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authorAndy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>2018-08-06 09:43:39 +0200
committerAndy Polyakov <appro@openssl.org>2018-08-07 08:53:12 +0200
commitf44d7e8b472dfc0602f8d06ef72e808a5e8d410c (patch)
treef19a31523638b6bf9d2b98f19f27de00376895fe
parent38eca7fed09a57c1b7a05d651af2c667b3e87719 (diff)
INSTALL,NOTES.ANDROID: minor updates.
Reviewed-by: Richard Levitte <levitte@openssl.org> (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/6866)
-rw-r--r--INSTALL10
-rw-r--r--NOTES.ANDROID4
2 files changed, 8 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/INSTALL b/INSTALL
index 98c34d6a71..34023dcd75 100644
--- a/INSTALL
+++ b/INSTALL
@@ -145,8 +145,8 @@
put together one-size-fits-all instructions. You might
have to pass more flags or set up environment variables
to actually make it work. Android and iOS cases are
- discussed in corresponding Configurations/10-main.cf
- sections. But there are cases when this option alone is
+ discussed in corresponding Configurations/15-*.conf
+ files. But there are cases when this option alone is
sufficient. For example to build the mingw64 target on
Linux "--cross-compile-prefix=x86_64-w64-mingw32-"
works. Naturally provided that mingw packages are
@@ -157,10 +157,12 @@
"--cross-compile-prefix=mipsel-linux-gnu-" suffices
in such case. Needless to mention that you have to
invoke ./Configure, not ./config, and pass your target
- name explicitly.
+ name explicitly. Also, note that --openssldir refers
+ to target's file system, not one you are building on.
--debug
- Build OpenSSL with debugging symbols.
+ Build OpenSSL with debugging symbols and zero optimization
+ level.
--libdir=DIR
The name of the directory under the top of the installation
diff --git a/NOTES.ANDROID b/NOTES.ANDROID
index 103ed87f3e..d13f47d667 100644
--- a/NOTES.ANDROID
+++ b/NOTES.ANDROID
@@ -46,8 +46,8 @@
One can engage clang by adjusting PATH to cover NDK's clang. Just keep
in mind that if you miss it, Configure will try to use gcc... Also,
PATH would need even further adjustment to cover unprefixed, yet
- target-specific, ar and ranlib (or not, if you use binutils-multiarch
- on your Linux).
+ target-specific, ar and ranlib. It's possible that you don't need to
+ bother, if binutils-multiarch is installed on your Linux system.
Running tests (on Linux)
------------------------