You will need working installations of Zlib and OpenSSL.
-Zlib:
+Zlib 1.1.4 or greater:
http://www.gzip.org/zlib/
OpenSSL 0.9.6 or greater:
Alternatively, Jim Knoble <jmknoble@jmknoble.cx> has written an excellent X11
passphrase requester. This is maintained separately at:
-http://www.ntrnet.net/~jmknoble/software/x11-ssh-askpass/index.html
+http://www.jmknoble.net/software/x11-ssh-askpass/
PRNGD:
There are a few other options to the configure script:
---with-pam enables PAM support.
-
---enable-gnome-askpass will build the GNOME passphrase dialog. You
-need a working installation of GNOME, including the development
-headers, for this to work.
+--with-pam enables PAM support. If PAM support is compiled in, it must
+also be enabled in sshd_config (refer to the UsePAM directive).
--with-prngd-socket=/some/file allows you to enable EGD or PRNGD
support and to specify a PRNGd socket. Use this if your Unix lacks
--with-osfsia, --without-osfsia will enable or disable OSF1's Security
Integration Architecture. The default for OSF1 machines is enable.
---with-kerberos4=PATH will enable Kerberos IV support. You will need
-to have the Kerberos libraries and header files installed for this
-to work. Use the optional PATH argument to specify the root of your
-Kerberos installation.
-
---with-afs=PATH will enable AFS support. You will need to have the
-Kerberos IV and the AFS libraries and header files installed for this
-to work. Use the optional PATH argument to specify the root of your
-AFS installation. AFS requires Kerberos support to be enabled.
-
--with-skey=PATH will enable S/Key one time password support. You will
need the S/Key libraries and header files installed for this to work.
--with-xauth=PATH specifies the location of the xauth binary
---with-ipv4-default instructs OpenSSH to use IPv4 by default for new
-connections. Normally OpenSSH will try attempt to lookup both IPv6 and
-IPv4 addresses. On Linux/glibc-2.1.2 this causes long delays in name
-resolution. If this option is specified, you can still attempt to
-connect to IPv6 addresses using the command line option '-6'.
-
--with-ssl-dir=DIR allows you to specify where your OpenSSL libraries
are installed.