-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Saturday, November 16, 2002, at 02:40 PM, Michael Havens wrote: > Exactly what do these lines do? > > $ ./config Should be ./configure (at least in most cases). Since there are subtle (and some not so subtle) variations between different unices, this command helps ensure that you have all of the required components and sets up your build environment to use these components. This is where you usually want to specify any options, such as the install directory. > $ make Execute the program make, which is a swiss-army knife of build tools. This command will generally do everything necessary to compile the program. > $ make test Some program authors provide this option as a way to ensure that the program is not completely broken. They are generally very simple tests that ensure basic functionality with the newly built program. > $ make install Copy the files over to the install directory in a general Unix-y way (bin, lib, share). This is probably the only step that will require you to be root since the default install directory is "/usr/local" and, by default, is not "world-writeable". > Are these the lines entered for compiling a program? > If so I'm compiling openssl in the hopes it will give me > libpisock.so.8.html > and libcrypto.so.0 .... Well I just tried and I guess it doesn't. It > just gave > me the same error: Install libopenssl0 off of the CDs to get "libcrypto.so.0". "libpisock.so.8" (the pilot-link library) is usually in an RPM called libpisock8. However, your version might be out of date (i.e. libpisock.so.7). If there is not an RPM available, then it is generally a good idea to have someone experienced carefully walk you through the source code installation. - -- Voltage Spike ,,, (. .) - --ooO-(_)-Ooo-- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.7 (Darwin) iD8DBQE92XodpNoctRtUIRQRAtZ1AKCDHQh1CSy5d71LL2EFWeSHTEMtNQCfYkZM 8wmIDAMw8Q6NEj5yvA028eo= =SnsJ -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----