<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> <html><head> <title>Cyrus SASLv2 INSTALL Documentation</title> <!-- $Id: install.html,v 1.10 2003/02/01 21:50:22 leg Exp $ --> </head> <body> <h1>Installation Procedure</h1> This document offers a general overview of installing the SASL library. <h2>Quick and Dirty</h2> <pre> cd (directory it was untarred into) ./configure make make install ln -s /usr/local/lib/sasl2 /usr/lib/sasl2 </pre> <p>If you're checking this directly out of CVS, you'll need to run "sh ./SMakefile" to build the configure script first. <p>Read <A HREF="sysadmin.html">the System Administrator's Guide</A> to learn how to configure libsasl in depth. There is also a <A HREF="upgrading.html">document</A> that covers migrating from libsasl v1 to libsasl v2 applications. <h2>Details</h2> <p>Note that the library looks for plugins in <tt>/usr/lib/sasl2</tt>, but installs them into <tt>${prefix}/lib/sasl2</tt>, where <tt>${prefix}</tt> is usually something like <tt>/usr/local</tt>. This is intentional - we want the plugins installed with the rest of the package (wherever things get installed at your site), but we want the library to <em>always</em> be able to find its plugins under <tt>/usr/lib/sasl2</tt>, no matter where you install things, so that the SASL plugin ABI on all platforms is roughly the same. <p>If you don't want to do this for some reason, you can set the location where the library will look for plugins by setting the environment variable SASL_PATH to the path the library should use. <h3>Requirements</h3> <p>You'll probably need the GNU make program, available as of this writing <a href="ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/make/make-3.77.tar.gz">here</a>.<p> <p>libsasl2 can use gdbm, Berkeley db, or ndbm to implement its user/password lookup. Most systems come with ndbm these days; as of this writing, gdbm is available as <a href="ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/gdbm/gdbm-1.7.3.tar.gz">this file</a>. Berkeley DB is available from: <a href="http://www.sleepycat.com/">here</a> <p>For Kerberos support, you'll need the kerberos libraries. At CMU, the version we use comes from <a href="http://www.pdc.kth.se/kth-krb/">here</a>. <p>For GSSAPI support you will need either MIT Kerberos 5 or the <a href="http://www.pdc.kth.se/heimdal">Heimdal implementation</a>. <p>You may want to play with your CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS a little if you're using vendor compilers. We use <tt>gcc</tt> extensively, but you'll probably have more luck if you use the same compiler for the library as you do for your applications. You can see what compilers we use on our platforms by looking at the "SMakefile". <h3>Supported platforms</h3> <p>This has been tested under Linux 2.2, Linux 2.4, Solaris 2.7 and Solaris 2.8. It should work under any platform where dynamic objects can be linked against other dynamic objects, and where the dynamic library file extension is ".so", or where libtool creates the .la files correctly. <hr> <h2>Installation under Win32</h2> <B>If you are using SASL under Win32 or have compiled it, please let us know!</B> See <a href="windows.html">the Windows documentation</a> for detailed instructions. <hr> Back to the <a href="index.html">index</a> </body> </html>