testssl.sh/bin
Jeroen Pluimers 6e36a484d3 OS X builds with:
cc_arguments_common="no-shared enable-static-engine no-zlib-dynamic enable-zlib enable-ssl2 enable-ssl3 enable-ssl-trace enable-rc2 enable-rc5 enable-gost enable-cms enable-md2 enable-mdc2 enable-ec enable-ec2m enable-ecdh enable-ecdsa enable-seed enable-camellia enable-idea enable-rfc3779 experimental-jpake -DOPENSSL_USE_BUILD_DATE"
   cc_arguments_x86="$cc_arguments_common"
   cc_arguments_x64="$cc_arguments_common enable-ec_nistp_64_gcc_128 "
Note: no -DTEMP_GOST_TLS yet.
2015-08-02 23:22:57 +02:00
..
Readme.md Update Readme.md 2015-07-21 10:34:08 +02:00
openssl.Darwin.i386 OS X builds with: 2015-08-02 23:22:57 +02:00
openssl.Darwin.x86_64 OS X builds with: 2015-08-02 23:22:57 +02:00
openssl.FreeBSD.amd64 - FreeBSD 64 bit binary (static, compiled under FreeBSD 9.3) 2015-07-23 16:34:45 +02:00
openssl.Linux.armv7l Arm compile added 2015-07-21 08:29:45 +02:00
openssl.Linux.i686 - Provide Darwin binaries and paths thereto 2015-07-16 23:01:10 +02:00
openssl.Linux.x86_64 - Provide Darwin binaries and paths thereto 2015-07-16 23:01:10 +02:00

Readme.md

Binaries

The binaries here have the naming scheme openssl.$(uname).$(uname -m) and will be picked up from testssl.sh if you run testssl.sh directly off the git directory.

They are compiled from Peter Mosmans openssl fork to support more advanced ciphers as well as broken stuff which is either missing in most OS and even in OpenSSL or LibreSSL.

More see ../openssl-bins/openssl-1.0.2-chacha.pm/

(Here you find the static binaries. If you want test Kerberos ciphers you need to copy the binary hereto)

For contributors see ../CREDITS.md.