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c88f6f0e40
On most systems, there is no E macro for errcode zero in <errno.h>, which means that it seldom comes up here. However, reports indicate that some platforms do have an E macro for errcode zero. With perl, errcode zero is a bit special. Perl consistently gives the empty string for that one, while the C strerror() may give back something else. The easiest way to deal with that possible mismatch is to skip this errcode. Fixes #12798 Reviewed-by: Paul Dale <paul.dale@oracle.com> (Merged from https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/12799)
154 lines
5.3 KiB
Perl
154 lines
5.3 KiB
Perl
#! /usr/bin/env perl
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# Copyright 2018-2020 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved.
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#
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# Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use
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# this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy
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# in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at
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# https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html
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use strict;
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no strict 'refs'; # To be able to use strings as function refs
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use OpenSSL::Test;
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use OpenSSL::Test::Utils;
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use Errno qw(:POSIX);
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use POSIX qw(:limits_h strerror);
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use Data::Dumper;
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setup('test_errstr');
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# In a cross compiled situation, there are chances that our
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# application is linked against different C libraries than
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# perl, and may thereby get different error messages for the
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# same error.
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# The safest is not to test under such circumstances.
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plan skip_all => 'This is unsupported for cross compiled configurations'
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if config('CROSS_COMPILE');
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# The same can be said when compiling OpenSSL with mingw configuration
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# on Windows when built with msys perl. Similar problems are also observed
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# in MSVC builds, depending on the perl implementation used.
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plan skip_all => 'This is unsupported on MSYS/MinGW or MSWin32'
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if $^O eq 'msys' or $^O eq 'MSWin32';
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plan skip_all => 'OpenSSL is configured "no-autoerrinit" or "no-err"'
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if disabled('autoerrinit') || disabled('err');
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# OpenSSL constants found in <openssl/err.h>
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use constant ERR_SYSTEM_FLAG => INT_MAX + 1;
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use constant ERR_LIB_OFFSET => 23; # Offset of the "library" errcode section
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# OpenSSL "library" numbers
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use constant ERR_LIB_NONE => 1;
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# We use Errno::EXPORT_OK as a list of known errno values on the current
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# system. libcrypto's ERR should either use the same string as perl, or if
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# it was outside the range that ERR looks at, ERR gives the reason string
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# "reason(nnn)", where nnn is the errno number.
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plan tests => scalar @Errno::EXPORT_OK
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+1 # Checking that error 128 gives 'reason(128)'
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+1 # Checking that error 0 gives the library name
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+1; # Check trailing whitespace is removed.
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# Test::More:ok() has a sub prototype, which means we need to use the '&ok'
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# syntax to force it to accept a list as a series of arguments.
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foreach my $errname (@Errno::EXPORT_OK) {
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# The error names are perl constants, which are implemented as functions
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# returning the numeric value of that name.
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my $errcode = "Errno::$errname"->();
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SKIP: {
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# On most systems, there is no E macro for errcode zero in <errno.h>,
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# which means that it seldom comes up here. However, reports indicate
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# that some platforms do have an E macro for errcode zero.
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# With perl, errcode zero is a bit special. Perl consistently gives
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# the empty string for that one, while the C strerror() may give back
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# something else. The easiest way to deal with that possible mismatch
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# is to skip this errcode.
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skip "perl error strings and ssystem error strings for errcode 0 differ", 1
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if $errcode == 0;
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&ok(match_syserr_reason($errcode));
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}
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}
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# OpenSSL library 1 is the "unknown" library
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&ok(match_opensslerr_reason(ERR_LIB_NONE << ERR_LIB_OFFSET | 256,
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"reason(256)"));
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# Reason code 0 of any library gives the library name as reason
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&ok(match_opensslerr_reason(ERR_LIB_NONE << ERR_LIB_OFFSET | 0,
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"unknown library"));
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&ok(match_any("Trailing whitespace \n\t", "?", ( "Trailing whitespace" )));
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exit 0;
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# For an error string "error:xxxxxxxx:lib:func:reason", this returns
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# the following array:
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#
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# ( "xxxxxxxx", "lib", "func", "reason" )
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sub split_error {
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# Limit to 5 items, in case the reason contains a colon
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my @erritems = split /:/, $_[0], 5;
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# Remove the first item, which is always "error"
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shift @erritems;
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return @erritems;
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}
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# Compares the first argument as string to each of the arguments 3 and on,
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# and returns an array of two elements:
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# 0: True if the first argument matched any of the others, otherwise false
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# 1: A string describing the test
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# The returned array can be used as the arguments to Test::More::ok()
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sub match_any {
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my $first = shift;
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my $desc = shift;
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my @strings = @_;
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# ignore trailing whitespace
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$first =~ s/\s+$//;
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if (scalar @strings > 1) {
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$desc = "match '$first' ($desc) with one of ( '"
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. join("', '", @strings) . "' )";
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} else {
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$desc = "match '$first' ($desc) with '$strings[0]'";
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}
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return ( scalar( grep { $first eq $_ } @strings ) > 0,
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$desc );
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}
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sub match_opensslerr_reason {
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my $errcode = shift;
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my @strings = @_;
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my $errcode_hex = sprintf "%x", $errcode;
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my $reason =
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( run(app([ qw(openssl errstr), $errcode_hex ]), capture => 1) )[0];
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$reason =~ s|\R$||;
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$reason = ( split_error($reason) )[3];
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return match_any($reason, $errcode, @strings);
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}
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sub match_syserr_reason {
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my $errcode = shift;
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my @strings = ();
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# The POSIX reason string
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push @strings, eval {
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# Set $! to the error number...
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local $! = $errcode;
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# ... and $! will give you the error string back
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$!
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};
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# The OpenSSL fallback string
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push @strings, "reason($errcode)";
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return match_opensslerr_reason(ERR_SYSTEM_FLAG | $errcode, @strings);
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}
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