Commit Graph

103 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Richard Levitte
894025c642 Add recipes for individual block ciphers, stream ciphers and digests
These recipes all correspond to a compiled test program.

Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
2015-09-07 16:10:57 +02:00
Richard Levitte
f3356b7f49 Add math tests recipes
The math recipes are among the heavier, but also quite important.
For the BN test, we have previously relied on bc to verify the numbers.
Unfortunately, bc doesn't exist everywhere, making tests on some platforms
rather painful.  With the new recipe (recipes/10-test_bn.t), we rely
on perl's Math::BigInt and a homegrown simple calculator (recipes/bc.pl)
that can do enough to cover for bc.

Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
2015-09-07 16:10:57 +02:00
Richard Levitte
aec27d4d52 Groundwork for a perl based testing framework
The idea with this perl based testing framework is to make use of
what's delivered with perl and exists on all sorts of platforms.

The choice came to using Test::More and Test::Harness, as that seems
to be the most widely spread foundation, even if perl is aged.

The main runner of the show is run_tests.pl.  As it currently stands,
it's designed to run from inside Makefile, but it's absolutely
possible to run it from the command line as well, like so:

	cd test
	OPENSSL_SRCDIR=.. perl run_tests.pl

The tester scripts themselves are stored in the subdirectory recipes/,
and initially, we have two such scripts, recipes/00-check_testalltests.t
and recipes/00-check_testexes.t.  recipes/00-check_testalltests.t will
pick out the dependencies of "alltests" in test/Makefile, and check if
it can find recipes with corresponding names.  recipes/00-check_testexes.t
does something similar, but bases it on existing compiled test binaries.
They make it easy to figure out what's to be added, and will be
removed when this effort is finished.

Individual recipes can be run as well, of course, as they are perl
scripts in themselves.  For example, you can run only
recipes/00-check_testexes.t like so:

	cd test
	OPENSSL_SRCDIR=.. perl recipes/00-check_testexes.t

To make coding easier, there's a routine library OpenSSL::Test, which
is reachable in a perl script like so:

	use lib 'testlib';
	use OpenSSL::Test;

Reviewed-by: Rich Salz <rsalz@openssl.org>
2015-09-07 16:10:57 +02:00