1Build and Install 2================= 3 4This document describes installation on all supported operating 5systems: the Unix/Linux family (including macOS), OpenVMS, 6and Windows. 7 8Table of Contents 9================= 10 11 - [Prerequisites](#prerequisites) 12 - [Notational Conventions](#notational-conventions) 13 - [Quick Installation Guide](#quick-installation-guide) 14 - [Building OpenSSL](#building-openssl) 15 - [Installing OpenSSL](#installing-openssl) 16 - [Configuration Options](#configuration-options) 17 - [API Level](#api-level) 18 - [Cross Compile Prefix](#cross-compile-prefix) 19 - [Build Type](#build-type) 20 - [Directories](#directories) 21 - [Compiler Warnings](#compiler-warnings) 22 - [ZLib Flags](#zlib-flags) 23 - [Seeding the Random Generator](#seeding-the-random-generator) 24 - [Setting the FIPS HMAC key](#setting-the-FIPS-HMAC-key) 25 - [Enable and Disable Features](#enable-and-disable-features) 26 - [Displaying configuration data](#displaying-configuration-data) 27 - [Installation Steps in Detail](#installation-steps-in-detail) 28 - [Configure](#configure-openssl) 29 - [Build](#build-openssl) 30 - [Test](#test-openssl) 31 - [Install](#install-openssl) 32 - [Advanced Build Options](#advanced-build-options) 33 - [Environment Variables](#environment-variables) 34 - [Makefile Targets](#makefile-targets) 35 - [Running Selected Tests](#running-selected-tests) 36 - [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) 37 - [Configuration Problems](#configuration-problems) 38 - [Build Failures](#build-failures) 39 - [Test Failures](#test-failures) 40 - [Notes](#notes) 41 - [Notes on multi-threading](#notes-on-multi-threading) 42 - [Notes on shared libraries](#notes-on-shared-libraries) 43 - [Notes on random number generation](#notes-on-random-number-generation) 44 - [Notes on assembler modules compilation](#notes-on-assembler-modules-compilation) 45 46Prerequisites 47============= 48 49To install OpenSSL, you will need: 50 51 * A "make" implementation 52 * Perl 5 with core modules (please read [NOTES-PERL.md](NOTES-PERL.md)) 53 * The Perl module `Text::Template` (please read [NOTES-PERL.md](NOTES-PERL.md)) 54 * an ANSI C compiler 55 * a development environment in the form of development libraries and C 56 header files 57 * a supported operating system 58 59For additional platform specific requirements, solutions to specific 60issues and other details, please read one of these: 61 62 * [Notes for UNIX-like platforms](NOTES-UNIX.md) 63 * [Notes for Android platforms](NOTES-ANDROID.md) 64 * [Notes for Windows platforms](NOTES-WINDOWS.md) 65 * [Notes for the DOS platform with DJGPP](NOTES-DJGPP.md) 66 * [Notes for the OpenVMS platform](NOTES-VMS.md) 67 * [Notes on Perl](NOTES-PERL.md) 68 * [Notes on Valgrind](NOTES-VALGRIND.md) 69 70Notational conventions 71====================== 72 73Throughout this document, we use the following conventions. 74 75Commands 76-------- 77 78Any line starting with a dollar sign is a command line. 79 80 $ command 81 82The dollar sign indicates the shell prompt and is not to be entered as 83part of the command. 84 85Choices 86------- 87 88Several words in curly braces separated by pipe characters indicate a 89**mandatory choice**, to be replaced with one of the given words. 90For example, the line 91 92 $ echo { WORD1 | WORD2 | WORD3 } 93 94represents one of the following three commands 95 96 $ echo WORD1 97 - or - 98 $ echo WORD2 99 - or - 100 $ echo WORD3 101 102One or several words in square brackets separated by pipe characters 103denote an **optional choice**. It is similar to the mandatory choice, 104but it can also be omitted entirely. 105 106So the line 107 108 $ echo [ WORD1 | WORD2 | WORD3 ] 109 110represents one of the four commands 111 112 $ echo WORD1 113 - or - 114 $ echo WORD2 115 - or - 116 $ echo WORD3 117 - or - 118 $ echo 119 120Arguments 121--------- 122 123**Mandatory arguments** are enclosed in double curly braces. 124A simple example would be 125 126 $ type {{ filename }} 127 128which is to be understood to use the command `type` on some file name 129determined by the user. 130 131**Optional Arguments** are enclosed in double square brackets. 132 133 [[ options ]] 134 135Note that the notation assumes spaces around `{`, `}`, `[`, `]`, `{{`, `}}` and 136`[[`, `]]`. This is to differentiate from OpenVMS directory 137specifications, which also use [ and ], but without spaces. 138 139Quick Installation Guide 140======================== 141 142If you just want to get OpenSSL installed without bothering too much 143about the details, here is the short version of how to build and install 144OpenSSL. If any of the following steps fails, please consult the 145[Installation in Detail](#installation-steps-in-detail) section below. 146 147Building OpenSSL 148---------------- 149 150Use the following commands to configure, build and test OpenSSL. 151The testing is optional, but recommended if you intend to install 152OpenSSL for production use. 153 154### Unix / Linux / macOS 155 156 $ ./Configure 157 $ make 158 $ make test 159 160### OpenVMS 161 162Use the following commands to build OpenSSL: 163 164 $ perl Configure 165 $ mms 166 $ mms test 167 168### Windows 169 170If you are using Visual Studio, open a Developer Command Prompt and 171issue the following commands to build OpenSSL. 172 173 $ perl Configure 174 $ nmake 175 $ nmake test 176 177As mentioned in the [Choices](#choices) section, you need to pick one 178of the four Configure targets in the first command. 179 180Most likely you will be using the `VC-WIN64A` target for 64bit Windows 181binaries (AMD64) or `VC-WIN32` for 32bit Windows binaries (X86). 182The other two options are `VC-WIN64I` (Intel IA64, Itanium) and 183`VC-CE` (Windows CE) are rather uncommon nowadays. 184 185Installing OpenSSL 186------------------ 187 188The following commands will install OpenSSL to a default system location. 189 190**Danger Zone:** even if you are impatient, please read the following two 191paragraphs carefully before you install OpenSSL. 192 193For security reasons the default system location is by default not writable 194for unprivileged users. So for the final installation step administrative 195privileges are required. The default system location and the procedure to 196obtain administrative privileges depends on the operating system. 197It is recommended to compile and test OpenSSL with normal user privileges 198and use administrative privileges only for the final installation step. 199 200On some platforms OpenSSL is preinstalled as part of the Operating System. 201In this case it is highly recommended not to overwrite the system versions, 202because other applications or libraries might depend on it. 203To avoid breaking other applications, install your copy of OpenSSL to a 204[different location](#installing-to-a-different-location) which is not in 205the global search path for system libraries. 206 207Finally, if you plan on using the FIPS module, you need to read the 208[Post-installation Notes](#post-installation-notes) further down. 209 210### Unix / Linux / macOS 211 212Depending on your distribution, you need to run the following command as 213root user or prepend `sudo` to the command: 214 215 $ make install 216 217By default, OpenSSL will be installed to 218 219 /usr/local 220 221More precisely, the files will be installed into the subdirectories 222 223 /usr/local/bin 224 /usr/local/lib 225 /usr/local/include 226 ... 227 228depending on the file type, as it is custom on Unix-like operating systems. 229 230### OpenVMS 231 232Use the following command to install OpenSSL. 233 234 $ mms install 235 236By default, OpenSSL will be installed to 237 238 SYS$COMMON:[OPENSSL] 239 240### Windows 241 242If you are using Visual Studio, open the Developer Command Prompt _elevated_ 243and issue the following command. 244 245 $ nmake install 246 247The easiest way to elevate the Command Prompt is to press and hold down both 248the `<CTRL>` and `<SHIFT>` keys while clicking the menu item in the task menu. 249 250The default installation location is 251 252 C:\Program Files\OpenSSL 253 254for native binaries, or 255 256 C:\Program Files (x86)\OpenSSL 257 258for 32bit binaries on 64bit Windows (WOW64). 259 260#### Installing to a different location 261 262To install OpenSSL to a different location (for example into your home 263directory for testing purposes) run `Configure` as shown in the following 264examples. 265 266The options `--prefix` and `--openssldir` are explained in further detail in 267[Directories](#directories) below, and the values used here are mere examples. 268 269On Unix: 270 271 $ ./Configure --prefix=/opt/openssl --openssldir=/usr/local/ssl 272 273On OpenVMS: 274 275 $ perl Configure --prefix=PROGRAM:[INSTALLS] --openssldir=SYS$MANAGER:[OPENSSL] 276 277Note: if you do add options to the configuration command, please make sure 278you've read more than just this Quick Start, such as relevant `NOTES-*` files, 279the options outline below, as configuration options may change the outcome 280in otherwise unexpected ways. 281 282Configuration Options 283===================== 284 285There are several options to `./Configure` to customize the build (note that 286for Windows, the defaults for `--prefix` and `--openssldir` depend on what 287configuration is used and what Windows implementation OpenSSL is built on. 288For more information, see the [Notes for Windows platforms](NOTES-WINDOWS.md). 289 290API Level 291--------- 292 293 --api=x.y[.z] 294 295Build the OpenSSL libraries to support the API for the specified version. 296If [no-deprecated](#no-deprecated) is also given, don't build with support 297for deprecated APIs in or below the specified version number. For example, 298adding 299 300 --api=1.1.0 no-deprecated 301 302will remove support for all APIs that were deprecated in OpenSSL version 3031.1.0 or below. This is a rather specialized option for developers. 304If you just intend to remove all deprecated APIs up to the current version 305entirely, just specify [no-deprecated](#no-deprecated). 306If `--api` isn't given, it defaults to the current (minor) OpenSSL version. 307 308Cross Compile Prefix 309-------------------- 310 311 --cross-compile-prefix=<PREFIX> 312 313The `<PREFIX>` to include in front of commands for your toolchain. 314 315It is likely to have to end with dash, e.g. `a-b-c-` would invoke GNU compiler 316as `a-b-c-gcc`, etc. Unfortunately cross-compiling is too case-specific to put 317together one-size-fits-all instructions. You might have to pass more flags or 318set up environment variables to actually make it work. Android and iOS cases 319are discussed in corresponding `Configurations/15-*.conf` files. But there are 320cases when this option alone is sufficient. For example to build the mingw64 321target on Linux `--cross-compile-prefix=x86_64-w64-mingw32-` works. Naturally 322provided that mingw packages are installed. Today Debian and Ubuntu users 323have option to install a number of prepackaged cross-compilers along with 324corresponding run-time and development packages for "alien" hardware. To give 325another example `--cross-compile-prefix=mipsel-linux-gnu-` suffices in such 326case. 327 328For cross compilation, you must [configure manually](#manual-configuration). 329Also, note that `--openssldir` refers to target's file system, not one you are 330building on. 331 332Build Type 333---------- 334 335 --debug 336 337Build OpenSSL with debugging symbols and zero optimization level. 338 339 --release 340 341Build OpenSSL without debugging symbols. This is the default. 342 343Directories 344----------- 345 346### libdir 347 348 --libdir=DIR 349 350The name of the directory under the top of the installation directory tree 351(see the `--prefix` option) where libraries will be installed. By default 352this is `lib`. Note that on Windows only static libraries (`*.lib`) will 353be stored in this location. Shared libraries (`*.dll`) will always be 354installed to the `bin` directory. 355 356Some build targets have a multilib postfix set in the build configuration. 357For these targets the default libdir is `lib<multilib-postfix>`. Please use 358`--libdir=lib` to override the libdir if adding the postfix is undesirable. 359 360### openssldir 361 362 --openssldir=DIR 363 364Directory for OpenSSL configuration files, and also the default certificate 365and key store. Defaults are: 366 367 Unix: /usr/local/ssl 368 Windows: C:\Program Files\Common Files\SSL 369 OpenVMS: SYS$COMMON:[OPENSSL-COMMON] 370 371For 32bit Windows applications on Windows 64bit (WOW64), always replace 372`C:\Program Files` by `C:\Program Files (x86)`. 373 374### prefix 375 376 --prefix=DIR 377 378The top of the installation directory tree. Defaults are: 379 380 Unix: /usr/local 381 Windows: C:\Program Files\OpenSSL 382 OpenVMS: SYS$COMMON:[OPENSSL] 383 384Compiler Warnings 385----------------- 386 387 --strict-warnings 388 389This is a developer flag that switches on various compiler options recommended 390for OpenSSL development. It only works when using gcc or clang as the compiler. 391If you are developing a patch for OpenSSL then it is recommended that you use 392this option where possible. 393 394ZLib Flags 395---------- 396 397### with-zlib-include 398 399 --with-zlib-include=DIR 400 401The directory for the location of the zlib include file. This option is only 402necessary if [zlib](#zlib) is used and the include file is not 403already on the system include path. 404 405### with-zlib-lib 406 407 --with-zlib-lib=LIB 408 409**On Unix**: this is the directory containing the zlib library. 410If not provided the system library path will be used. 411 412**On Windows:** this is the filename of the zlib library (with or 413without a path). This flag must be provided if the 414[zlib-dynamic](#zlib-dynamic) option is not also used. If `zlib-dynamic` is used 415then this flag is optional and defaults to `ZLIB1` if not provided. 416 417**On VMS:** this is the filename of the zlib library (with or without a path). 418This flag is optional and if not provided then `GNV$LIBZSHR`, `GNV$LIBZSHR32` 419or `GNV$LIBZSHR64` is used by default depending on the pointer size chosen. 420 421Seeding the Random Generator 422---------------------------- 423 424 --with-rand-seed=seed1[,seed2,...] 425 426A comma separated list of seeding methods which will be tried by OpenSSL 427in order to obtain random input (a.k.a "entropy") for seeding its 428cryptographically secure random number generator (CSPRNG). 429The current seeding methods are: 430 431### os 432 433Use a trusted operating system entropy source. 434This is the default method if such an entropy source exists. 435 436### getrandom 437 438Use the [getrandom(2)][man-getrandom] or equivalent system call. 439 440[man-getrandom]: http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getrandom.2.html 441 442### devrandom 443 444Use the first device from the `DEVRANDOM` list which can be opened to read 445random bytes. The `DEVRANDOM` preprocessor constant expands to 446 447 "/dev/urandom","/dev/random","/dev/srandom" 448 449on most unix-ish operating systems. 450 451### egd 452 453Check for an entropy generating daemon. 454This source is ignored by the FIPS provider. 455 456### rdcpu 457 458Use the `RDSEED` or `RDRAND` command if provided by the CPU. 459 460### librandom 461 462Use librandom (not implemented yet). 463This source is ignored by the FIPS provider. 464 465### none 466 467Disable automatic seeding. This is the default on some operating systems where 468no suitable entropy source exists, or no support for it is implemented yet. 469This option is ignored by the FIPS provider. 470 471For more information, see the section [Notes on random number generation][rng] 472at the end of this document. 473 474[rng]: #notes-on-random-number-generation 475 476Setting the FIPS HMAC key 477------------------------- 478 479 --fips-key=value 480 481As part of its self-test validation, the FIPS module must verify itself 482by performing a SHA-256 HMAC computation on itself. The default key is 483the SHA256 value of "holy hand grenade of antioch" and is sufficient 484for meeting the FIPS requirements. 485 486To change the key to a different value, use this flag. The value should 487be a hex string no more than 64 characters. 488 489Enable and Disable Features 490--------------------------- 491 492Feature options always come in pairs, an option to enable feature 493`xxxx`, and an option to disable it: 494 495 [ enable-xxxx | no-xxxx ] 496 497Whether a feature is enabled or disabled by default, depends on the feature. 498In the following list, always the non-default variant is documented: if 499feature `xxxx` is disabled by default then `enable-xxxx` is documented and 500if feature `xxxx` is enabled by default then `no-xxxx` is documented. 501 502### no-afalgeng 503 504Don't build the AFALG engine. 505 506This option will be forced on a platform that does not support AFALG. 507 508### enable-ktls 509 510Build with Kernel TLS support. 511 512This option will enable the use of the Kernel TLS data-path, which can improve 513performance and allow for the use of sendfile and splice system calls on 514TLS sockets. The Kernel may use TLS accelerators if any are available on the 515system. This option will be forced off on systems that do not support the 516Kernel TLS data-path. 517 518### enable-asan 519 520Build with the Address sanitiser. 521 522This is a developer option only. It may not work on all platforms and should 523never be used in production environments. It will only work when used with 524gcc or clang and should be used in conjunction with the [no-shared](#no-shared) 525option. 526 527### enable-acvp-tests 528 529Build support for Automated Cryptographic Validation Protocol (ACVP) 530tests. 531 532This is required for FIPS validation purposes. Certain ACVP tests require 533access to algorithm internals that are not normally accessible. 534Additional information related to ACVP can be found at 535<https://github.com/usnistgov/ACVP>. 536 537### no-asm 538 539Do not use assembler code. 540 541This should be viewed as debugging/troubleshooting option rather than for 542production use. On some platforms a small amount of assembler code may still 543be used even with this option. 544 545### no-async 546 547Do not build support for async operations. 548 549### no-atexit 550 551Do not use `atexit()` in libcrypto builds. 552 553`atexit()` has varied semantics between platforms and can cause SIGSEGV in some 554circumstances. This option disables the atexit registration of OPENSSL_cleanup. 555 556### no-autoalginit 557 558Don't automatically load all supported ciphers and digests. 559 560Typically OpenSSL will make available all of its supported ciphers and digests. 561For a statically linked application this may be undesirable if small executable 562size is an objective. This only affects libcrypto. Ciphers and digests will 563have to be loaded manually using `EVP_add_cipher()` and `EVP_add_digest()` 564if this option is used. This option will force a non-shared build. 565 566### no-autoerrinit 567 568Don't automatically load all libcrypto/libssl error strings. 569 570Typically OpenSSL will automatically load human readable error strings. For a 571statically linked application this may be undesirable if small executable size 572is an objective. 573 574### no-autoload-config 575 576Don't automatically load the default `openssl.cnf` file. 577 578Typically OpenSSL will automatically load a system config file which configures 579default SSL options. 580 581### enable-buildtest-c++ 582 583While testing, generate C++ buildtest files that simply check that the public 584OpenSSL header files are usable standalone with C++. 585 586Enabling this option demands extra care. For any compiler flag given directly 587as configuration option, you must ensure that it's valid for both the C and 588the C++ compiler. If not, the C++ build test will most likely break. As an 589alternative, you can use the language specific variables, `CFLAGS` and `CXXFLAGS`. 590 591### --banner=text 592 593Use the specified text instead of the default banner at the end of 594configuration. 595 596### --w 597 598On platforms where the choice of 32-bit or 64-bit architecture 599is not explicitly specified, `Configure` will print a warning 600message and wait for a few seconds to let you interrupt the 601configuration. Using this flag skips the wait. 602 603### no-bulk 604 605Build only some minimal set of features. 606This is a developer option used internally for CI build tests of the project. 607 608### no-cached-fetch 609 610Never cache algorithms when they are fetched from a provider. Normally, a 611provider indicates if the algorithms it supplies can be cached or not. Using 612this option will reduce run-time memory usage but it also introduces a 613significant performance penalty. This option is primarily designed to help 614with detecting incorrect reference counting. 615 616### no-capieng 617 618Don't build the CAPI engine. 619 620This option will be forced if on a platform that does not support CAPI. 621 622### no-cmp 623 624Don't build support for Certificate Management Protocol (CMP) 625and Certificate Request Message Format (CRMF). 626 627### no-cms 628 629Don't build support for Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS). 630 631### no-comp 632 633Don't build support for SSL/TLS compression. 634 635If this option is enabled (the default), then compression will only work if 636the zlib or `zlib-dynamic` options are also chosen. 637 638### enable-crypto-mdebug 639 640This now only enables the `failed-malloc` feature. 641 642### enable-crypto-mdebug-backtrace 643 644This is a no-op; the project uses the compiler's address/leak sanitizer instead. 645 646### no-ct 647 648Don't build support for Certificate Transparency (CT). 649 650### no-deprecated 651 652Don't build with support for deprecated APIs up until and including the version 653given with `--api` (or the current version, if `--api` wasn't specified). 654 655### no-dgram 656 657Don't build support for datagram based BIOs. 658 659Selecting this option will also force the disabling of DTLS. 660 661### no-dso 662 663Don't build support for loading Dynamic Shared Objects (DSO) 664 665### enable-devcryptoeng 666 667Build the `/dev/crypto` engine. 668 669This option is automatically selected on the BSD platform, in which case it can 670be disabled with `no-devcryptoeng`. 671 672### no-dynamic-engine 673 674Don't build the dynamically loaded engines. 675 676This only has an effect in a shared build. 677 678### no-ec 679 680Don't build support for Elliptic Curves. 681 682### no-ec2m 683 684Don't build support for binary Elliptic Curves 685 686### enable-ec_nistp_64_gcc_128 687 688Enable support for optimised implementations of some commonly used NIST 689elliptic curves. 690 691This option is only supported on platforms: 692 693 - with little-endian storage of non-byte types 694 - that tolerate misaligned memory references 695 - where the compiler: 696 - supports the non-standard type `__uint128_t` 697 - defines the built-in macro `__SIZEOF_INT128__` 698 699### enable-egd 700 701Build support for gathering entropy from the Entropy Gathering Daemon (EGD). 702 703### no-engine 704 705Don't build support for loading engines. 706 707### no-err 708 709Don't compile in any error strings. 710 711### enable-external-tests 712 713Enable building of integration with external test suites. 714 715This is a developer option and may not work on all platforms. The following 716external test suites are currently supported: 717 718 - GOST engine test suite 719 - Python PYCA/Cryptography test suite 720 - krb5 test suite 721 722See the file [test/README-external.md](test/README-external.md) 723for further details. 724 725### no-filenames 726 727Don't compile in filename and line number information (e.g. for errors and 728memory allocation). 729 730### enable-fips 731 732Build (and install) the FIPS provider 733 734### no-fips-securitychecks 735 736Don't perform FIPS module run-time checks related to enforcement of security 737parameters such as minimum security strength of keys. 738 739### enable-fuzz-libfuzzer, enable-fuzz-afl 740 741Build with support for fuzzing using either libfuzzer or AFL. 742 743These are developer options only. They may not work on all platforms and 744should never be used in production environments. 745 746See the file [fuzz/README.md](fuzz/README.md) for further details. 747 748### no-gost 749 750Don't build support for GOST based ciphersuites. 751 752Note that if this feature is enabled then GOST ciphersuites are only available 753if the GOST algorithms are also available through loading an externally supplied 754engine. 755 756### no-legacy 757 758Don't build the legacy provider. 759 760Disabling this also disables the legacy algorithms: MD2 (already disabled by default). 761 762### no-makedepend 763 764Don't generate dependencies. 765 766### no-module 767 768Don't build any dynamically loadable engines. 769 770This also implies `no-dynamic-engine`. 771 772### no-multiblock 773 774Don't build support for writing multiple records in one go in libssl 775 776Note: this is a different capability to the pipelining functionality. 777 778### no-nextprotoneg 779 780Don't build support for the Next Protocol Negotiation (NPN) TLS extension. 781 782### no-ocsp 783 784Don't build support for Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP). 785 786### no-padlockeng 787 788Don't build the padlock engine. 789 790### no-hw-padlock 791 792As synonym for `no-padlockeng`. Deprecated and should not be used. 793 794### no-pic 795 796Don't build with support for Position Independent Code. 797 798### no-pinshared 799 800Don't pin the shared libraries. 801 802By default OpenSSL will attempt to stay in memory until the process exits. 803This is so that libcrypto and libssl can be properly cleaned up automatically 804via an `atexit()` handler. The handler is registered by libcrypto and cleans 805up both libraries. On some platforms the `atexit()` handler will run on unload of 806libcrypto (if it has been dynamically loaded) rather than at process exit. 807 808This option can be used to stop OpenSSL from attempting to stay in memory until the 809process exits. This could lead to crashes if either libcrypto or libssl have 810already been unloaded at the point that the atexit handler is invoked, e.g. on a 811platform which calls `atexit()` on unload of the library, and libssl is unloaded 812before libcrypto then a crash is likely to happen. 813 814Note that shared library pinning is not automatically disabled for static builds, 815i.e., `no-shared` does not imply `no-pinshared`. This may come as a surprise when 816linking libcrypto statically into a shared third-party library, because in this 817case the shared library will be pinned. To prevent this behaviour, you need to 818configure the static build using `no-shared` and `no-pinshared` together. 819 820Applications can suppress running of the `atexit()` handler at run time by 821using the `OPENSSL_INIT_NO_ATEXIT` option to `OPENSSL_init_crypto()`. 822See the man page for it for further details. 823 824### no-posix-io 825 826Don't use POSIX IO capabilities. 827 828### no-psk 829 830Don't build support for Pre-Shared Key based ciphersuites. 831 832### no-rdrand 833 834Don't use hardware RDRAND capabilities. 835 836### no-rfc3779 837 838Don't build support for RFC3779, "X.509 Extensions for IP Addresses and 839AS Identifiers". 840 841### sctp 842 843Build support for Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP). 844 845### no-shared 846 847Do not create shared libraries, only static ones. 848 849See [Notes on shared libraries](#notes-on-shared-libraries) below. 850 851### no-sock 852 853Don't build support for socket BIOs. 854 855### no-srp 856 857Don't build support for Secure Remote Password (SRP) protocol or 858SRP based ciphersuites. 859 860### no-srtp 861 862Don't build Secure Real-Time Transport Protocol (SRTP) support. 863 864### no-sse2 865 866Exclude SSE2 code paths from 32-bit x86 assembly modules. 867 868Normally SSE2 extension is detected at run-time, but the decision whether or not 869the machine code will be executed is taken solely on CPU capability vector. This 870means that if you happen to run OS kernel which does not support SSE2 extension 871on Intel P4 processor, then your application might be exposed to "illegal 872instruction" exception. There might be a way to enable support in kernel, e.g. 873FreeBSD kernel can be compiled with `CPU_ENABLE_SSE`, and there is a way to 874disengage SSE2 code paths upon application start-up, but if you aim for wider 875"audience" running such kernel, consider `no-sse2`. Both the `386` and `no-asm` 876options imply `no-sse2`. 877 878### no-ssl-trace 879 880Don't build with SSL Trace capabilities. 881 882This removes the `-trace` option from `s_client` and `s_server`, and omits the 883`SSL_trace()` function from libssl. 884 885Disabling `ssl-trace` may provide a small reduction in libssl binary size. 886 887### no-static-engine 888 889Don't build the statically linked engines. 890 891This only has an impact when not built "shared". 892 893### no-stdio 894 895Don't use anything from the C header file `stdio.h` that makes use of the `FILE` 896type. Only libcrypto and libssl can be built in this way. Using this option will 897suppress building the command line applications. Additionally, since the OpenSSL 898tests also use the command line applications, the tests will also be skipped. 899 900### no-tests 901 902Don't build test programs or run any tests. 903 904### no-threads 905 906Don't build with support for multi-threaded applications. 907 908### threads 909 910Build with support for multi-threaded applications. Most platforms will enable 911this by default. However, if on a platform where this is not the case then this 912will usually require additional system-dependent options! 913 914See [Notes on multi-threading](#notes-on-multi-threading) below. 915 916### enable-trace 917 918Build with support for the integrated tracing api. 919 920See manual pages OSSL_trace_set_channel(3) and OSSL_trace_enabled(3) for details. 921 922### no-ts 923 924Don't build Time Stamping (TS) Authority support. 925 926### enable-ubsan 927 928Build with the Undefined Behaviour sanitiser (UBSAN). 929 930This is a developer option only. It may not work on all platforms and should 931never be used in production environments. It will only work when used with 932gcc or clang and should be used in conjunction with the `-DPEDANTIC` option 933(or the `--strict-warnings` option). 934 935### no-ui-console 936 937Don't build with the User Interface (UI) console method 938 939The User Interface console method enables text based console prompts. 940 941### enable-unit-test 942 943Enable additional unit test APIs. 944 945This should not typically be used in production deployments. 946 947### no-uplink 948 949Don't build support for UPLINK interface. 950 951### enable-weak-ssl-ciphers 952 953Build support for SSL/TLS ciphers that are considered "weak" 954 955Enabling this includes for example the RC4 based ciphersuites. 956 957### zlib 958 959Build with support for zlib compression/decompression. 960 961### zlib-dynamic 962 963Like the zlib option, but has OpenSSL load the zlib library dynamically 964when needed. 965 966This is only supported on systems where loading of shared libraries is supported. 967 968### 386 969 970In 32-bit x86 builds, use the 80386 instruction set only in assembly modules 971 972The default x86 code is more efficient, but requires at least an 486 processor. 973Note: This doesn't affect compiler generated code, so this option needs to be 974accompanied by a corresponding compiler-specific option. 975 976### no-{protocol} 977 978 no-{ssl|ssl3|tls|tls1|tls1_1|tls1_2|tls1_3|dtls|dtls1|dtls1_2} 979 980Don't build support for negotiating the specified SSL/TLS protocol. 981 982If `no-tls` is selected then all of `tls1`, `tls1_1`, `tls1_2` and `tls1_3` 983are disabled. 984Similarly `no-dtls` will disable `dtls1` and `dtls1_2`. The `no-ssl` option is 985synonymous with `no-ssl3`. Note this only affects version negotiation. 986OpenSSL will still provide the methods for applications to explicitly select 987the individual protocol versions. 988 989### no-{protocol}-method 990 991 no-{ssl3|tls1|tls1_1|tls1_2|dtls1|dtls1_2}-method 992 993Analogous to `no-{protocol}` but in addition do not build the methods for 994applications to explicitly select individual protocol versions. Note that there 995is no `no-tls1_3-method` option because there is no application method for 996TLSv1.3. 997 998Using individual protocol methods directly is deprecated. Applications should 999use `TLS_method()` instead. 1000 1001### enable-{algorithm} 1002 1003 enable-{md2|rc5} 1004 1005Build with support for the specified algorithm. 1006 1007### no-{algorithm} 1008 1009 no-{aria|bf|blake2|camellia|cast|chacha|cmac| 1010 des|dh|dsa|ecdh|ecdsa|idea|md4|mdc2|ocb| 1011 poly1305|rc2|rc4|rmd160|scrypt|seed| 1012 siphash|siv|sm2|sm3|sm4|whirlpool} 1013 1014Build without support for the specified algorithm. 1015 1016The `ripemd` algorithm is deprecated and if used is synonymous with `rmd160`. 1017 1018### Compiler-specific options 1019 1020 -Dxxx, -Ixxx, -Wp, -lxxx, -Lxxx, -Wl, -rpath, -R, -framework, -static 1021 1022These system specific options will be recognised and passed through to the 1023compiler to allow you to define preprocessor symbols, specify additional 1024libraries, library directories or other compiler options. It might be worth 1025noting that some compilers generate code specifically for processor the 1026compiler currently executes on. This is not necessarily what you might have 1027in mind, since it might be unsuitable for execution on other, typically older, 1028processor. Consult your compiler documentation. 1029 1030Take note of the [Environment Variables](#environment-variables) documentation 1031below and how these flags interact with those variables. 1032 1033 -xxx, +xxx, /xxx 1034 1035Additional options that are not otherwise recognised are passed through as 1036they are to the compiler as well. Unix-style options beginning with a 1037`-` or `+` and Windows-style options beginning with a `/` are recognized. 1038Again, consult your compiler documentation. 1039 1040If the option contains arguments separated by spaces, then the URL-style 1041notation `%20` can be used for the space character in order to avoid having 1042to quote the option. For example, `-opt%20arg` gets expanded to `-opt arg`. 1043In fact, any ASCII character can be encoded as %xx using its hexadecimal 1044encoding. 1045 1046Take note of the [Environment Variables](#environment-variables) documentation 1047below and how these flags interact with those variables. 1048 1049### Environment Variables 1050 1051 VAR=value 1052 1053Assign the given value to the environment variable `VAR` for `Configure`. 1054 1055These work just like normal environment variable assignments, but are supported 1056on all platforms and are confined to the configuration scripts only. 1057These assignments override the corresponding value in the inherited environment, 1058if there is one. 1059 1060The following variables are used as "`make` variables" and can be used as an 1061alternative to giving preprocessor, compiler and linker options directly as 1062configuration. The following variables are supported: 1063 1064 AR The static library archiver. 1065 ARFLAGS Flags for the static library archiver. 1066 AS The assembler compiler. 1067 ASFLAGS Flags for the assembler compiler. 1068 CC The C compiler. 1069 CFLAGS Flags for the C compiler. 1070 CXX The C++ compiler. 1071 CXXFLAGS Flags for the C++ compiler. 1072 CPP The C/C++ preprocessor. 1073 CPPFLAGS Flags for the C/C++ preprocessor. 1074 CPPDEFINES List of CPP macro definitions, separated 1075 by a platform specific character (':' or 1076 space for Unix, ';' for Windows, ',' for 1077 VMS). This can be used instead of using 1078 -D (or what corresponds to that on your 1079 compiler) in CPPFLAGS. 1080 CPPINCLUDES List of CPP inclusion directories, separated 1081 the same way as for CPPDEFINES. This can 1082 be used instead of -I (or what corresponds 1083 to that on your compiler) in CPPFLAGS. 1084 HASHBANGPERL Perl invocation to be inserted after '#!' 1085 in public perl scripts (only relevant on 1086 Unix). 1087 LD The program linker (not used on Unix, $(CC) 1088 is used there). 1089 LDFLAGS Flags for the shared library, DSO and 1090 program linker. 1091 LDLIBS Extra libraries to use when linking. 1092 Takes the form of a space separated list 1093 of library specifications on Unix and 1094 Windows, and as a comma separated list of 1095 libraries on VMS. 1096 RANLIB The library archive indexer. 1097 RC The Windows resource compiler. 1098 RCFLAGS Flags for the Windows resource compiler. 1099 RM The command to remove files and directories. 1100 1101These cannot be mixed with compiling/linking flags given on the command line. 1102In other words, something like this isn't permitted. 1103 1104 $ ./Configure -DFOO CPPFLAGS=-DBAR -DCOOKIE 1105 1106Backward compatibility note: 1107 1108To be compatible with older configuration scripts, the environment variables 1109are ignored if compiling/linking flags are given on the command line, except 1110for the following: 1111 1112 AR, CC, CXX, CROSS_COMPILE, HASHBANGPERL, PERL, RANLIB, RC, and WINDRES 1113 1114For example, the following command will not see `-DBAR`: 1115 1116 $ CPPFLAGS=-DBAR ./Configure -DCOOKIE 1117 1118However, the following will see both set variables: 1119 1120 $ CC=gcc CROSS_COMPILE=x86_64-w64-mingw32- ./Configure -DCOOKIE 1121 1122If `CC` is set, it is advisable to also set `CXX` to ensure both the C and C++ 1123compiler are in the same "family". This becomes relevant with 1124`enable-external-tests` and `enable-buildtest-c++`. 1125 1126### Reconfigure 1127 1128 reconf 1129 reconfigure 1130 1131Reconfigure from earlier data. 1132 1133This fetches the previous command line options and environment from data 1134saved in `configdata.pm` and runs the configuration process again, using 1135these options and environment. Note: NO other option is permitted together 1136with `reconf`. Note: The original configuration saves away values for ALL 1137environment variables that were used, and if they weren't defined, they are 1138still saved away with information that they weren't originally defined. 1139This information takes precedence over environment variables that are 1140defined when reconfiguring. 1141 1142Displaying configuration data 1143----------------------------- 1144 1145The configuration script itself will say very little, and finishes by 1146creating `configdata.pm`. This perl module can be loaded by other scripts 1147to find all the configuration data, and it can also be used as a script to 1148display all sorts of configuration data in a human readable form. 1149 1150For more information, please do: 1151 1152 $ ./configdata.pm --help # Unix 1153 1154or 1155 1156 $ perl configdata.pm --help # Windows and VMS 1157 1158Installation Steps in Detail 1159============================ 1160 1161Configure OpenSSL 1162----------------- 1163 1164### Automatic Configuration 1165 1166In previous version, the `config` script determined the platform type and 1167compiler and then called `Configure`. Starting with version 3.0, they are 1168the same. 1169 1170#### Unix / Linux / macOS 1171 1172 $ ./Configure [[ options ]] 1173 1174#### OpenVMS 1175 1176 $ perl Configure [[ options ]] 1177 1178#### Windows 1179 1180 $ perl Configure [[ options ]] 1181 1182### Manual Configuration 1183 1184OpenSSL knows about a range of different operating system, hardware and 1185compiler combinations. To see the ones it knows about, run 1186 1187 $ ./Configure LIST # Unix 1188 1189or 1190 1191 $ perl Configure LIST # All other platforms 1192 1193For the remainder of this text, the Unix form will be used in all examples. 1194Please use the appropriate form for your platform. 1195 1196Pick a suitable name from the list that matches your system. For most 1197operating systems there is a choice between using cc or gcc. 1198When you have identified your system (and if necessary compiler) use this 1199name as the argument to `Configure`. For example, a `linux-elf` user would 1200run: 1201 1202 $ ./Configure linux-elf [[ options ]] 1203 1204### Creating your own Configuration 1205 1206If your system isn't listed, you will have to create a configuration 1207file named `Configurations/{{ something }}.conf` and add the correct 1208configuration for your system. See the available configs as examples 1209and read [Configurations/README.md](Configurations/README.md) and 1210[Configurations/README-design.md](Configurations/README-design.md) 1211for more information. 1212 1213The generic configurations `cc` or `gcc` should usually work on 32 bit 1214Unix-like systems. 1215 1216`Configure` creates a build file (`Makefile` on Unix, `makefile` on Windows 1217and `descrip.mms` on OpenVMS) from a suitable template in `Configurations/`, 1218and defines various macros in `include/openssl/configuration.h` (generated 1219from `include/openssl/configuration.h.in`. 1220 1221If none of the generated build files suit your purpose, it's possible to 1222write your own build file template and give its name through the environment 1223variable `BUILDFILE`. For example, Ninja build files could be supported by 1224writing `Configurations/build.ninja.tmpl` and then configure with `BUILDFILE` 1225set like this (Unix syntax shown, you'll have to adapt for other platforms): 1226 1227 $ BUILDFILE=build.ninja perl Configure [options...] 1228 1229### Out of Tree Builds 1230 1231OpenSSL can be configured to build in a build directory separate from the 1232source code directory. It's done by placing yourself in some other 1233directory and invoking the configuration commands from there. 1234 1235#### Unix example 1236 1237 $ mkdir /var/tmp/openssl-build 1238 $ cd /var/tmp/openssl-build 1239 $ /PATH/TO/OPENSSL/SOURCE/Configure [[ options ]] 1240 1241#### OpenVMS example 1242 1243 $ set default sys$login: 1244 $ create/dir [.tmp.openssl-build] 1245 $ set default [.tmp.openssl-build] 1246 $ perl D:[PATH.TO.OPENSSL.SOURCE]Configure [[ options ]] 1247 1248#### Windows example 1249 1250 $ C: 1251 $ mkdir \temp-openssl 1252 $ cd \temp-openssl 1253 $ perl d:\PATH\TO\OPENSSL\SOURCE\Configure [[ options ]] 1254 1255Paths can be relative just as well as absolute. `Configure` will do its best 1256to translate them to relative paths whenever possible. 1257 1258Build OpenSSL 1259------------- 1260 1261Build OpenSSL by running: 1262 1263 $ make # Unix 1264 $ mms ! (or mmk) OpenVMS 1265 $ nmake # Windows 1266 1267This will build the OpenSSL libraries (`libcrypto.a` and `libssl.a` on 1268Unix, corresponding on other platforms) and the OpenSSL binary 1269(`openssl`). The libraries will be built in the top-level directory, 1270and the binary will be in the `apps/` subdirectory. 1271 1272If the build fails, take a look at the [Build Failures](#build-failures) 1273subsection of the [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting) section. 1274 1275Test OpenSSL 1276------------ 1277 1278After a successful build, and before installing, the libraries should 1279be tested. Run: 1280 1281 $ make test # Unix 1282 $ mms test ! OpenVMS 1283 $ nmake test # Windows 1284 1285**Warning:** you MUST run the tests from an unprivileged account (or disable 1286your privileges temporarily if your platform allows it). 1287 1288See [test/README.md](test/README.md) for further details how run tests. 1289 1290See [test/README-dev.md](test/README-dev.md) for guidelines on adding tests. 1291 1292Install OpenSSL 1293--------------- 1294 1295If everything tests ok, install OpenSSL with 1296 1297 $ make install # Unix 1298 $ mms install ! OpenVMS 1299 $ nmake install # Windows 1300 1301Note that in order to perform the install step above you need to have 1302appropriate permissions to write to the installation directory. 1303 1304The above commands will install all the software components in this 1305directory tree under `<PREFIX>` (the directory given with `--prefix` or 1306its default): 1307 1308### Unix / Linux / macOS 1309 1310 bin/ Contains the openssl binary and a few other 1311 utility scripts. 1312 include/openssl 1313 Contains the header files needed if you want 1314 to build your own programs that use libcrypto 1315 or libssl. 1316 lib Contains the OpenSSL library files. 1317 lib/engines Contains the OpenSSL dynamically loadable engines. 1318 1319 share/man/man1 Contains the OpenSSL command line man-pages. 1320 share/man/man3 Contains the OpenSSL library calls man-pages. 1321 share/man/man5 Contains the OpenSSL configuration format man-pages. 1322 share/man/man7 Contains the OpenSSL other misc man-pages. 1323 1324 share/doc/openssl/html/man1 1325 share/doc/openssl/html/man3 1326 share/doc/openssl/html/man5 1327 share/doc/openssl/html/man7 1328 Contains the HTML rendition of the man-pages. 1329 1330### OpenVMS 1331 1332'arch' is replaced with the architecture name, `ALPHA` or `IA64`, 1333'sover' is replaced with the shared library version (`0101` for 1.1), and 1334'pz' is replaced with the pointer size OpenSSL was built with: 1335 1336 [.EXE.'arch'] Contains the openssl binary. 1337 [.EXE] Contains a few utility scripts. 1338 [.include.openssl] 1339 Contains the header files needed if you want 1340 to build your own programs that use libcrypto 1341 or libssl. 1342 [.LIB.'arch'] Contains the OpenSSL library files. 1343 [.ENGINES'sover''pz'.'arch'] 1344 Contains the OpenSSL dynamically loadable engines. 1345 [.SYS$STARTUP] Contains startup, login and shutdown scripts. 1346 These define appropriate logical names and 1347 command symbols. 1348 [.SYSTEST] Contains the installation verification procedure. 1349 [.HTML] Contains the HTML rendition of the manual pages. 1350 1351### Additional Directories 1352 1353Additionally, install will add the following directories under 1354OPENSSLDIR (the directory given with `--openssldir` or its default) 1355for you convenience: 1356 1357 certs Initially empty, this is the default location 1358 for certificate files. 1359 private Initially empty, this is the default location 1360 for private key files. 1361 misc Various scripts. 1362 1363The installation directory should be appropriately protected to ensure 1364unprivileged users cannot make changes to OpenSSL binaries or files, or 1365install engines. If you already have a pre-installed version of OpenSSL as 1366part of your Operating System it is recommended that you do not overwrite 1367the system version and instead install to somewhere else. 1368 1369Package builders who want to configure the library for standard locations, 1370but have the package installed somewhere else so that it can easily be 1371packaged, can use 1372 1373 $ make DESTDIR=/tmp/package-root install # Unix 1374 $ mms/macro="DESTDIR=TMP:[PACKAGE-ROOT]" install ! OpenVMS 1375 1376The specified destination directory will be prepended to all installation 1377target paths. 1378 1379Compatibility issues with previous OpenSSL versions 1380--------------------------------------------------- 1381 1382### COMPILING existing applications 1383 1384Starting with version 1.1.0, OpenSSL hides a number of structures that were 1385previously open. This includes all internal libssl structures and a number 1386of EVP types. Accessor functions have been added to allow controlled access 1387to the structures' data. 1388 1389This means that some software needs to be rewritten to adapt to the new ways 1390of doing things. This often amounts to allocating an instance of a structure 1391explicitly where you could previously allocate them on the stack as automatic 1392variables, and using the provided accessor functions where you would previously 1393access a structure's field directly. 1394 1395Some APIs have changed as well. However, older APIs have been preserved when 1396possible. 1397 1398Post-installation Notes 1399----------------------- 1400 1401With the default OpenSSL installation comes a FIPS provider module, which 1402needs some post-installation attention, without which it will not be usable. 1403This involves using the following command: 1404 1405 $ openssl fipsinstall 1406 1407See the openssl-fipsinstall(1) manual for details and examples. 1408 1409Advanced Build Options 1410====================== 1411 1412Environment Variables 1413--------------------- 1414 1415A number of environment variables can be used to provide additional control 1416over the build process. Typically these should be defined prior to running 1417`Configure`. Not all environment variables are relevant to all platforms. 1418 1419 AR 1420 The name of the ar executable to use. 1421 1422 BUILDFILE 1423 Use a different build file name than the platform default 1424 ("Makefile" on Unix-like platforms, "makefile" on native Windows, 1425 "descrip.mms" on OpenVMS). This requires that there is a 1426 corresponding build file template. 1427 See [Configurations/README.md](Configurations/README.md) 1428 for further information. 1429 1430 CC 1431 The compiler to use. Configure will attempt to pick a default 1432 compiler for your platform but this choice can be overridden 1433 using this variable. Set it to the compiler executable you wish 1434 to use, e.g. gcc or clang. 1435 1436 CROSS_COMPILE 1437 This environment variable has the same meaning as for the 1438 "--cross-compile-prefix" Configure flag described above. If both 1439 are set then the Configure flag takes precedence. 1440 1441 HASHBANGPERL 1442 The command string for the Perl executable to insert in the 1443 #! line of perl scripts that will be publicly installed. 1444 Default: /usr/bin/env perl 1445 Note: the value of this variable is added to the same scripts 1446 on all platforms, but it's only relevant on Unix-like platforms. 1447 1448 KERNEL_BITS 1449 This can be the value `32` or `64` to specify the architecture 1450 when it is not "obvious" to the configuration. It should generally 1451 not be necessary to specify this environment variable. 1452 1453 NM 1454 The name of the nm executable to use. 1455 1456 OPENSSL_LOCAL_CONFIG_DIR 1457 OpenSSL comes with a database of information about how it 1458 should be built on different platforms as well as build file 1459 templates for those platforms. The database is comprised of 1460 ".conf" files in the Configurations directory. The build 1461 file templates reside there as well as ".tmpl" files. See the 1462 file [Configurations/README.md](Configurations/README.md) 1463 for further information about the format of ".conf" files 1464 as well as information on the ".tmpl" files. 1465 In addition to the standard ".conf" and ".tmpl" files, it is 1466 possible to create your own ".conf" and ".tmpl" files and 1467 store them locally, outside the OpenSSL source tree. 1468 This environment variable can be set to the directory where 1469 these files are held and will be considered by Configure 1470 before it looks in the standard directories. 1471 1472 PERL 1473 The name of the Perl executable to use when building OpenSSL. 1474 Only needed if builing should use a different Perl executable 1475 than what is used to run the Configure script. 1476 1477 RANLIB 1478 The name of the ranlib executable to use. 1479 1480 RC 1481 The name of the rc executable to use. The default will be as 1482 defined for the target platform in the ".conf" file. If not 1483 defined then "windres" will be used. The WINDRES environment 1484 variable is synonymous to this. If both are defined then RC 1485 takes precedence. 1486 1487 WINDRES 1488 See RC. 1489 1490Makefile Targets 1491---------------- 1492 1493The `Configure` script generates a Makefile in a format relevant to the specific 1494platform. The Makefiles provide a number of targets that can be used. Not all 1495targets may be available on all platforms. Only the most common targets are 1496described here. Examine the Makefiles themselves for the full list. 1497 1498 all 1499 The target to build all the software components and 1500 documentation. 1501 1502 build_sw 1503 Build all the software components. 1504 THIS IS THE DEFAULT TARGET. 1505 1506 build_docs 1507 Build all documentation components. 1508 1509 clean 1510 Remove all build artefacts and return the directory to a "clean" 1511 state. 1512 1513 depend 1514 Rebuild the dependencies in the Makefiles. This is a legacy 1515 option that no longer needs to be used since OpenSSL 1.1.0. 1516 1517 install 1518 Install all OpenSSL components. 1519 1520 install_sw 1521 Only install the OpenSSL software components. 1522 1523 install_docs 1524 Only install the OpenSSL documentation components. 1525 1526 install_man_docs 1527 Only install the OpenSSL man pages (Unix only). 1528 1529 install_html_docs 1530 Only install the OpenSSL HTML documentation. 1531 1532 install_fips 1533 Install the FIPS provider module configuration file. 1534 1535 list-tests 1536 Prints a list of all the self test names. 1537 1538 test 1539 Build and run the OpenSSL self tests. 1540 1541 uninstall 1542 Uninstall all OpenSSL components. 1543 1544 reconfigure 1545 reconf 1546 Re-run the configuration process, as exactly as the last time 1547 as possible. 1548 1549 update 1550 This is a developer option. If you are developing a patch for 1551 OpenSSL you may need to use this if you want to update 1552 automatically generated files; add new error codes or add new 1553 (or change the visibility of) public API functions. (Unix only). 1554 1555Running Selected Tests 1556---------------------- 1557 1558You can specify a set of tests to be performed 1559using the `make` variable `TESTS`. 1560 1561See the section [Running Selected Tests of 1562test/README.md](test/README.md#running-selected-tests). 1563 1564Troubleshooting 1565=============== 1566 1567Configuration Problems 1568---------------------- 1569 1570### Selecting the correct target 1571 1572The `./Configure` script tries hard to guess your operating system, but in some 1573cases it does not succeed. You will see a message like the following: 1574 1575 $ ./Configure 1576 Operating system: x86-whatever-minix 1577 This system (minix) is not supported. See file INSTALL.md for details. 1578 1579Even if the automatic target selection by the `./Configure` script fails, 1580chances are that you still might find a suitable target in the `Configurations` 1581directory, which you can supply to the `./Configure` command, 1582possibly after some adjustment. 1583 1584The `Configurations/` directory contains a lot of examples of such targets. 1585The main configuration file is [10-main.conf], which contains all targets that 1586are officially supported by the OpenSSL team. Other configuration files contain 1587targets contributed by other OpenSSL users. The list of targets can be found in 1588a Perl list `my %targets = ( ... )`. 1589 1590 my %targets = ( 1591 ... 1592 "target-name" => { 1593 inherit_from => [ "base-target" ], 1594 CC => "...", 1595 cflags => add("..."), 1596 asm_arch => '...', 1597 perlasm_scheme => "...", 1598 }, 1599 ... 1600 ) 1601 1602If you call `./Configure` without arguments, it will give you a list of all 1603known targets. Using `grep`, you can lookup the target definition in the 1604`Configurations/` directory. For example the `android-x86_64` can be found in 1605[Configurations/15-android.conf](Configurations/15-android.conf). 1606 1607The directory contains two README files, which explain the general syntax and 1608design of the configuration files. 1609 1610 - [Configurations/README.md](Configurations/README.md) 1611 - [Configurations/README-design.md](Configurations/README-design.md) 1612 1613If you need further help, try to search the [openssl-users] mailing list 1614or the [GitHub Issues] for existing solutions. If you don't find anything, 1615you can [raise an issue] to ask a question yourself. 1616 1617More about our support resources can be found in the [SUPPORT] file. 1618 1619### Configuration Errors 1620 1621If the `./config` or `./Configure` command fails with an error message, 1622read the error message carefully and try to figure out whether you made 1623a mistake (e.g., by providing a wrong option), or whether the script is 1624working incorrectly. If you think you encountered a bug, please 1625[raise an issue] on GitHub to file a bug report. 1626 1627Along with a short description of the bug, please provide the complete 1628configure command line and the relevant output including the error message. 1629 1630Note: To make the output readable, pleace add a 'code fence' (three backquotes 1631` ``` ` on a separate line) before and after your output: 1632 1633 ``` 1634 ./Configure [your arguments...] 1635 1636 [output...] 1637 1638 ``` 1639 1640Build Failures 1641-------------- 1642 1643If the build fails, look carefully at the output. Try to locate and understand 1644the error message. It might be that the compiler is already telling you 1645exactly what you need to do to fix your problem. 1646 1647There may be reasons for the failure that aren't problems in OpenSSL itself, 1648for example if the compiler reports missing standard or third party headers. 1649 1650If the build succeeded previously, but fails after a source or configuration 1651change, it might be helpful to clean the build tree before attempting another 1652build. Use this command: 1653 1654 $ make clean # Unix 1655 $ mms clean ! (or mmk) OpenVMS 1656 $ nmake clean # Windows 1657 1658Assembler error messages can sometimes be sidestepped by using the `no-asm` 1659configuration option. See also [notes](#notes-on-assembler-modules-compilation). 1660 1661Compiling parts of OpenSSL with gcc and others with the system compiler will 1662result in unresolved symbols on some systems. 1663 1664If you are still having problems, try to search the [openssl-users] mailing 1665list or the [GitHub Issues] for existing solutions. If you think you 1666encountered an OpenSSL bug, please [raise an issue] to file a bug report. 1667Please take the time to review the existing issues first; maybe the bug was 1668already reported or has already been fixed. 1669 1670Test Failures 1671------------- 1672 1673If some tests fail, look at the output. There may be reasons for the failure 1674that isn't a problem in OpenSSL itself (like an OS malfunction or a Perl issue). 1675 1676You may want increased verbosity, that can be accomplished as described in 1677section [Test Failures of test/README.md](test/README.md#test-failures). 1678 1679You may also want to selectively specify which test(s) to perform. This can be 1680done using the `make` variable `TESTS` as described in section [Running 1681Selected Tests of test/README.md](test/README.md#running-selected-tests). 1682 1683If you find a problem with OpenSSL itself, try removing any 1684compiler optimization flags from the `CFLAGS` line in the Makefile and 1685run `make clean; make` or corresponding. 1686 1687To report a bug please open an issue on GitHub, at 1688<https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues>. 1689 1690Notes 1691===== 1692 1693Notes on multi-threading 1694------------------------ 1695 1696For some systems, the OpenSSL `Configure` script knows what compiler options 1697are needed to generate a library that is suitable for multi-threaded 1698applications. On these systems, support for multi-threading is enabled 1699by default; use the `no-threads` option to disable (this should never be 1700necessary). 1701 1702On other systems, to enable support for multi-threading, you will have 1703to specify at least two options: `threads`, and a system-dependent option. 1704(The latter is `-D_REENTRANT` on various systems.) The default in this 1705case, obviously, is not to include support for multi-threading (but 1706you can still use `no-threads` to suppress an annoying warning message 1707from the `Configure` script.) 1708 1709OpenSSL provides built-in support for two threading models: pthreads (found on 1710most UNIX/Linux systems), and Windows threads. No other threading models are 1711supported. If your platform does not provide pthreads or Windows threads then 1712you should use `Configure` with the `no-threads` option. 1713 1714For pthreads, all locks are non-recursive. In addition, in a debug build, 1715the mutex attribute `PTHREAD_MUTEX_ERRORCHECK` is used. If this is not 1716available on your platform, you might have to add 1717`-DOPENSSL_NO_MUTEX_ERRORCHECK` to your `Configure` invocation. 1718(On Linux `PTHREAD_MUTEX_ERRORCHECK` is an enum value, so a built-in 1719ifdef test cannot be used.) 1720 1721Notes on shared libraries 1722------------------------- 1723 1724For most systems the OpenSSL `Configure` script knows what is needed to 1725build shared libraries for libcrypto and libssl. On these systems 1726the shared libraries will be created by default. This can be suppressed and 1727only static libraries created by using the `no-shared` option. On systems 1728where OpenSSL does not know how to build shared libraries the `no-shared` 1729option will be forced and only static libraries will be created. 1730 1731Shared libraries are named a little differently on different platforms. 1732One way or another, they all have the major OpenSSL version number as 1733part of the file name, i.e. for OpenSSL 1.1.x, `1.1` is somehow part of 1734the name. 1735 1736On most POSIX platforms, shared libraries are named `libcrypto.so.1.1` 1737and `libssl.so.1.1`. 1738 1739on Cygwin, shared libraries are named `cygcrypto-1.1.dll` and `cygssl-1.1.dll` 1740with import libraries `libcrypto.dll.a` and `libssl.dll.a`. 1741 1742On Windows build with MSVC or using MingW, shared libraries are named 1743`libcrypto-1_1.dll` and `libssl-1_1.dll` for 32-bit Windows, 1744`libcrypto-1_1-x64.dll` and `libssl-1_1-x64.dll` for 64-bit x86_64 Windows, 1745and `libcrypto-1_1-ia64.dll` and `libssl-1_1-ia64.dll` for IA64 Windows. 1746With MSVC, the import libraries are named `libcrypto.lib` and `libssl.lib`, 1747while with MingW, they are named `libcrypto.dll.a` and `libssl.dll.a`. 1748 1749On VMS, shareable images (VMS speak for shared libraries) are named 1750`ossl$libcrypto0101_shr.exe` and `ossl$libssl0101_shr.exe`. However, when 1751OpenSSL is specifically built for 32-bit pointers, the shareable images 1752are named `ossl$libcrypto0101_shr32.exe` and `ossl$libssl0101_shr32.exe` 1753instead, and when built for 64-bit pointers, they are named 1754`ossl$libcrypto0101_shr64.exe` and `ossl$libssl0101_shr64.exe`. 1755 1756Notes on random number generation 1757--------------------------------- 1758 1759Availability of cryptographically secure random numbers is required for 1760secret key generation. OpenSSL provides several options to seed the 1761internal CSPRNG. If not properly seeded, the internal CSPRNG will refuse 1762to deliver random bytes and a "PRNG not seeded error" will occur. 1763 1764The seeding method can be configured using the `--with-rand-seed` option, 1765which can be used to specify a comma separated list of seed methods. 1766However, in most cases OpenSSL will choose a suitable default method, 1767so it is not necessary to explicitly provide this option. Note also 1768that not all methods are available on all platforms. The FIPS provider will 1769silently ignore seed sources that were not validated. 1770 1771I) On operating systems which provide a suitable randomness source (in 1772form of a system call or system device), OpenSSL will use the optimal 1773available method to seed the CSPRNG from the operating system's 1774randomness sources. This corresponds to the option `--with-rand-seed=os`. 1775 1776II) On systems without such a suitable randomness source, automatic seeding 1777and reseeding is disabled (`--with-rand-seed=none`) and it may be necessary 1778to install additional support software to obtain a random seed and reseed 1779the CSPRNG manually. Please check out the manual pages for `RAND_add()`, 1780`RAND_bytes()`, `RAND_egd()`, and the FAQ for more information. 1781 1782Notes on assembler modules compilation 1783-------------------------------------- 1784 1785Compilation of some code paths in assembler modules might depend on whether the 1786current assembler version supports certain ISA extensions or not. Code paths 1787that use the AES-NI, PCLMULQDQ, SSSE3, and SHA extensions are always assembled. 1788Apart from that, the minimum requirements for the assembler versions are shown 1789in the table below: 1790 1791| ISA extension | GNU as | nasm | llvm | 1792|---------------|--------|--------|---------| 1793| AVX | 2.19 | 2.09 | 3.0 | 1794| AVX2 | 2.22 | 2.10 | 3.1 | 1795| ADCX/ADOX | 2.23 | 2.10 | 3.3 | 1796| AVX512 | 2.25 | 2.11.8 | 3.6 (*) | 1797| AVX512IFMA | 2.26 | 2.11.8 | 6.0 (*) | 1798| VAES | 2.30 | 2.13.3 | 6.0 (*) | 1799 1800--- 1801 1802(*) Even though AVX512 support was implemented in llvm 3.6, prior to version 7.0 1803an explicit -march flag was apparently required to compile assembly modules. But 1804then the compiler generates processor-specific code, which in turn contradicts 1805the idea of performing dispatch at run-time, which is facilitated by the special 1806variable `OPENSSL_ia32cap`. For versions older than 7.0, it is possible to work 1807around the problem by forcing the build procedure to use the following script: 1808 1809 #!/bin/sh 1810 exec clang -no-integrated-as "$@" 1811 1812instead of the real clang. In which case it doesn't matter what clang version 1813is used, as it is the version of the GNU assembler that will be checked. 1814 1815--- 1816 1817<!-- Links --> 1818 1819[openssl-users]: 1820 <https://mta.openssl.org/mailman/listinfo/openssl-users> 1821 1822[SUPPORT]: 1823 ./SUPPORT.md 1824 1825[GitHub Issues]: 1826 <https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues> 1827 1828[raise an issue]: 1829 <https://github.com/openssl/openssl/issues/new/choose> 1830 1831[10-main.conf]: 1832 Configurations/10-main.conf 1833