I wasn''t sure if the devkit download was or not supposed to include an ssl.h file? Thoughts? -=r
2009/5/9 Roger Pack <rogerdpack at gmail.com>:> I wasn''t sure if the devkit download was or not supposed to include an > ssl.h file?No, the devkit doens''t include any OpenSSL or any header files except the ones for Windows itself. You will need to download or build OpenSSL binaries (or static libs) to be able to have those. See sqlite3-ruby repo at github and also mysql-gem for hints on how to do it (or at least how I do it).> Thoughts?previous version of the devkit included files from extracted OpenSSL, readline and others. Moving to the gem approach, those files will not be available in the by the gem itself, so I decided to avoid confusion and only package the MSYS+MinGW binaries. Cheers, -- Luis Lavena AREA 17 - Perfection in design is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but rather when there is nothing more to take away. Antoine de Saint-Exup?ry
> previous version of the devkit included files from extracted OpenSSL, > readline and others. Moving to the gem approach, those files will not > be available in the by the gem itself, so I decided to avoid confusion > and only package the MSYS+MinGW binaries.So the gem approach will install libs via a devkit gem? Thanks. -=r
On Tue, May 19, 2009 at 4:03 PM, Roger Pack <rogerdpack at gmail.com> wrote:>> previous version of the devkit included files from extracted OpenSSL, >> readline and others. Moving to the gem approach, those files will not >> be available in the by the gem itself, so I decided to avoid confusion >> and only package the MSYS+MinGW binaries. > > So the gem approach will install libs via a devkit gem? > Thanks.Yes, stay tuned because the next blog post is going to be the devkit gem and install procedure for the Development Kit. -- Luis Lavena AREA 17 - Perfection in design is achieved not when there is nothing more to add, but rather when there is nothing more to take away. Antoine de Saint-Exup?ry