NAME Alien::LibreSSL - Alien wrapper for LibreSSL (alternative to OpenSSL) VERSION version 0.02 SYNOPSIS EUMM: use ExtUtils::MakeMaker; use Alien::Base::Wrapper qw( Alien::LibreSSL !export ); WriteMakefile( ... CONFIGURE => { 'Alien::Build::Wrapper' => 0, 'Alien::LibreSSL' => 0, }, Alien::Base::Wrapper->mm_args, ); MB: use Module::Build; use Alien::Base::Wrapper qw( Alien::LibreSSL !export ); my $build = Module::Build->new( ... configure_requires => { 'Alien::Build::Wrapper' => 0, 'Alien::LibreSSL' => 0, }, Alien::Base::Wrapper->mb_args, ... ); $build->create_build_script; Perl script: use Alien::LibreSSL; use Env qw( @PATH ); unshift @PATH, 'Alien::LibreSSL->bin_dir; system 'openssl ...'; DESCRIPTION This module provides an implementation of SSL. It will use the system SSL, if it can be found. If the system does not provide SSL, this alien will download and build LibreSSL, a drop in replacement for OpenSSL Motiviations SSL has lots of pitfalls. SSL on Perl has all of those pitfalls plus some more. Once you get Net::SSLeay you are mostly out of the woods. Getting Net::SSLeay to install can be problematic on some platforms. My hope is that some combination of this module and Alien::OpenSSL will one day make it easier to install Net::SSLeay. CAVEATS Normally Alien::Build + alienfile use Net::SSLeay (via HTTP::Tiny or LWP::UserAgent) in order to download https URLs from the internet, but for this to be a dependency of Net::SSLeay that will obviously not work. Instead this alien attempts to bootstrap SSL by downloading via wget or curl, if they are available. By default, if they are not available then this Alien will attempt to download via http. This obviously might not be desirable for some so you can set ALIEN_OPENSSL_FTP to 0 if you want to ensure the trasfer happens over https (and will die, if it isn't available). ENVIRONMENT ALIEN_OPENSSL_FTP Set to 1 to allow downloads via ftp or http (the default). Set to 0 to disallow insecure downloads over ftp or http. SEE ALSO Alien Alien::OpenSSL AUTHOR Graham Ollis COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2017 by Graham Ollis. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.