http://www.openssl.org/
(OpenSSL 0.9.5a is partially supported, but some ciphers (SSH protocol 1
-Blowfish included) do not work correctly.)
-
-RPMs of OpenSSL are available at http://violet.ibs.com.au/openssh/files/support.
-For Red Hat Linux 6.2, they have been released as errata. RHL7 includes
-these.
+Blowfish) do not work correctly.)
OpenSSH can utilise Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) if your system
supports it. PAM is standard on Redhat and Debian Linux, Solaris and
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-rsh=PATH allows you to specify the path to your rsh program.
-Normally ./configure will search the current $PATH for 'rsh'. You
-may need to specify this option if rsh is not in your path or has a
-different name.
-
--with-pam enables PAM support.
--enable-gnome-askpass will build the GNOME passphrase dialog. You
--without-lastlog will disable lastlog support entirely.
---with-sia, --without-sia will enable or disable OSF1's Security
+--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
--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.