-rw-r--r-- 2918 librandombytes-20230905/doc/install.md raw
Prerequisites: `python3`; `gcc` and/or `clang`; OpenSSL. Currently
tested only under Linux, but porting to other systems shouldn't be
difficult.
### For sysadmins
To install in `/usr/local/{include,lib,bin}`:
./configure && make -j8 install
If you're running an old Linux system and see that the `randombytes-info`
output says `randombytes source kernel-devurandom` (this will happen on
Linux kernels before 3.17), add the lines
dd count=1 bs=64 if=/dev/random of=/dev/urandom status=none \
&& findmnt -t tmpfs -T /var/run >/dev/null \
&& touch /var/run/urandom-ready &
to your boot scripts to improve librandombytes startup time. On new
Linux systems, `randombytes-info` should instead say `kernel-getrandom`
and startup time should be fine in any case, unaffected by these lines.
If you're running a Linux virtual machine (old or new) and see startup
delays, you probably need the host to provide `virtio-rng`.
### For developers with an unprivileged account
Typically you'll already have
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH="$HOME/lib"
export LIBRARY_PATH="$HOME/lib"
export CPATH="$HOME/include"
export PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH"
in `$HOME/.profile`. To install in `$HOME/{include,lib,bin}`:
./configure --prefix=$HOME && make -j8 install
### For distributors creating a package
Run
./configure --prefix=/usr && make -j8
and then follow your usual packaging procedures for the
`build/0/package` files:
build/0/package/man/man3/randombytes.3
build/0/package/include/randombytes.h
build/0/package/lib/librandombytes*
build/0/package/bin/randombytes-info
Note that `librandombytes-kernel` and `librandombytes-openssl` are
alternative implementations of the same librandombytes API. There are
default symlinks to `librandombytes-kernel`, but you should allow the
sysadmin to change these symlinks to `librandombytes-openssl` by simply
installing a `librandombytes-openssl` package. The OpenSSL dependency is
for `librandombytes-openssl`; the rest of librandombytes is independent
of OpenSSL.
### More options
You can run
./configure --host=amd64
to override `./configure`'s guess of the architecture that it should
compile for. However, cross-compilers aren't yet selected automatically.
Inside the `build` directory, `0` is symlinked to `amd64` for
`--host=amd64`. Running `make clean` removes `build/amd64`. Re-running
`./configure` automatically starts with `make clean`.
A subsequent `./configure --host=arm64` will create `build/arm64` and
symlink `0 -> arm64`, without touching an existing `build/amd64`.
Compilers tried are listed in `compilers/default`. Each compiler
includes `-fPIC` to create a shared library and `-fwrapv` to switch to a
slightly less dangerous version of C; also, `-fvisibility=hidden` is
added automatically to hide non-public symbols in the library. The first
compiler that seems to work is used to compile everything.