commit ed78e81b9c19d27e0898b28f138f2536a286020d from: Omar Polo date: Fri Feb 18 09:09:23 2022 UTC remove paragraph "locally installed libressl" + some tweaks libtls is now widely available, it's at least on gentoo, arch, void, alpine, fedora and debian sid; there's no need to show how to compile to a locally installed one. commit - c273bc0e414a3405a9c009bcf05fd8bae488bfdf commit + ed78e81b9c19d27e0898b28f138f2536a286020d blob - cbb8d83aa181fbe7251eddefa0e5d0c10e1a78b5 blob + 4e956bac7c8a197c2641a73b641ccd8d40134680 --- README.md +++ README.md @@ -129,28 +129,13 @@ more information. [contrib-page]: https://gmid.omarpolo.com/contrib.html#dockerfile -### Local libretls - -This is **NOT** recommended, please try to port LibreSSL/LibreTLS to -your distribution of choice or use docker instead. - -However, it's possible to statically-link `gmid` to locally-installed -libretls quite easily. (It's how I test gmid on Fedora, for instance) - -Let's say you have compiled and installed libretls in `$LIBRETLS`, -then you can build `gmid` with - - ./configure CFLAGS="-I$LIBRETLS/include" \ - LDFLAGS="$LIBRETLS/lib/libtls.a -lssl -lcrypto -lpthread -levent" - make - ### Testing Execute make regress -to start the suite. Keep in mind that the regression tests will +to start the suite. Keep in mind that the regression tests needs to create files inside the `regress` directory and bind the 10965 port.