SSL testcases are configured in the `ssl-tests` directory.
-Each `ssl_*.conf.in` file contains a number of test configurations. These files
+Each `ssl_*.cnf.in` file contains a number of test configurations. These files
are used to generate testcases in the OpenSSL CONF format.
The precise test output can be dependent on the library configuration. The test
However, for verification, we also include checked-in configuration outputs
corresponding to the default configuration. These testcases live in
-`test/ssl-tests/*.conf` files.
+`test/ssl-tests/*.cnf` files.
-For more details, see `ssl-tests/01-simple.conf.in` for an example.
+For more details, see `ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf.in` for an example.
## Configuring the test
* HandshakeMode - which handshake flavour to test:
- Simple - plain handshake (default)
- Resume - test resumption
- - Renegotiate - test renegotiation
+ - RenegotiateServer - test server initiated renegotiation
+ - RenegotiateClient - test client initiated renegotiation
When HandshakeMode is Resume or Renegotiate, the original handshake is expected
to succeed. All configured test expectations are verified against the second
- Yes - a session ticket is expected
- No - a session ticket is not expected
+* SessionIdExpected - whether or not a session id is expected
+ - Ignore - do not check for a session id (default)
+ - Yes - a session id is expected
+ - No - a session id is not expected
+
* ResumptionExpected - whether or not resumption is expected (Resume mode only)
- Yes - resumed handshake
- No - full handshake (default)
* ExpectedNPNProtocol, ExpectedALPNProtocol - NPN and ALPN expectations.
+* ExpectedTmpKeyType - the expected algorithm or curve of server temp key
+
+* ExpectedServerCertType, ExpectedClientCertType - the expected algorithm or
+ curve of server or client certificate
+
+* ExpectedServerSignHash, ExpectedClientSignHash - the expected
+ signing hash used by server or client certificate
+
+* ExpectedServerSignType, ExpectedClientSignType - the expected
+ signature type used by server or client when signing messages
+
+* ExpectedClientCANames - for client auth list of CA names the server must
+ send. If this is "empty" the list is expected to be empty otherwise it
+ is a file of certificates whose subject names form the list.
+
+* ExpectedServerCANames - list of CA names the client must send, TLS 1.3 only.
+ If this is "empty" the list is expected to be empty otherwise it is a file
+ of certificates whose subject names form the list.
+
## Configuring the client and server
The client and server configurations can be any valid `SSL_CTX`
protocols can be specified as a comma-separated list, and a callback with the
recommended behaviour will be installed automatically.
+* SRPUser, SRPPassword - SRP settings. For client, this is the SRP user to
+ connect as; for server, this is a known SRP user.
+
### Default server and client configurations
The default server certificate and CA files are added to the configurations
## Adding a test to the test harness
1. Add a new test configuration to `test/ssl-tests`, following the examples of
- existing `*.conf.in` files (for example, `01-simple.conf.in`).
+ existing `*.cnf.in` files (for example, `01-simple.cnf.in`).
-2. Generate the generated `*.conf` test input file. You can do so by running
+2. Generate the generated `*.cnf` test input file. You can do so by running
`generate_ssl_tests.pl`:
```
$ ./config
$ cd test
-$ TOP=.. perl -I testlib/ generate_ssl_tests.pl ssl-tests/my.conf.in \
- > ssl-tests/my.conf
+$ TOP=.. perl -I ../util/perl/ generate_ssl_tests.pl ssl-tests/my.cnf.in default \
+ > ssl-tests/my.cnf
```
-where `my.conf.in` is your test input file.
+where `my.cnf.in` is your test input file and `default` is the provider to use.
+For all the pre-generated test files you should use the default provider.
-For example, to generate the test cases in `ssl-tests/01-simple.conf.in`, do
+For example, to generate the test cases in `ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf.in`, do
```
-$ TOP=.. perl -I testlib/ generate_ssl_tests.pl ssl-tests/01-simple.conf.in > ssl-tests/01-simple.conf
+$ TOP=.. perl -I ../util/perl/ generate_ssl_tests.pl ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf.in default > ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf
```
Alternatively (hackish but simple), you can comment out
OpenSSL directory, do
```
-$ CTLOG_FILE=test/ct/log_list.conf TEST_CERTS_DIR=test/certs test/ssl_test \
- test/ssl-tests/01-simple.conf
+$ CTLOG_FILE=test/ct/log_list.cnf TEST_CERTS_DIR=test/certs test/ssl_test \
+ test/ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf
```
or for shared builds
```
-$ CTLOG_FILE=test/ct/log_list.conf TEST_CERTS_DIR=test/certs \
- util/shlib_wrap.sh test/ssl_test test/ssl-tests/01-simple.conf
+$ CTLOG_FILE=test/ct/log_list.cnf TEST_CERTS_DIR=test/certs \
+ util/wrap.pl test/ssl_test test/ssl-tests/01-simple.cnf
```
Note that the test expectations sometimes depend on the Configure settings. For
just run `make test` do not need any extra steps.
However, when running a test manually, keep in mind that the repository version
-of the generated `test/ssl-tests/*.conf` correspond to expected outputs in with
+of the generated `test/ssl-tests/*.cnf` correspond to expected outputs in with
the default Configure options. To run `ssl_test` manually from the command line
in a build with a different configuration, you may need to generate the right
-`*.conf` file from the `*.conf.in` input first.
+`*.cnf` file from the `*.cnf.in` input first.