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			82 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.7 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			82 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.7 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
| 
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|  NOTES FOR THE OPENVMS PLATFORM
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|  ==============================
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| 
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|  Requirement details
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|  -------------------
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| 
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|  In addition to the requirements and instructions listed in INSTALL,
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|  this are required as well:
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| 
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|   * At least ODS-5 disk organization for source and build.
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|     Installation can be done on any existing disk organization.
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| 
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| 
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|  About ANSI C compiler
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|  ---------------------
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| 
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|  An ANSI C compiled is needed among other things.  This means that
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|  VAX C is not and will not be supported.
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| 
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|  We have only tested with DEC C (a.k.a HP VMS C / VSI C) and require
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|  version 7.1 or later.  Compiling with a different ANSI C compiler may
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|  require some work.
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| 
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|  Please avoid using C RTL feature logical names DECC$* when building
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|  and testing OpenSSL.  Most of all, they can be disruptive when
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|  running the tests, as they affect the Perl interpreter.
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| 
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| 
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|  About ODS-5 directory names and Perl
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|  ------------------------------------
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| 
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|  It seems that the perl function canonpath() in the File::Spec module
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|  doesn't treat file specifications where the last directory name
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|  contains periods very well.  Unfortunately, some versions of VMS tar
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|  will keep the periods in the OpenSSL source directory instead of
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|  converting them to underscore, thereby leaving your source in
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|  something like [.openssl-1^.1^.0].  This will lead to issues when
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|  configuring and building OpenSSL.
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| 
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|  We have no replacement for Perl's canonpath(), so the best workaround
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|  for now is to rename the OpenSSL source directory, as follows (please
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|  adjust for the actual source directory name you have):
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| 
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|     $ rename openssl-1^.1^.0.DIR openssl-1_1_0.DIR 
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| 
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| 
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|  About MMS and DCL
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|  -----------------
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| 
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|  MMS has certain limitations when it comes to line length, and DCL has
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|  certain limitations when it comes to total command length.  We do
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|  what we can to mitigate, but there is the possibility that it's not
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|  enough.  Should you run into issues, a very simple solution is to set
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|  yourself up a few logical names for the directory trees you're going
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|  to use.
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| 
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| 
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|  Checking the distribution
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|  -------------------------
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| 
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|  There have been reports of places where the distribution didn't quite
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|  get through, for example if you've copied the tree from a NFS-mounted
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|  Unix mount point.
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| 
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|  The easiest way to check if everything got through as it should is to
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|  check for one of the following files:
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| 
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|    [.crypto]opensslconf^.h.in
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| 
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|  The best way to get a correct distribution is to download the gzipped
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|  tar file from ftp://ftp.openssl.org/source/, use GZIP -d to uncompress
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|  it and VMSTAR to unpack the resulting tar file.
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| 
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|  Gzip and VMSTAR are available here:
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| 
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|    http://antinode.info/dec/index.html#Software
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| 
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|  Should you need it, you can find UnZip for VMS here:
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| 
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|    http://www.info-zip.org/UnZip.html
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