Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
160 lines (115 loc) · 5.89 KB

INSTALL.md

File metadata and controls

160 lines (115 loc) · 5.89 KB

Pre-built binaries

Docker images of master and of the tagged versions are available directly from Github.

Windows binaries for Cygwin are graciously produced by nono303 on his repository.

Compile and install

Dependencies

sslh uses:

  • libconfig. For Debian this is contained in package libconfig-dev. You can compile with or without it using USELIBCONFIG in the Makefile.

  • libwrap. For Debian, this is contained in packages libwrap0-dev. You can compile with or without it using USELIBWRAP in the Makefile.

  • libsystemd, in package libsystemd-dev. You can compile with or without it using USESYSTEMD in the Makefile.

  • libcap, in package libcap-dev. You can compile with or without it using USELIBCAP in the Makefile

  • libconfig++-dev, in package lìbconfig++-dev

  • libbsd, to enable to change the process name (as shown in ps, so each forked process shows what protocol and what connection it is serving), which requires libbsd at runtime, and libbsd-dev at compile-time.

  • libpcre2, in package libpcre2-dev. You can compile with or without it using ENABLE_REGEX in the Makefile.

  • libev-dev, in package libev-dev. If you build a binary specifically and do not build sslh-ev, you don't need this.

For OpenSUSE, these are contained in packages libconfig9 and libconfig-dev in repository http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/multimedia:/libs/openSUSE_12.1/

For Fedora, you'll need packages libconfig and libconfig-devel:

yum install libconfig libconfig-devel

If you want to rebuild sslh-conf.c (after a make distclean for example), you will also need to add conf2struct (v1.5) to your path.

The test scripts are written in Perl, and will require IO::Socket::INET6 (libio-socket-inet6-perl in Debian).

Compilation

First you have to run ./configure in the ./sslh directory. After this, the Makefile is created, and you can do your configuration changes in the Makefile. After each run of ./configure, those changes are gone and the Makefile is recreated.

There are a couple of configuration options at the beginning of the Makefile:

  • # override undefine HAVE_LANDLOCK if you uncomment this line, sslh will be compiled without landlock. This works with gcc versions < 12. Otherwise, if your system has linux/landlock.h in the include path, the configure script creates a config.h file, which defines HAVE_LANDLOCK. It is not enough, to set this to 0, you must delete it, when you don't wish to have landlock in your binary.

  • USELIBWRAP compiles support for host access control (see hosts_access(3)), you will need libwrap headers and library to compile (libwrap0-dev in Debian).

  • USELIBCONFIG compiles support for the configuration file. You will need libconfig headers to compile (libconfig8-dev in Debian).

  • USESYSTEMD compiles support for using systemd socket activation. You will need systemd headers to compile (systemd-devel in Fedora).

  • USELIBBSD compiles support for updating the process name (as shown by ps).

  • USELIBCAP compiles support for libcap, which allows to inherit capabilities to daughter-processes, which run as restricted users. You need this, when you wish to make sure, that the --user= parameter can be used, without setting capabilities etc. to your binaries, to make this work.

Now you can do either a plain make to create the binaries, or you can do an make install to create the binaries and install them.

Generating the configuration parser

The configuration file and command line parser is generated by conf2struct, from sslhconf.cfg, which generates sslh-conf.c and sslh-conf.h. The resulting files are included in the source so sslh can be built without conf2struct installed.

Further, to prevent build issues, sslh-conf.[ch] has no dependency to sslhconf.cfg in the Makefile. In the event of adding configuration settings, they need to be regenerated using make c2s.

Binaries

The Makefile produces three different executables: sslh-fork, sslh-select and sslh-ev:

  • sslh-fork forks a new process for each incoming connection. It is well-tested and very reliable, but incurs the overhead of many processes.
    If you are going to use sslh for a "small" setup (less than a dozen ssh connections and a low-traffic https server) then sslh-fork is probably more suited for you.

  • sslh-select uses only one thread, which monitors all connections at once. It only incurs a 16 byte overhead per connection. Also, if it stops, you'll lose all connections, which means you can't upgrade it remotely. If you are going to use sslh on a "medium" setup (a few hundreds of connections), or if you are on a system where forking is expensive (e.g. Windows), sslh-select will be better.

  • sslh-ev is similar to sslh-select, but uses libev as a backend. This allows using specific kernel APIs that allow to manage thousands of connections concurrently.

Installation

  • In general:
    ./configure
    make
    cp sslh-fork /usr/local/sbin/sslh
    cp basic.cfg /etc/sslh.cfg
    vi /etc/sslh.cfg
  • For Debian:
    cp scripts/etc.init.d.sslh /etc/init.d/sslh
  • For CentOS:
    cp scripts/etc.rc.d.init.d.sslh.centos /etc/rc.d/init.d/sslh

You might need to create links in /etc/rc.d so that the server start automatically at boot-up, e.g. under Debian:

update-rc.d sslh defaults