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Authenticating HTTP(S) proxy with TCP/IP tunneling and acceleration—mirror of http://svn.awk.cz/cntlm
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Installation using packages ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Most of the popular distros contain cntlm packages.n their repositories. You can use the procedures described below to prepare a package of current cntlm version if desired. NOTE: generating packages traditionally requires root privileges (to be able to set proper ownership and permissions on package members). You can overcome that using fakeroot. However, to install your packages you have to be root. *** SOURCE TARBALL *** $ make tgz or $ make tbz2 *** DEBIAN PACKAGES *** 1) Quick way: $ make deb 2) From Debian/Ubuntu repository: Get these files (e.g. apt-get source cntlm): cntlm_0.XX-X.diff.gz cntlm_0.XX-X.dsc cntlm_0.XX.orig.tar.gz Compile: $ dpkg-source -x cntlm_0.XX-Y.dsc $ cd cntlm-0.XX/ $ dpkg-buildpackage -b -rfakeroot Upon installation, the package takes care of creating a dedicated user for cntlm, init script integration, manages eventual configuration file updates with new upstream versions, things like restart of the daemon after future updates, etc. You can later revert all these changes with one command, should you decide to remove cntlm from your system. *** RPM FROM SCRATCH *** 1) Quick way: $ make rpm # you'll need root privs. or fakeroot utility 2) Detailed howto (or if make rpm doesn't work for you) To build an RPM package from scratch, as root change to /usr/src/[redhat|rpm|whatever]/SOURCES Copy there all files from cntlm's rpm/ directory plus appropriate version of the source tar.bz2 (see SOURCE TARBALL section above) and type: $ rpmbuild -ba cntlm.spec Shortly after, you'll have source and binary RPMs ready in your ../SRPMS, resp. ../RPMS directories. If your build cannot find the default config file in /etc, you probably have broken RPM build environment. You should add this to your ~/.rpmmacros: %_sysconfdir /etc *** RPM FROM *.src.rpm *** If you just want to create a binary package from src.rpm, as root type: $ rpmbuild --rebuild pkgname.src.rpm Resulting binary RPM will be at /usr/src/..../RPMS If your build cannot find the default config file in /etc, you probably have broken RPM build environment. You should add this to your ~/.rpmmacros: %_sysconfdir /etc *** WINDOWS INSTALLER *** Traditional compilation steps: $ ./configure $ make Prepare all binaries, manuals, config templates, Start Menu links and InnoSetup project definition file: $ make win Then run InnoSetup compiler to pack it all into an automatic installer EXE: $ /your/path/to/ISCC.exe win/setup.iss or Open folder "win" in explorer, right click "setup.iss" and select "Compile". Both with generate an installer in the "win" folder. Traditional installation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ First, you have to compile cntlm. Using the Makefile, this should be very easy: $ ./configure $ make $ make install Cntlm does not require any dynamic libraries and there are no dependencies you have to satisfy before compilation, except for libpthreads. This library is required for all threaded applications and is very likely to be part of your system already, because it comes with libc. Next, install cntlm onto your system like so: Default installation directories are /usr/sbin, /usr/share/man and /etc. Should you want to install cntlm into a different location, change the DESTDIR installation prefix (from "/") to add a different installation prefix (e.g. /usr/local). To change individual directories, use BINDIR, MANDIR and SYSCONFDIR: $ make SYSCONFDIR=/etc BINDIR=/usr/bin MANDIR=/usr/share/man $ make install SYSCONFDIR=/etc BINDIR=/usr/bin MANDIR=/usr/share/man Cntlm is compiled with system-wide configuration file by default. That means whenever you run cntlm, it looks into a hardcoded path (SYSCONFDIR) and tries to load cntml.conf. You cannot make it not to do so, unless you use -c with an alternative file or /dev/null. This is standard behaviour and probably what you want. On the other hand, some of you might not want to use cntlm as a daemon started by init scripts and you would prefer setting up everything on the command line. This is possible, just comment out SYSCONFDIR variable definition in the Makefile before you compile cntlm and it will remove this feature. Installation includes the main binary, the man page (see "man cntlm") and if the default config feature was not removed, it also installs a configuration template. Please note that unlike bin and man targets, existing configuration is never overwritten during installation. In the doc/ directory you can find among other things a file called "cntlmd". It can be used as an init.d script. Architectures ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The build system now has an autodetection of the build arch endianness. Every common CPU and OS out there is supported, including Windows, MacOS X, Linux, *BSD, AIX. Compilers ~~~~~~~~~ Cntlm is tested against GCC and IBM XL C/C++, other C compilers will work for you too. There are no compiler specific directives and options AFAIK. compilers might work for you (then again, they might not). Specific Makefiles for different compilers are supported by the ./configure script (e.g. Makefile.xlc) Contact ~~~~~~~ David Kubicek <[email protected]>
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