NOTES.UNIX: add "Linking your application" paragraph
... and mention more runtime search path flags. Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org> Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org> (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/6587)
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NOTES.UNIX
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NOTES.UNIX
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@ -24,12 +24,12 @@
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Every Unix system has its own set of default locations for shared
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libraries, such as /lib, /usr/lib or possibly /usr/local/lib. If
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libraries are installed in non-default locations, dynamically linked
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binaries will not find them and therefore fail to run unless they get a
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bit of help from a defined runtime shared library search path.
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binaries will not find them and therefore fail to run, unless they get
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a bit of help from a defined runtime shared library search path.
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For OpenSSL's application (the 'openssl' command), our configuration
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scripts do NOT generally set the runtime shared library search path for
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you. It's therefore advisable to set it explicitly when configuring
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you. It's therefore advisable to set it explicitly when configuring,
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unless the libraries are to be installed in directories that you know
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to be in the default list.
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@ -42,14 +42,15 @@
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Possible options to set the runtime shared library search path include
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the following:
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-Wl,-rpath,/whatever/path
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-R /whatever/path
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-rpath /whatever/path
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-Wl,-rpath,/whatever/path # Linux, *BSD, etc.
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-R /whatever/path # Solaris
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-Wl,-R,/whatever/path # AIX (-bsvr4 is passed internally)
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-Wl,+b,/whatever/path # HP-UX
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-rpath /whatever/path # Tru64, IRIX
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OpenSSL's configuration scripts recognise all these options and pass
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them to the Makefile that they build. (In fact, it recognises anything
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starting with '-Wl,' as a linker option, so for example, HP-UX'
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'-Wl,+b,/whatever/path' would be used correctly)
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them to the Makefile that they build. (In fact, all arguments starting
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with '-Wl,' are recognised as linker options.)
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Please do not use verbatim directories in your runtime shared library
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search path! Some OpenSSL config targets add an extra directory level
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@ -89,3 +90,28 @@
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$ ./config --prefix=/usr/local/ssl --openssldir=/usr/local/ssl \
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'-Wl,--enable-new-dtags,-rpath,$(LIBRPATH)'
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It might be worth noting that some/most ELF systems implement support
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for runtime search path relative to the directory containing current
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executable, by interpreting $ORIGIN along with some other internal
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variables. Consult your system documentation.
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Linking your application
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------------------------
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Third-party applications dynamically linked with OpenSSL (or any other)
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shared library face exactly the same problem with non-default locations.
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The OpenSSL config options mentioned above might or might not have bearing
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on linking of the target application. "Might" means that under some
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circumstances it would be sufficient to link with OpenSSL shared library
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"naturally", i.e. with -L/whatever/path -lssl -lcrypto. But there are
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also cases when you'd have to explicitly specify runtime search path
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when linking your application. Consult your system documentation and use
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above section as inspiration...
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Shared OpenSSL builds also install static libraries. Linking with the
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latter is likely to require special care, because linkers usually look
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for shared libraries first and tend to remain "blind" to static OpenSSL
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libraries. Referring to system documentation would suffice, if not for
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a corner case. On AIX static libraries (in shared build) are named
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differently, add _a suffix to link with them, e.g. -lcrypto_a.
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