0. Building on *nix from git repository Run the autogen script to generate configure, then proceed to step 1. Prerequisites: You'll need autoconf, automake and libtool installed. $ ./autogen.sh 1. Building on *nix from a release $ ./configure $ make $ make check # (optional, but highly recommended) $ sudo make install 2. Building on iOS Use on the xcode project in IDE/iOS/wolfssl.xcodeproj There is a README in IDE/iOS with more information 3. Building for Apple ARM64 When building for an Apple ARM64 platform, ensure the host CPU type is detected as "aarch64" during configure, if not, pass --host=aarch64-apple-darwin to configure. 4. Building on Windows Use the Visual Studio Solution wolfssl64.sln 5. Building with IAR Please see the README in IDE/IAR-EWARM for detailed instructions 6. Building with Keil Please see the Keil Projects in IDE/MDK5-ARM/Projects 7. Building with Microchip tools Please see the README in mplabx 8. Building with Freescale MQX Please see the README in mqx 9. Building with Rowley CrossWorks for ARM Use the CrossWorks project in IDE/ROWLEY-CROSSWORKS-ARM/wolfssl.hzp There is a README.md in IDE/ROWLEY-CROSSWORKS-ARM with more information 10. Building with Arduino Use the script IDE/ARDUINO/wolfssl-arduino.sh to reformat the wolfSSL library for compatibility with the Arduino IDE. There is a README.md in IDE/ARDUINO for detailed instructions. 11. Building for Android with Visual Studio 2017 Please see the README in IDE/VS-ARM. Use the Visual Studio solution IDE/VS-ARM/wolfssl.sln. 12. Building for Yocto Project or OpenEmbedded Please see the README in the "meta-wolfssl" repository. This repository holds wolfSSL's Yocto and OpenEmbedded layer, which contains recipes for wolfSSL, wolfSSH, wolfMQTT, wolfTPM, wolfCrypt examples, and OSS project bbappend files. https://github.com/wolfssl/meta-wolfssl The wolfSSL recipe can also be found in the OpenEmbedded "meta-openembedded/meta-networking/recipes-connectivity" layer: https://github.com/openembedded/meta-openembedded 13. Porting to a new platform Please see section 2.4 in the manual: http://www.wolfssl.com/yaSSL/Docs-cyassl-manual-2-building-cyassl.html 14. Building with CMake Note: Primary development uses automake (./configure). The support for CMake is still under development. For configuring wolfssl using CMake, we recommend downloading the CMake GUI (https://cmake.org/download/). This tool allows you to see all of wolfssl's configuration variables, set them, and view their descriptions. Looking at the GUI or CMakeCache.txt (generated after running cmake once) is the best way to find out what configuration options are available and what they do. You can also invoke CMake from the GUI, which is described in the Windows instructions below. For Unix-based systems, we describe the command line work flow. Regardless of your chosen workflow, cmake will generate a header options.h in the wolfssl directory that contains the options used to configure the build. Unix-based Platforms --- 1) Navigate to the wolfssl root directory containing "CMakeLists.txt". 2) Create a directory called "build" and change into it. This is where CMake will store build files. 3) Run `cmake ..` to generate the target build files (e.g. UNIX Makefiles). To enable or disable features, set them using -D<option>=[yes/no]. For example, to disable TLS 1.3 support, run cmake .. -DWOLFSSL_TLS13=no (autoconf equivalent: ./configure --disable-tls13) To enable DSA, run cmake .. -DWOLFSSL_DSA=yes (autoconf equivalent: ./configure --enable-dsa). Again, you can find a list of these options and their descriptions either using the CMake GUI or by looking at CMakeCache.txt. 5) The build directory should now contain the generated build files. Build with `cmake --build .`. Under the hood, this runs the target build tool (by default, make). You can also invoke the target build tool directly (e.g. make). To build with debugging use: `cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug`. In the simplest form: # create a root directory for wolfssl repo git clone https://github.com/wolfSSL/wolfssl.git cd wolfssl # From the root of the wolfSSL repo: mkdir -p out pushd out cmake .. cmake --build . # View the available ciphers with: ./examples/client/client -e popd ARIA Cipher Suite. The ARIA cipher needs a 3rd party source binary, typically called `MagicCrypto.tar.gz`. The MagicCrypto files can be either copied to the local `wolfssl` directory, or an environment variable `ARIA_DIR` can be set to point to the location. Simply having the environment variable or local `MagicCrypto` directory will not automatically enable the ARIA Ciphers. To enable ARIA Ciphers in wolfSSL for `CMake`: # From the root of the wolfSSL repo: # set to your path export ARIA_DIR=~/workspace/MagicCrypto mkdir -p out pushd out cmake .. -DWOLFSSL_ARIA=yes cmake --build . # View the available ciphers with: ./examples/client/client -e popd Windows (Visual Studio) --- 1) Go to this page, download the appropriate Windows installer, and install to get the CMake GUI: https://cmake.org/download/ Native CMake support in Visual Studio 16 2019 (and possibly older versions) has proven buggy. We recommend using the CMake GUI in concert with Visual Studio, as described in these steps. 2) Open CMake. 3) Where is the source code: <root directory of wolfssl containing CMakeLists.txt> 4) Where to build the binaries: <build directory, e.g. wolfssl/build> 5) Hit Configure. CMake runs the code in CMakeLists.txt and builds up an internal representation of the project. 6) Hit Generate. CMake generates the build files. For Windows, this will be Visual Studio project (.vcxproj) and solution (.sln) files. 7) Open Visual Studio and select "Open a project or solution". 8) Navigate to the build directory and select wolfssl.sln to load the project. Windows (command line) --- 1) Open Command Prompt 2) Run the Visual Studio batch to setup command line variables, e.g. C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio\2017\Community\VC\Auxiliary\Build\vcvars64.bat 3) Follow steps in "Unix-based Platforms" above. 15. Building with liboqs for TLS 1.3 [EXPERIMENTAL] In order be able to use liboqs, you must have it built and installed on your system. We support liboqs at a specific git commit. NOTE: Even if you have already installed liboqs, you need to follow these steps to install liboqs again as we support sphincs variants that are disabled by default in OQS's fork of OpenSSL. Here are instructions for obtaining and building liboqs: $ mkdir ~/oqs $ cd ~/oqs $ git clone --single-branch https://github.com/open-quantum-safe/liboqs.git $ cd liboqs/ $ git checkout 0.8.0 $ mkdir build $ cd build $ cmake -DOQS_USE_OPENSSL=0 .. $ make all $ sudo make install And then for building wolfssl, the following is sufficient: $ cd wolfssl $ ./autogen.sh (Might not be necessary) $ ./configure --with-liboqs $ make all Execute the following to see the liboqs-related options for KEM groups near the end of the output of these commands: $ ./examples/server/server -? $ ./examples/client/client -? For a quick start, you can run the client and server like this: $ ./examples/server/server -v 4 --pqc P521_KYBER_LEVEL5 $ ./examples/client/client -v 4 --pqc P521_KYBER_LEVEL5 Look for the following line in the output of the server and client: ``` Using Post-Quantum KEM: P521_KYBER_LEVEL5 ``` For authentication, you can generate a certificate chain using a patch on top of the Open Quantum Safe project's fork of OpenSSL. We support certificates and keys generated by the patched version which is maintained in our OSP repo. Instructions for obtaining and building our patched version of OQS's fork of OpenSSL can be found at: https://github.com/wolfSSL/osp/tree/master/oqs/README.md There are scripts for generating FALCON, Dilithium and SPHINCS+ certificate chains which can be found in the same directory as the `README.md` file in the `osp` github repo. Please find instructions on how to generate the keys and certificates in the `README.md` file. Once the certificates and keys are generated, copy them from the to the certs directory of wolfssl. Now you can run the server and client like this: $ examples/server/server -v 4 -l TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 \ -A certs/falcon_level5_root_cert.pem \ -c certs/falcon_level1_entity_cert.pem \ -k certs/falcon_level1_entity_key.pem \ --pqc P521_KYBER_LEVEL5 $ examples/client/client -v 4 -l TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384 \ -A certs/falcon_level1_root_cert.pem \ -c certs/falcon_level5_entity_cert.pem \ -k certs/falcon_level5_entity_key.pem \ --pqc P521_KYBER_LEVEL5 Congratulations! You have just achieved a fully quantum-safe TLS 1.3 connection! The following NIST Competition winning algorithms are supported: - CRYSTALS-KYBER (KEM) - Dilithium (signature scheme) - FALCON (signature scheme) - SPHINCS+ (signature scheme) The following NIST Competition Round 3 finalist algorithms were supported, but have been removed after 5.3.3 - SABER (KEM) - NTRU (KEM) Links to more information about all of these algorithms can be found here: https://csrc.nist.gov/projects/post-quantum-cryptography/round-3-submissions NOTE: The quantum-safe algorithms provided by liboqs are unstandardized and experimental. It is highly advised that they NOT be used in production environments. All OIDs and codepoints are temporary and expected to change in the future. You should have no expectation of backwards compatibility. 16. Building with vcpkg # Building wolfssl - Using vcpkg You can download and install wolfssl using the [vcpkg](https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg): git clone https://github.com/Microsoft/vcpkg.git cd vcpkg ./bootstrap-vcpkg.sh OR for Windows bootstrap-vcpkg.bat ./vcpkg integrate install ./vcpkg install wolfssl The wolfssl port in vcpkg is kept up to date by wolfSSL. We also have vcpkg ports for wolftpm, wolfmqtt and curl. 17. Building with hash-sigs lib for LMS/HSS support [EXPERIMENTAL] Using LMS/HSS requires that the hash-sigs lib has been built on your system. We support hash-sigs lib at this git commit: b0631b8891295bf2929e68761205337b7c031726 At the time of writing this, this is the HEAD of the master branch of the hash-sigs project. Currently the hash-sigs project only builds static libraries: - hss_verify.a: a single-threaded verify-only static lib. - hss_lib.a: a single-threaded static lib. - hss_lib_thread.a: a multi-threaded static lib. The multi-threaded version will mainly have speedups for key generation and signing. The default LMS build (--enable-lms) will look for hss_lib.a first, and hss_lib_thread.a second, in a specified hash-sigs dir. The LMS verify-only build (--enable-lms=verify-only) will look for hss_verify.a only, which is a slimmer library that includes only the minimal functions necessary for signature verification. How to get and build the hash-sigs library: $ mkdir ~/hash_sigs $ cd ~/hash_sigs $ git clone https://github.com/cisco/hash-sigs.git src $ cd src $ git checkout b0631b8891295bf2929e68761205337b7c031726 In sha256.h, set USE_OPENSSL to 0: #define USE_OPENSSL 0 To build the single-threaded version: $ make hss_lib.a $ ls *.a hss_lib.a To build multi-threaded: $ make hss_lib_thread.a $ ls *.a hss_lib_thread.a To build verify-only: $ make hss_verify.a $ ls *.a hss_verify.a Build wolfSSL with $ ./configure \ --enable-static \ --disable-shared \ --enable-lms \ --with-liblms=<path to dir containing hss_lib.a or hss_lib_thread.a> $ make Run the benchmark against LMS/HSS with: $ ./wolfcrypt/benchmark/benchmark -lms_hss 18. Building for Debian, Ubuntu, Linux Mint, and derivatives To generate a .deb package, configure wolfSSL with the desired configuration. Then run `make deb` to generate a Debian package with the current configuration. To build the package inside a Docker container, use `make deb-docker`. In both cases the resulting packages are placed in the root directory of the project. 19. Building for RHEL, Fedora, CentOS, SUSE, and openSUSE To generate a .rpm package, configure wolfSSL with the desired configuration. Then run `make rpm` to generate a .rpm package with the current configuration. To build the package inside a Docker container, use `make rpm-docker`. In both cases the resulting packages are placed in the root directory of the project. 20. Building with xmss-reference lib for XMSS/XMSS^MT support [EXPERIMENTAL] Experimental support for XMSS/XMSS^MT has been achieved by integration with the xmss-reference implementation from RFC 8391 (XMSS: eXtended Merkle Signature Scheme). We support a patched version of xmss-reference based on this git commit: 171ccbd26f098542a67eb5d2b128281c80bd71a6 At the time of writing this, this is the HEAD of the master branch of the xmss-reference project. How to get the xmss-reference library: $ mkdir ~/xmss $ cd ~/xmss $ git clone https://github.com/XMSS/xmss-reference.git src $ cd src $ git checkout 171ccbd26f098542a67eb5d2b128281c80bd71a6 $ git apply <path to xmss reference patch> The patch may be found in the wolfssl-examples repo here: pq/stateful_hash_sig/0001-Patch-to-support-wolfSSL-xmss-reference-integration.patch To build patched xmss-reference: $ make xmss_lib.a To build verify-only patched xmss-reference: $ make xmss_verify_lib.a Note that this patch changes xmss-reference to use wolfCrypt SHA256 hashing, by registering a SHA callback function in xmss-reference. It thus benefits from all the same asm speedups as wolfCrypt SHA hashing. Depending on architecture you may build with --enable-intelasm, or --enable-armasm, and see 30-40% speedups in XMSS/XMSS^MT. For full keygen, signing, verifying, and benchmarking support, build wolfSSL with: $ ./configure \ --enable-xmss \ --with-libxmss=<path to xmss src dir> $ make Run the benchmark against XMSS/XMSS^MT with: $ ./wolfcrypt/benchmark/benchmark -xmss_xmssmt For a leaner xmss verify-only build, build with $ ./configure \ --enable-xmss=verify-only \ --with-libxmss=<path to xmss src dir> $ make