mirror of
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036cbb6bbf
Reviewed-by: Tim Hudson <tjh@openssl.org> (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/12109)
189 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
189 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
TEST DATA2
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Running external test suites with OpenSSL
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=========================================
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It is possible to integrate external test suites into OpenSSL's "make test".
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This capability is considered a developer option and does not work on all
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platforms.
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The BoringSSL test suite
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========================
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In order to run the BoringSSL tests with OpenSSL, first checkout the BoringSSL
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source code into an appropriate directory. This can be done in two ways:
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1) Separately from the OpenSSL checkout using:
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$ git clone https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl boringssl
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The BoringSSL tests are only confirmed to work at a specific commit in the
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BoringSSL repository. Later commits may or may not pass the test suite:
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$ cd boringssl
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$ git checkout 490469f850e
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2) Using the already configured submodule settings in OpenSSL:
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$ git submodule update --init
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Configure the OpenSSL source code to enable the external tests:
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$ cd ../openssl
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$ ./config enable-ssl3 enable-ssl3-method enable-weak-ssl-ciphers \
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enable-external-tests
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Note that using other config options than those given above may cause the tests
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to fail.
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Run the OpenSSL tests by providing the path to the BoringSSL test runner in the
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BORING_RUNNER_DIR environment variable:
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$ BORING_RUNNER_DIR=/path/to/boringssl/ssl/test/runner make test
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Note that the test suite may change directory while running so the path provided
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should be absolute and not relative to the current working directory.
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To see more detailed output you can run just the BoringSSL tests with the
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verbose option:
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$ VERBOSE=1 BORING_RUNNER_DIR=/path/to/boringssl/ssl/test/runner make \
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TESTS="test_external_boringssl" test
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Test failures and suppressions
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------------------------------
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A large number of the BoringSSL tests are known to fail. A test could fail
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because of many possible reasons. For example:
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- A bug in OpenSSL
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- Different interpretations of standards
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- Assumptions about the way BoringSSL works that do not apply to OpenSSL
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- The test uses APIs added to BoringSSL that are not present in OpenSSL
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- etc
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In order to provide a "clean" baseline run with all the tests passing a config
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file has been provided that suppresses the running of tests that are known to
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fail. These suppressions are held in the file "test/ossl_shim/ossl_config.json"
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within the OpenSSL source code.
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The community is encouraged to contribute patches which reduce the number of
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suppressions that are currently present.
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Python PYCA/Cryptography test suite
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===================================
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This python test suite runs cryptographic tests with a local OpenSSL build as
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the implementation.
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First checkout the PYCA/Cryptography module into ./pyca-cryptography using:
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$ git submodule update --init
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Then configure/build OpenSSL compatible with the python module:
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$ ./config shared enable-external-tests
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$ make
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The tests will run in a python virtual environment which requires virtualenv
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to be installed.
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$ make test VERBOSE=1 TESTS=test_external_pyca
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Test failures and suppressions
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------------------------------
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Some tests target older (<=1.0.2) versions so will not run. Other tests target
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other crypto implementations so are not relevant. Currently no tests fail.
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krb5 test suite
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===============
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Much like the PYCA/Cryptography test suite, this builds and runs the krb5
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tests against the local OpenSSL build.
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You will need a git checkout of krb5 at the top level:
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$ git clone https://github.com/krb5/krb5
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krb5's master has to pass this same CI, but a known-good version is
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krb5-1.15.1-final if you want to be sure.
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$ cd krb5
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$ git checkout krb5-1.15.1-final
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$ cd ..
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OpenSSL must be built with external tests enabled:
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$ ./config enable-external-tests
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$ make
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krb5's tests will then be run as part of the rest of the suite, or can be
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explicitly run (with more debugging):
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$ VERBOSE=1 make TESTS=test_external_krb5 test
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Test-failures suppressions
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--------------------------
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krb5 will automatically adapt its test suite to account for the configuration
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of your system. Certain tests may require more installed packages to run. No
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tests are expected to fail.
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GOST engine test suite
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===============
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Much like the PYCA/Cryptography test suite, this builds and runs the GOST engine
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tests against the local OpenSSL build.
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You will need a git checkout of gost-engine at the top level:
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$ git submodule update --init
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Then configure/build OpenSSL enabling external tests:
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$ ./config shared enable-external-tests
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$ make
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GOST engine requires CMake for the build process.
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GOST engine tests will then be run as part of the rest of the suite, or can be
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explicitly run (with more debugging):
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$ make test VERBOSE=1 TESTS=test_external_gost_engine
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Updating test suites
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====================
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To update the commit for any of the above test suites:
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- Make sure the submodules are cloned locally:
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$ git submodule update --init --recursive
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- Enter subdirectory and pull from the repository (use a specific branch/tag if required):
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$ cd <submodule-dir>
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$ git pull origin master
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- Go to root directory, there should be a new git status:
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$ cd ../
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$ git status
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...
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# modified: <submodule-dir> (new commits)
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...
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- Add/commit/push the update
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git add <submodule-dir>
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git commit -m "Updated <submodule> to latest commit"
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git push
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