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Reviewed-by: Neil Horman <nhorman@openssl.org> Release: yes
106 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
106 lines
4.5 KiB
Plaintext
=pod
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=head1 NAME
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ossl-guide-introduction
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- OpenSSL Guide: An introduction to OpenSSL
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=head1 WHAT IS OPENSSL?
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OpenSSL is a robust, commercial-grade, full-featured toolkit for general-purpose
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cryptography and secure communication. Its features are made available via a
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command line application that enables users to perform various cryptography
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related functions such as generating keys and certificates. Additionally it
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supplies two libraries that application developers can use to implement
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cryptography based capabilities and to securely communicate across a network.
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Finally, it also has a set of providers that supply implementations of a broad
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set of cryptographic algorithms.
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OpenSSL is fully open source. Version 3.0 and above are distributed under the
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Apache v2 license.
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=head1 GETTING AND INSTALLING OPENSSL
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The OpenSSL Project develops and distributes the source code for OpenSSL. You
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can obtain that source code via the OpenSSL website
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(L<https://www.openssl.org/source>).
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Many Operating Systems (notably Linux distributions) supply pre-built OpenSSL
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binaries either pre-installed or available via the package management system in
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use for that OS. It is worth checking whether this applies to you before
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attempting to build OpenSSL from the source code.
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Some third parties also supply OpenSSL binaries (e.g. for Windows and some other
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platforms). The OpenSSL project maintains a list of these third parties at
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L<https://wiki.openssl.org/index.php/Binaries>.
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If you build and install OpenSSL from the source code then you should download
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the appropriate files for the version that you want to use from the link given
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above. Extract the contents of the B<tar.gz> archive file that you downloaded
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into an appropriate directory. Inside that archive you will find a file named
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B<INSTALL.md> which will supply detailed instructions on how to build and
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install OpenSSL from source. Make sure you read the contents of that file
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carefully in order to achieve a successful build. In the directory you will also
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find a set of B<NOTES> files that provide further platform specific information.
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Make sure you carefully read the file appropriate to your platform. As well as
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the platform specific B<NOTES> files there is also a B<NOTES-PERL.md> file that
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provides information about setting up Perl for use by the OpenSSL build system
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across multiple platforms.
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Sometimes you may want to build and install OpenSSL from source on a system
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which already has a pre-built version of OpenSSL installed on it via the
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Operating System package management system (for example if you want to use a
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newer version of OpenSSL than the one supplied by your Operating System). In
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this case it is strongly recommended to install OpenSSL to a different location
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than where the pre-built version is installed. You should B<never> replace the
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pre-built version with a different version as this may break your system.
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=head1 CONTENTS OF THE OPENSSL GUIDE
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The OpenSSL Guide is a series of documentation pages (starting with this one)
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that introduce some of the main concepts in OpenSSL. The guide can either be
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read end-to-end in order, or alternatively you can simply skip to the parts most
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applicable to your use case. Note however that later pages may depend on and
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assume knowledge from earlier pages.
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The pages in the guide are as follows:
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=over 4
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=item L<ossl-guide-libraries-introduction(7)>: An introduction to the OpenSSL libraries
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=item L<ossl-guide-libcrypto-introduction(7)>: An introduction to libcrypto
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=item L<ossl-guide-libssl-introduction(7)>: An introduction to libssl
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=item L<ossl-guide-tls-introduction(7)>: An introduction to SSL/TLS in OpenSSL
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=item L<ossl-guide-tls-client-block(7)>: Writing a simple blocking TLS client
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=item L<ossl-guide-tls-client-non-block(7)>: Writing a simple nonblocking TLS client
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=item L<ossl-guide-tls-server-block(7)>: Writing a simple blocking TLS server
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=item L<ossl-guide-quic-introduction(7)>: An introduction to QUIC in OpenSSL
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=item L<ossl-guide-quic-client-block(7)>: Writing a simple blocking QUIC client
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=item L<ossl-guide-quic-multi-stream(7)>: Writing a simple multi-stream QUIC client
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=item L<ossl-guide-quic-client-non-block(7)>: Writing a simple nonblocking QUIC client
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=item L<ossl-guide-migration(7)>: Migrating from older OpenSSL versions
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=back
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=head1 COPYRIGHT
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Copyright 2023-2024 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
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Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
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this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
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in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
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L<https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html>.
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=cut
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