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 NOTES FOR THE OPENVMS PLATFORM
 ==============================

 Requirement details
 -------------------

 In addition to the requirements and instructions listed in INSTALL,
 this are required as well:

  * At least ODS-5 disk organization for source and build.
    Installation can be done on any existing disk organization.


 About ANSI C compiler
 ---------------------

 An ANSI C compiled is needed among other things.  This means that
 VAX C is not and will not be supported.

 We have only tested with DEC C (a.k.a HP VMS C / VSI C) and require
 version 7.1 or later.  Compiling with a different ANSI C compiler may
 require some work.

 Please avoid using C RTL feature logical names DECC$* when building
 and testing OpenSSL.  Most of all, they can be disruptive when
 running the tests, as they affect the Perl interpreter.


 About ODS-5 directory names and Perl
 ------------------------------------

 It seems that the perl function canonpath() in the File::Spec module
 doesn't treat file specifications where the last directory name
 contains periods very well.  Unfortunately, some versions of VMS tar
 will keep the periods in the OpenSSL source directory instead of
 converting them to underscore, thereby leaving your source in
 something like [.openssl-1^.1^.0].  This will lead to issues when
 configuring and building OpenSSL.

 We have no replacement for Perl's canonpath(), so the best workaround
 for now is to rename the OpenSSL source directory, as follows (please
 adjust for the actual source directory name you have):

    $ rename openssl-1^.1^.0.DIR openssl-1_1_0.DIR 


 About MMS and DCL
 -----------------

 MMS has certain limitations when it comes to line length, and DCL has
 certain limitations when it comes to total command length.  We do
 what we can to mitigate, but there is the possibility that it's not
 enough.  Should you run into issues, a very simple solution is to set
 yourself up a few logical names for the directory trees you're going
 to use.


 Checking the distribution
 -------------------------

 There have been reports of places where the distribution didn't quite
 get through, for example if you've copied the tree from a NFS-mounted
 Unix mount point.

 The easiest way to check if everything got through as it should is to
 check for one of the following files:

   [.crypto]opensslconf^.h.in

 The best way to get a correct distribution is to download the gzipped
 tar file from ftp://ftp.openssl.org/source/, use GZIP -d to uncompress
 it and VMSTAR to unpack the resulting tar file.

 Gzip and VMSTAR are available here:

   http://antinode.info/dec/index.html#Software

 Should you need it, you can find UnZip for VMS here:

   http://www.info-zip.org/UnZip.html