Hi Nicholas,
your 2.3.2 executable is statically linked and doesn't require those
shared libraries to be available on your system.
During the the 2.3.3 life-cycle it became apparent that static linking
on Unix is incompatible with a few low-level functions GnuGk is using
(eg. dlopen()) and can cause hard crashes, thus the 2.3.4 executables
are dynamically linked.
Most probably you have libssl on your system, usually in /usr/lib/, but
probably a slightly different version. You can just make a symbolic
link, eg. ("ln -s libssl.so.0.9.7.so libssl.so.0.9.8.so").
Regards,
Jan
Nicholas Thompson wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am currently running the pre-compiled 2.3.2 (32bit) on Centos 5.5 without
> any problems. However, I downloaded the 2.3.4 executable (32bit) and this
> is what I get when I run the command:
>
> error while loading shared libraries: libssl.so.0.9.8: cannot open shared
> object file: No such file or directory
>
>
> I know CentOS uses OpenSSL, not libssl. What changed between 2.3.2 and
> 2.3.4 and how do I fix it?
>
> Thanks!
> Nick~
--
Jan Willamowius, [email protected], http://www.gnugk.org/
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