  7. Windows 9x are not ordinarily tested. Its mention merely means that we
  8. attempt to maintain certain programming discipline and pay attention
  9. to backward compatibility issues, in other words it's kind of expected
  10. to work on Windows 9x, but no regression tests are actually performed.
  11. On additional note newer OpenSSL versions are compiled and linked with
  12. Winsock 2. This means that minimum OS requirement was elevated to NT 4
  13. and Windows 98 [there is Winsock 2 update for Windows 95 though].
  14. - you need Perl for Win32. Unless you will build on Cygwin, you will need
  15. ActiveState Perl, available from http://www.activestate.com/ActivePerl.
  16. - one of the following C compilers:
  17. * Visual C++
  18. * Borland C
  19. * GNU C (Cygwin or MinGW)
  20. - even though optional for non-gcc builds, Netwide Assembler, a.k.a.
  21. NASM, available from http://sourceforge.net/projects/nasm is
  22. recommended.
  23. If you are compiling from a tarball or a CVS snapshot then the Win32 files
  24. may well be not up to date. This may mean that some "tweaking" is required to
  25. get it all to work. See the trouble shooting section later on for if (when?)
  26. it goes wrong.
  27. Visual C++
  28. ----------
  29. If you want to compile in the assembly language routines with Visual
  30. C++, then you will need already mentioned Netwide Assembler binary,
  31. nasmw.exe, to be available on your %PATH%.
  32. Firstly you should run Configure:
  33. > perl Configure VC-WIN32 --prefix=c:/some/openssl/dir
  34. Where the prefix argument specifies where OpenSSL will be installed to.
  35. Next you need to build the Makefiles and optionally the assembly
  36. language files:
  37. - If you are using NASM then run:
  38. > ms\do_nasm
  39. - If you don't want to use the assembly language files at all then run:
  40. > ms\do_ms
  41. If you get errors about things not having numbers assigned then check the
  42. troubleshooting section: you probably won't be able to compile it as it
  43. stands.
  44. Then from the VC++ environment at a prompt do:
  45. > nmake -f ms\ntdll.mak
  46. If all is well it should compile and you will have some DLLs and
  47. executables in out32dll. If you want to try the tests then do:
  48. > nmake -f ms\ntdll.mak test
  49. To install OpenSSL to the specified location do:
  50. > nmake -f ms\ntdll.mak install
  51. Tweaks:
  52. There are various changes you can make to the Win32 compile
  53. environment. By default the library is not compiled with debugging
  54. symbols. If you add 'debug' to the mk1mf.pl lines in the do_* batch
  55. file then debugging symbols will be compiled in. Note that mk1mf.pl
  56. expects the platform to be the last argument on the command line, so
  57. 'debug' must appear before that, as all other options.
  58. By default in 0.9.8 OpenSSL will compile builtin ENGINES into the
  59. libeay32.dll shared library. If you specify the "no-static-engine"
  60. option on the command line to Configure the shared library build
  61. (ms\ntdll.mak) will compile the engines as separate DLLs.
  62. The default Win32 environment is to leave out any Windows NT specific
  63. features.
  64. If you want to enable the NT specific features of OpenSSL (currently
  65. only the logging BIO) follow the instructions above but call the batch
  66. file do_nt.bat instead of do_ms.bat.
  67. You can also build a static version of the library using the Makefile
  68. ms\nt.mak
  69. Borland C++ builder 5
  70. ---------------------
  71. * Configure for building with Borland Builder:
  72. > perl Configure BC-32
  73. * Create the appropriate makefile
  74. > ms\do_nasm
  75. * Build
  76. > make -f ms\bcb.mak
  77. Borland C++ builder 3 and 4
  78. ---------------------------
  79. * Setup PATH. First must be GNU make then bcb4/bin
  80. * Run ms\bcb4.bat
  81. * Run make:
  82. > make -f bcb.mak
  83. GNU C (Cygwin)
  84. --------------
  85. Cygwin implements a Posix/Unix runtime system (cygwin1.dll) on top of
  86. Win32 subsystem and provides a bash shell and GNU tools environment.
  87. Consequently, a make of OpenSSL with Cygwin is virtually identical to
  88. Unix procedure. It is also possible to create Win32 binaries that only
  89. use the Microsoft C runtime system (msvcrt.dll or crtdll.dll) using
  90. MinGW. MinGW can be used in the Cygwin development environment or in a
  91. standalone setup as described in the following section.
  92. To build OpenSSL using Cygwin:
  93. * Install Cygwin (see http://cygwin.com/)
  94. * Install Perl and ensure it is in the path. Both Cygwin perl
  95. (5.6.1-2 or newer) and ActivePerl work.
  96. * Run the Cygwin bash shell
  97. * $ tar zxvf openssl-x.x.x.tar.gz
  98. $ cd openssl-x.x.x
  99. To build the Cygwin version of OpenSSL:
  100. $ ./config
  101. [...]
  102. $ make
  103. [...]
  104. $ make test
  105. $ make install
  106. This will create a default install in /usr/local/ssl.
  107. To build the MinGW version (native Windows) in Cygwin:
  108. $ ./Configure mingw
  109. [...]
  110. $ make
  111. [...]
  112. $ make test
  113. $ make install
  114. Cygwin Notes:
  115. "make test" and normal file operations may fail in directories
  116. mounted as text (i.e. mount -t c:\somewhere /home) due to Cygwin
  117. stripping of carriage returns. To avoid this ensure that a binary
  118. mount is used, e.g. mount -b c:\somewhere /home.
  119. "bc" is not provided in older Cygwin distribution. This causes a
  120. non-fatal error in "make test" but is otherwise harmless. If
  121. desired and needed, GNU bc can be built with Cygwin without change.
  122. GNU C (MinGW/MSYS)
  123. -------------
  124. * Compiler and shell environment installation:
  125. MinGW and MSYS are available from http://www.mingw.org/, both are
  126. required. Run the installers and do whatever magic they say it takes
  127. to start MSYS bash shell with GNU tools on its PATH.
  128. * Compile OpenSSL:
  129. $ ./config
  130. [...]
  131. $ make
  132. [...]
  133. $ make test
  134. This will create the library and binaries in root source directory
  135. and openssl.exe application in apps directory.
  136. It is also possible to cross-compile it on Linux by configuring
  137. with './Configure --cross-compile-prefix=i386-mingw32- mingw ...'.
  138. 'make test' is naturally not applicable then.
  139. libcrypto.a and libssl.a are the static libraries. To use the DLLs,
  140. link with libeay32.a and libssl32.a instead.
  141. See troubleshooting if you get error messages about functions not
  142. having a number assigned.
  143. Installation
  144. ------------
  145. If you used the Cygwin procedure above, you have already installed and
  146. can skip this section. For all other procedures, there's currently no real
  147. installation procedure for Win32. There are, however, some suggestions:
  148. - do nothing. The include files are found in the inc32/ subdirectory,
  149. all binaries are found in out32dll/ or out32/ depending if you built
  150. dynamic or static libraries.
  151. - do as is written in INSTALL.Win32 that comes with modssl:
  152. $ md c:\openssl
  153. $ md c:\openssl\bin
  154. $ md c:\openssl\lib
  155. $ md c:\openssl\include
  156. $ md c:\openssl\include\openssl
  157. $ copy /b inc32\openssl\* c:\openssl\include\openssl
  158. $ copy /b out32dll\ssleay32.lib c:\openssl\lib
  159. $ copy /b out32dll\libeay32.lib c:\openssl\lib
  160. $ copy /b out32dll\ssleay32.dll c:\openssl\bin
  161. $ copy /b out32dll\libeay32.dll c:\openssl\bin
  162. $ copy /b out32dll\openssl.exe c:\openssl\bin
  163. Of course, you can choose another device than c:. C: is used here
  164. because that's usually the first (and often only) harddisk device.
  165. Note: in the modssl INSTALL.Win32, p: is used rather than c:.
  166. Troubleshooting
  167. ---------------
  168. Since the Win32 build is only occasionally tested it may not always compile
  169. cleanly. If you get an error about functions not having numbers assigned
  170. when you run ms\do_ms then this means the Win32 ordinal files are not up to
  171. date. You can do:
  172. > perl util\mkdef.pl crypto ssl update
  173. then ms\do_XXX should not give a warning any more. However the numbers that
  174. get assigned by this technique may not match those that eventually get
  175. assigned in the CVS tree: so anything linked against this version of the
  176. library may need to be recompiled.
  177. If you get errors about unresolved symbols there are several possible
  178. causes.
  179. If this happens when the DLL is being linked and you have disabled some
  180. ciphers then it is possible the DEF file generator hasn't removed all
  181. the disabled symbols: the easiest solution is to edit the DEF files manually
  182. to delete them. The DEF files are ms\libeay32.def ms\ssleay32.def.
  183. Another cause is if you missed or ignored the errors about missing numbers
  184. mentioned above.
  185. If you get warnings in the code then the compilation will halt.
  186. The default Makefile for Win32 halts whenever any warnings occur. Since VC++
  187. has its own ideas about warnings which don't always match up to other
  188. environments this can happen. The best fix is to edit the file with the
  189. warning in and fix it. Alternatively you can turn off the halt on warnings by
  190. editing the CFLAG line in the Makefile and deleting the /WX option.
  191. You might get compilation errors. Again you will have to fix these or report
  192. them.
  193. One final comment about compiling applications linked to the OpenSSL library.
  194. If you don't use the multithreaded DLL runtime library (/MD option) your
  195. program will almost certainly crash because malloc gets confused -- the
  196. OpenSSL DLLs are statically linked to one version, the application must
  197. not use a different one. You might be able to work around such problems
  198. by adding CRYPTO_malloc_init() to your program before any calls to the
  199. OpenSSL libraries: This tells the OpenSSL libraries to use the same
  200. malloc(), free() and realloc() as the application. However there are many
  201. standard library functions used by OpenSSL that call malloc() internally
  202. (e.g. fopen()), and OpenSSL cannot change these; so in general you cannot
  203. rely on CRYPTO_malloc_init() solving your problem, and you should
  204. consistently use the multithreaded library.
  205. Linking your application
  206. ------------------------
  207. If you link with static OpenSSL libraries [those built with ms/nt.mak],
  208. then you're expected to additionally link your application with
  209. WS2_32.LIB, ADVAPI32.LIB, GDI32.LIB and USER32.LIB. Those developing
  210. non-interactive service applications might feel concerned about linking
  211. with the latter two, as they are justly associated with interactive
  212. desktop, which is not available to service processes. The toolkit is
  213. designed to detect in which context it's currently executed, GUI,
  214. console app or service, and act accordingly, namely whether or not to
  215. actually make GUI calls.
  216. If you link with OpenSSL .DLLs, then you're expected to include into
  217. your application code small "shim" snippet, which provides glue between
  218. OpenSSL BIO layer and your compiler run-time. Look up OPENSSL_Applink
  219. reference page for further details.