* Rick Stevens <ricks@xxxxxxxx> [20080510 01:16]: [snip] > Not always possible. I recently had to put OpenSSL 0.9.8g on a CentOS > 5.1 machine to pass a certain certification. The latest OpenSSL for > CentOS 5.1 is 0.9.8b (farking ancient). I did it by building it from > a F9-Preview source RPM, building it (with some tweaks as F9 has some > ciphers that CentOS 5.1 doesn't have), installing the binaries and > poking various symlinks and such to make existing apps happy. So, Rule > 1 can't ALWAYS be adhered to, no matter how "stock" you want your system > to be. Don't stare yourself blind on the version string. If the only reason for requiring OpenSSL 0.9.8g is security fixes, then the version in CentOS may very well have all the ones you'd care about. You are aware of Red Hat's ABI/API guarantee - right? Saying that - I have some tools that I build for RHEL 5.x and for Fedora 8 (soon 9) as a matter of course, as I use them elsewhere regularly. As always - YMMY... [snip] /Anders -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list