commit 04397b32938b5934efa096d9218b93a31c73fe6c from: Omar Polo date: Thu Jan 21 13:14:55 2021 UTC typo commit - 8f0da580686d7a40eb710809ee2500eb57ba7830 commit + 04397b32938b5934efa096d9218b93a31c73fe6c blob - aa67019fd680e63bb4986b803b55dc5dedcf9464 blob + d6dac179f5db72ec61eaf680f0bddaafb34fcb7e --- README.md +++ README.md @@ -71,11 +71,11 @@ your distribution of choice or use docker instead. However, it's possible to link `gmid` to locally-installed libtls quite easily. (It's how I test gmid on Fedora, for instance) -Let's say you have compiled and installed libressl in `$LIBRESSL`, +Let's say you have compiled and installed libretls in `$LIBRETLS`, then you can build `gmid` with - ./configure CFLAGS="-I$LIBRESSL/include" \ - LDFLAGS="$LIBRESSL/lib/libtls.a -lssl -lcrypto" + ./configure CFLAGS="-I$LIBRETLS/include" \ + LDFLAGS="$LIBRETLS/lib/libtls.a -lssl -lcrypto" make (Fedora requires also `-lpthread` for some reason)