Remove INSTALL-win32.txt that is now hosted in openvpn-build

The contents of INSTALL-win32.txt mostly just describe how to use
OpenVPN-GUI,
OpenVPN Windows services and openvpn-build. These are only loosely coupled
with
OpenVPN, and may change independently of it. Thus hosting the file in
openvpn-build (which brings all of these components together) makes most
sense.

URL: https://github.com/OpenVPN/openvpn-build/pull/35
URL: https://github.com/OpenVPN/openvpn-build/pull/38
Signed-off-by: Samuli Seppänen <samuli@openvpn.net>
Acked-by: David Sommerseth <davids@openvpn.net>
Message-Id: <1477396539-1293-1-git-send-email-samuli@openvpn.net>
URL: https://www.mail-archive.com/openvpn-devel@lists.sourceforge.net/msg12771.html
Signed-off-by: David Sommerseth <davids@openvpn.net>
This commit is contained in:
Samuli Seppänen 2016-10-25 14:55:39 +03:00 committed by David Sommerseth
parent c5da6dbf3f
commit 04341beb1d

View File

@ -1,77 +0,0 @@
UPGRADING FROM 2.3-ALPHA1 AND EARLIER
OpenVPN Windows installer went through major changes in
2.3-alpha2. To avoid any unexpected behavior, it is strongly
suggested to upgrade as follows.
First backup configuration files and certificates from your
current installation; by default they're in
C:\Program Files\OpenVPN\config (32-bit Windows)
C:\Program Files (x86)\OpenVPN\config (64-bit Windows)
After this, stop the openvpn-gui or the openvpn service
wrapper, if either of them is running and uninstall OpenVPN.
Finally, remove the OpenVPN install directory entirely (e.g.
using Windows Explorer as administrator).
Finally, install the new version of OpenVPN and copy over
your configuration files and certificates, which now go to
C:\Program Files\OpenVPN\config
provided you did not install the 32-bit version on 64-bit
Windows.
IMPORTANT NOTE FOR WINDOWS VISTA/7 USERS
Note that on Windows Vista, you will need to run the OpenVPN
GUI with administrator privileges, so that it can add routes
to the routing table that are pulled from the OpenVPN server.
You can do this by right-clicking on the OpenVPN GUI
desktop icon, and selecting "Run as administrator".
GENERAL QUICKSTART FOR WINDOWS
The OpenVPN Client requires a configuration file
and key/certificate files. You should obtain
these and save them to OpenVPN's configuration
directory, usually C:\Program Files\OpenVPN\config.
You can run OpenVPN as a Windows system service or by using
the client GUI. To use the OpenVPN GUI, double click on the
desktop icon or start menu icon. The OpenVPN GUI is a
system-tray applet, so an icon for the GUI will appear in
the lower-right corner of the screen. Right click on the
system tray icon, and a menu should appear showing the names
of your OpenVPN configuration files, and giving you the
option to connect.
BUILDING OPENVPN FOR WINDOWS
Official OpenVPN Windows releases are cross-compiled on Linux using the
openvpn-build buildsystem:
https://community.openvpn.net/openvpn/wiki/BuildingUsingGenericBuildsystem
First setup the build environment as shown in the above article. Then fetch the
openvpn-build repository:
git clone https://github.com/OpenVPN/openvpn-build.git
Review the build configuration:
openvpn-build/generic/build.vars
openvpn-build/windows-nsis/build-complete.vars
Build (unsigned):
cd openvpn-build/windows-nsis
./build-complete
Build (signed):
cd openvpn-build/windows-nsis
./build-complete --sign --sign-pkcs12=<pkcs12-file>\
--sign-pkcs12-pass=<pkcs12-file-password> \
--sign-timestamp="<timestamp-url>"