It's actually been this way since at least 2012 (when a 3-argument open was added to runtests.pl). Given the lack of complaints in the interim, it's safe to call this 23 year old perl version the minimum.
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curl internals
The canonical libcurl internals documentation is now in the everything curl book. This file lists supported versions of libs and build tools.
Portability
We write curl and libcurl to compile with C89 compilers on 32-bit and up machines. Most of libcurl assumes more or less POSIX compliance but that is not a requirement.
We write libcurl to build and work with lots of third party tools, and we want it to remain functional and buildable with these and later versions (older versions may still work but is not what we work hard to maintain):
Dependencies
We aim to support these or later versions.
- OpenSSL 0.9.7
- GnuTLS 3.1.10
- zlib 1.1.4
- libssh2 1.0
- c-ares 1.16.0
- libidn2 2.0.0
- wolfSSL 2.0.0
- OpenLDAP 2.0
- MIT Kerberos 1.2.4
- GSKit V5R3M0
- NSS 3.14.x
- Heimdal ?
- nghttp2 1.12.0
- WinSock 2.2 (on Windows 95+ and Windows CE .NET 4.1+)
Build tools
When writing code (mostly for generating stuff included in release tarballs) we use a few "build tools" and we make sure that we remain functional with these versions:
- GNU Libtool 1.4.2
- GNU Autoconf 2.59
- GNU Automake 1.7
- GNU M4 1.4
- perl 5.6
- roffit 0.5
- nroff any version that supports
-man [in] [out]
- cmake 3.7
Library Symbols
All symbols used internally in libcurl must use a Curl_
prefix if they are
used in more than a single file. Single-file symbols must be made static.
Public ("exported") symbols must use a curl_
prefix. Public API functions
are marked with CURL_EXTERN
in the public header files so that all others
can be hidden on platforms where this is possible.