-- Kyle Hamilton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > If you installed it to /usr/local/ssl/bin, and you > have changed > directory to /usr/local/ssl/bin, then the most > likely scenario is that > you do not have "." in your $PATH. > > I consider it a security risk to have the current > directory in your > path; in this case, the best way to execute it would > be to go to that > directory and type "./openssl" or even just call it > by > /usr/local/ssl/bin/openssl directly.
Oh my bad! I didn't guess the solution had been so simple! :-) > > -Kyle H > > On 7/24/06, DEVAL SHAH <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hello, > > I have openssl installed on a Solaris machine. I > have logged in as a root > > user. I goto /usr/local/ssl/bin and try to run > openssl command. It gives me > > this error: > > openssl: not found. > > > > > > Is there any environment variable or anything else > to be set ? > > > > Any help on this? > > > > Thank you > > Deval > > > > > > > ______________________________________________________________________ > > OpenSSL Project > http://www.openssl.org > > User Support Mailing List > openssl-users@openssl.org > > Automated List Manager > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > ______________________________________________________________________ > OpenSSL Project > http://www.openssl.org > User Support Mailing List > openssl-users@openssl.org > Automated List Manager > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com ______________________________________________________________________ OpenSSL Project http://www.openssl.org User Support Mailing List openssl-users@openssl.org Automated List Manager [EMAIL PROTECTED]