1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
|
Building The Library
=================================
This document describes how to build Botan on Unix/POSIX and MS
Windows systems. The POSIX oriented descriptions should apply to most
common Unix systems (including MacOS X), along with POSIX-ish systems
like BeOS, QNX, and Plan 9. Currently, systems other than Windows and
POSIX (such as VMS, MacOS 9, OS/390, OS/400, ...) are not supported by
the build system, primarily due to lack of access. Please contact the
maintainer if you would like to build Botan on such a system.
Botan's build is controlled by configure.py, which is a `Python
<http://www.python.org>`_ script. Python 2.5 or later is required.
For the impatient, this works for most systems::
$ ./configure.py [--prefix=/some/directory]
$ make
$ make install
Or using ``nmake``, if you're compiling on Windows with Visual C++. On
platforms that do not understand the '#!' convention for beginning
script files, or that have Python installed in an unusual spot, you
might need to prefix the ``configure.py`` command with ``python`` or
``/path/to/python``::
$ python ./configure.py [arguments]
Configuring the Build
---------------------------------
The first step is to run ``configure.py``, which is a Python script
that creates various directories, config files, and a Makefile for
building everything. The script requires at least Python 2.5; any
later version of Python 2.x should also work. Python 3.1 will also
work but requires an extra step; see :ref:`configure_with_python3` for
details.
The script will attempt to guess what kind of system you are trying to
compile for (and will print messages telling you what it guessed).
You can override this process by passing the options ``--cc``,
``--os``, and ``--cpu``.
You can pass basically anything reasonable with ``--cpu``: the script
knows about a large number of different architectures, their
sub-models, and common aliases for them. You should only select the
64-bit version of a CPU (such as "sparc64" or "mips64") if your
operating system knows how to handle 64-bit object code - a 32-bit
kernel on a 64-bit CPU will generally not like 64-bit code.
By default the script tries to figure out what will work on your
system, and use that. It will print a display at the end showing which
algorithms have and have not been enabled. For instance on one system
we might see lines like::
INFO: Skipping, by request only - bzip2 gnump openssl qt_mutex zlib
INFO: Skipping, incompatible CPU - aes_intel aes_ssse3 asm_x86_64 mp_asm64 mp_x86_64 sha1_x86_64
INFO: Skipping, incompatible OS - beos_stats cryptoapi_rng win32_crit_section win32_stats
INFO: Skipping, incompatible compiler - mp_msvc64 mp_x86_32_msvc
The ones that are skipped because they are 'by request only' have to
be explicitly asked for, because they rely on third party libraries
which your system might not have or that you might not want the
resulting binary to depend on. For instance to enable zlib support,
add ``--with-zlib`` to your invocation of ``configure.py``.
You can control which algorithms and modules are built using the
options ``--enable-modules=MODS`` and ``--disable-modules=MODS``, for
instance ``--enable-modules=zlib`` and ``--disable-modules=rc5,idea``.
Modules not listed on the command line will simply be loaded if needed
or if configured to load by default. If you use ``--no-autoload``,
only the most core modules will be included; you can then explicitly
enable things that you want to use with ``--enable-modules``. This is
useful for creating a minimal build targeting to a specific
application, especially in conjunction with the amalgamation option;
see :ref:`amalgamation`.
For instance::
$ ./configure.py --no-autoload --enable-modules=rsa,ecdsa,eme1,emsa1,emsa4
will set up a build that only includes RSA, ECDSA, and some padding
modes, along with their dependencies. A small subset of core features,
including AES, SHA-2, HMAC, and the multiple precision integer
library, are always loaded.
The script tries to guess what kind of makefile to generate, and it
almost always guesses correctly (basically, Visual C++ uses NMAKE with
Windows commands, and everything else uses Unix make with POSIX
commands). Just in case, you can override it with
``--make-style=somestyle``. The styles Botan currently knows about are
'unix' (normal Unix makefiles), and 'nmake', the make variant commonly
used by Windows compilers. To add a new variant (eg, a build script
for VMS), you will need to create a new template file in
``src/build-data/makefile``.
On Unix
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The basic build procedure on Unix and Unix-like systems is::
$ ./configure.py [--enable-modules=<list>] [--cc=CC]
$ make
# You may need to set your LD_LIBRARY_PATH or equivalent for ./check to run
$ make check # optional, but a good idea
$ make install
On Unix systems the script will default to using GCC; use
``--cc`` if you want something else. For instance use
``--cc=icc`` for Intel C++ and ``--cc=clang`` for Clang.
The ``make install`` target has a default directory in which it
will install Botan (typically ``/usr/local``). You can override
this by using the ``--prefix`` argument to
``configure.py``, like so:
``./configure.py --prefix=/opt <other arguments>``
On some systems shared libraries might not be immediately visible to
the runtime linker. For example, on Linux you may have to edit
``/etc/ld.so.conf`` and run ``ldconfig`` (as root) in
order for new shared libraries to be picked up by the linker. An
alternative is to set your ``LD_LIBRARY_PATH`` shell variable
to include the directory that the Botan libraries were installed into.
On Mac OS X
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In general the Unix instructions above should apply, however OS X does
not support ``LD_LIBRARY_PATH``. Thomas Keller suggests instead
running ``install_name_tool`` between building and running the
self-test program::
$ VERSION=1.10.0 # or whatever the current version is
$ install_name_tool -change $(otool -X -D libbotan-$VERSION.dylib) \
$PWD/libbotan-$VERSION.dylib check
Building Universal Binaries
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
To build a universal binary for OS X, you need to set some additional
build flags. Do this with the --cc-abi-flags option::
$ ./configure.py [other arguments] --cc-abi-flags="-force_cpusubtype_ALL -mmacosx-version-min=10.4 -arch i386 -arch ppc"
On MS Windows
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
If you don't want to deal with building botan on Windows, check the
website; commonly prebuilt Windows binaries with installers are
available, especially for stable versions.
You need to have a copy of Python installed, and have both Python and
your chosen compiler in your path. Open a command shell (or the SDK
shell), and run::
> python configure.py --cc=msvc (or --cc=gcc for MinGW) [--cpu=CPU]
> nmake
> nmake check # optional, but recommended
> nmake install
For Win95 pre OSR2, the ``cryptoapi_rng`` module will not work,
because CryptoAPI didn't exist. And all versions of NT4 lack the
ToolHelp32 interface, which is how ``win32_stats`` does its slow
polls, so a version of the library built with that module will not
load under NT4. Later versions of Windows support both methods, so
this shouldn't be much of an issue anymore.
By default the install target will be ``C:\botan``; you can modify
this with the ``--prefix`` option.
When building your applications, all you have to do is tell the
compiler to look for both include files and library files in
``C:\botan``, and it will find both. Or you can move them to a
place where they will be in the default compiler search paths (consult
your documentation and/or local expert for details).
For iOS using XCode
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
To cross compile for iOS, configure with::
$ ./configure.py --cpu=armv7 --cc=clang --cc-bin="clang++ -arch armv7 -arch armv7s --sysroot=$(IOS_SYSROOT)"
Along with any additional configuration arguments. Using
``--no-autoload`` might be helpful as can substantially reduce code
size.
Edit the makefile and change AR (around line 30) to::
AR = libtool -static -o
You may also want to edit LIB_OPT to use -Os to optimize for size.
Now build as normal with ``make check``. Confirm the binary is
compiled for both architectures with::
$ xcrun -sdk iphoneos lipo -info check
Architectures in the fat file: check are: armv7 armv7s
Now sign the test application with::
$ codesign -fs "Your Name" check
which should allow you to run the library self tests on a jailbroken
device.
For Android
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
It has been reported several times that the library can be built for
Android using the NDK, but precise instructions of what was required
have not been provided. If you successfully build the library for
Android, please report the exact sequence of steps needed so this
documentation can be updated.
Other Build-Related Tasks
----------------------------------------
.. _building_docs:
Building The Documentation
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
There are two documentation options available, Sphinx and Doxygen.
Sphinx will be used if ``sphinx-build`` is detected in the PATH, or if
``--with-sphinx`` is used at configure time. Doxygen is only enabled
if ``--with-doxygen`` is used. Both are generated by the makefile
target ``docs``.
.. _amalgamation:
The Amalgamation Build
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
You can also configure Botan to be built using only a single source
file; this is quite convenient if you plan to embed the library into
another application. To do so, run ``configure.py`` with whatever
arguments you would ordinarily use, along with the option
``--gen-amalgamation``. This will create two (rather large) files,
``botan_all.h`` and ``botan_all.cpp``.
Whenever you would have included a botan header, you can then include
``botan_all.h``, and include ``botan_all.cpp`` along with the rest of
the source files in your build. If you want to be able to easily
switch between amalgamated and non-amalgamated versions (for instance
to take advantage of prepackaged versions of botan on operating
systems that support it), you can instead ignore ``botan_all.h`` and
use the headers from ``build/include`` as normal.
You can also build the library as normal but using the amalgamation
instead of the individual source files using ``--via-amalgamation``.
This is essentially a very simple form of link time optimization;
because the entire library source is visible to the compiler, it has
more opportunities for interprocedural optimizations.
Modules Relying on Third Party Libraries
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Currently ``configure.py`` cannot detect if external libraries are
available, so using them is controlled explicitly at build time
by the user using
- ``--with-bzip2`` enables the filters providing bzip2 compression
and decompression. Requires the bzip2 development libraries to be
installed.
- ``--with-zlib`` enables the filters providing zlib compression
and decompression. Requires the zlib development libraries to be
installed.
- ``--with-lzma`` enables the filters providing lzma compression and
decompression. Requires the lzma development libraries to be
installed.
- ``--with-sqlite3`` enables storing TLS session information to an
encrypted SQLite database.
- ``--with-gnump`` adds an alternative engine for public key
cryptography that uses the GNU MP library. GNU MP 4.1 or later is
required.
- ``--with-openssl`` adds an engine that uses OpenSSL for some public
key operations and ciphers/hashes. OpenSSL 0.9.7 or later is
required.
Multiple Builds
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
It may be useful to run multiple builds with different
configurations. Specify ``--build-dir=<dir>`` to set up a build
environment in a different directory.
.. _configure_with_python3:
Configuring the Build With Python 3.1
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The versions of Python beginning with 3 are (intentionally)
incompatible with the (currently more common) 2.x series. If you want
to use Python 3.1 to set up the build, you'll have to use the
``2to3`` program (included in the Python distribution) on the
script; this will convert the script to the Python 3.x dialect::
$ python ./configure.py
File "configure.py", line 860
except KeyError, e:
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
$ # incompatible python version, let's fix it
$ 2to3 -w configure.py
[...]
RefactoringTool: Files that were modified:
RefactoringTool: configure.py
$ python ./configure.py
[...]
Setting Distribution Info
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The build allows you to set some information about what distribution
this build of the library comes from. It is particularly relevant to
people packaging the library for wider distribution, to signify what
distribution this build is from. Applications can test this value by
checking the string value of the macro ``BOTAN_DISTRIBUTION_INFO``. It
can be set using the ``--distribution-info`` flag to ``configure.py``,
and otherwise defaults to "unspecified". For instance, a `Gentoo
<http://www.gentoo.org>`_ ebuild might set it with
``--distribution-info="Gentoo ${PVR}"`` where ``${PVR}`` is an ebuild
variable automatically set to a combination of the library and ebuild
versions.
Local Configuration Settings
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
You may want to do something peculiar with the configuration; to
support this there is a flag to ``configure.py`` called
``--with-local-config=<file>``. The contents of the file are
inserted into ``build/build.h`` which is (indirectly) included
into every Botan header and source file.
Configuration Parameters
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
There are some configuration parameters which you may want to tweak
before building the library. These can be found in ``config.h``. This
file is overwritten every time the configure script is run (and does
not exist until after you run the script for the first time).
Also included in ``build/build.h`` are macros which let applications
check which features are included in the current version of the
library. All of them begin with ``BOTAN_HAS_``. For example, if
``BOTAN_HAS_BLOWFISH`` is defined, then an application can include
``<botan/blowfish.h>`` and use the Blowfish class.
``BOTAN_MP_WORD_BITS``: This macro controls the size of the words used
for calculations with the MPI implementation in Botan. You can choose
8, 16, 32, or 64. Normally this defaults to either 32 or 64, depending
on the processor. Unless you are building for a 8 or 16-bit CPU, this
isn't worth messing with.
``BOTAN_DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE``: This constant is used as the size of
buffers throughout Botan. The default should be fine for most
purposes, reduce if you are very concerned about runtime memory usage.
Building Applications
----------------------------------------
Unix
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Botan usually links in several different system libraries (such as
``librt`` and ``libz``), depending on which modules are
configured at compile time. In many environments, particularly ones
using static libraries, an application has to link against the same
libraries as Botan for the linking step to succeed. But how does it
figure out what libraries it *is* linked against?
The answer is to ask the ``botan-config`` script. This
basically solves the same problem all the other ``*-config``
scripts solve, and in basically the same manner.
There are 4 options:
``--prefix[=DIR]``: If no argument, print the prefix where Botan
is installed (such as ``/opt`` or ``/usr/local``). If an
argument is specified, other options given with the same command will
execute as if Botan as actually installed at ``DIR`` and not
where it really is; or at least where ``botan-config`` thinks
it really is. I should mention that it
``--version``: Print the Botan version number.
``--cflags``: Print options that should be passed to the compiler
whenever a C++ file is compiled. Typically this is used for setting
include paths.
``--libs``: Print options for which libraries to link to (this includes
``-lbotan``).
Your ``Makefile`` can run ``botan-config`` and get the
options necessary for getting your application to compile and link,
regardless of whatever crazy libraries Botan might be linked against.
Botan also by default installs a file for ``pkg-config``,
namespaced by the major and minor versions. So it can be used,
for instance, as::
$ pkg-config botan-1.10 --modversion
1.10.0
$ pkg-config botan-1.10 --cflags
-I/usr/local/include
$ pkg-config botan-1.10 --libs
-L/usr/local/lib -lbotan -lm -lbz2 -lpthread -lrt
MS Windows
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
No special help exists for building applications on Windows. However,
given that typically Windows software is distributed as binaries, this
is less of a problem - only the developer needs to worry about it. As
long as they can remember where they installed Botan, they just have
to set the appropriate flags in their Makefile/project file.
Language Wrappers
----------------------------------------
Building the Python wrappers
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The Python wrappers for Botan use Boost.Python, so you must have Boost
installed. To build the wrappers, pass the flag
``--with-boost-python`` to ``configure.py``. This will create a second
makefile, ``Makefile.python``, with instructions for building the
Python module. After building the library, execute::
$ make -f Makefile.python
to build the module. Currently only Unix systems are supported, and
the Makefile assumes that the version of Python you want to build
against is the same one you used to run ``configure.py``.
To install the module, use the ``install`` target.
See :doc:`Python Bindings <python>` for more information about the
binding.
Building the Perl XS wrappers
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
To build the Perl XS wrappers, change your directory to
``src/wrap/perl-xs`` and run ``perl Makefile.PL``, then run
``make`` to build the module and ``make test`` to run the test
suite::
$ perl Makefile.PL
Checking if your kit is complete...
Looks good
Writing Makefile for Botan
$ make
cp Botan.pm blib/lib/Botan.pm
AutoSplitting blib/lib/Botan.pm (blib/lib/auto/Botan)
/usr/bin/perl5.8.8 /usr/lib64/perl5/5.8.8/ExtUtils/xsubpp [...]
g++ -c -Wno-write-strings -fexceptions -g [...]
Running Mkbootstrap for Botan ()
chmod 644 Botan.bs
rm -f blib/arch/auto/Botan/Botan.so
g++ -shared Botan.o -o blib/arch/auto/Botan/Botan.so \
-lbotan -lbz2 -lpthread -lrt -lz \
chmod 755 blib/arch/auto/Botan/Botan.so
cp Botan.bs blib/arch/auto/Botan/Botan.bs
chmod 644 blib/arch/auto/Botan/Botan.bs
Manifying blib/man3/Botan.3pm
$ make test
PERL_DL_NONLAZY=1 /usr/bin/perl5.8.8 [...]
t/base64......ok
t/filt........ok
t/hex.........ok
t/oid.........ok
t/pipe........ok
t/x509cert....ok
All tests successful.
Files=6, Tests=83, 0 wallclock secs ( 0.08 cusr + 0.02 csys = 0.10 CPU)
|