> On Oct 12, 2018, at 10:58 PM, Cy Schubert <Cy.Schubert_at_cschubert.com> wrote: > > In message <tkrat.3c3bfd84a6c58d9a_at_FreeBSD.org>, Don Lewis writes: >> Prior to the OpenSSL 1.1.1 import, the base OpenSSL library was >> /usr/lib/libssl.so.8. The security/openssl port (1.0.2p) installed >> ${LOCALBASE}/lib/ilbssl.so.9 and the security/openssl-devel port >> (1.1.0i) installed ${LOCALBASE}/lib/libssl.so.11. After the import, the >> base OpenSSL library is /usr/lib/libssl.so.9. Now if you build ports >> with DEFAULT_VERSIONS+=ssl=openssl, the library that actually gets used >> is ambiguous because there are now two different versions of libssl.so >> (1.0.2p and 1.1.1) with the same shared library version number. >> >> I stumbled across this when debugging a virtualbox-ose configure >> failure. The test executable was linked to the ports version of >> libssl.so but rtld chose the base libssl.so at run time. > > This is also the issue with ports-mgmt/pkg on a system that still > requires OpenSSL 1.0.2 from ports in order to support an old client. > > cwfw# pkg info > ld-elf.so.1: /usr/local/lib/libcrypto.so.9: version OPENSSL_1_1_0 > required by /usr/local/lib/libpkg.so.4 not defined > cwfw# > > If I remove security/openssl, the above issue is resolved however the > old client, which should be replaced next year, fails to communicate > with the server. The classic rock & a hard place scenario. Not saying this is a real solution for the general problem, but can you use a libmap.conf entry to work around this? -- DEReceived on Sat Oct 13 2018 - 16:11:38 UTC
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