1# SSL tests 2 3SSL testcases are configured in the `ssl-tests` directory. 4 5Each `ssl_*.conf.in` file contains a number of test configurations. These files 6are used to generate testcases in the OpenSSL CONF format. 7 8The precise test output can be dependent on the library configuration. The test 9harness generates the output files on the fly. 10 11However, for verification, we also include checked-in configuration outputs 12corresponding to the default configuration. These testcases live in 13`test/ssl-tests/*.conf` files. 14 15For more details, see `ssl-tests/01-simple.conf.in` for an example. 16 17## Configuring the test 18 19First, give your test a name. The names do not have to be unique. 20 21An example test input looks like this: 22 23``` 24 { 25 name => "test-default", 26 server => { "CipherString" => "DEFAULT" }, 27 client => { "CipherString" => "DEFAULT" }, 28 test => { "ExpectedResult" => "Success" }, 29 } 30``` 31 32The test section supports the following options 33 34### Test mode 35 36* Method - the method to test. One of DTLS or TLS. 37 38* HandshakeMode - which handshake flavour to test: 39 - Simple - plain handshake (default) 40 - Resume - test resumption 41 - RenegotiateServer - test server initiated renegotiation 42 - RenegotiateClient - test client initiated renegotiation 43 44When HandshakeMode is Resume or Renegotiate, the original handshake is expected 45to succeed. All configured test expectations are verified against the second 46handshake. 47 48* ApplicationData - amount of application data bytes to send (integer, defaults 49 to 256 bytes). Applies to both client and server. Application data is sent in 50 64kB chunks (but limited by MaxFragmentSize and available parallelization, see 51 below). 52 53* MaxFragmentSize - maximum send fragment size (integer, defaults to 512 in 54 tests - see `SSL_CTX_set_max_send_fragment` for documentation). Applies to 55 both client and server. Lowering the fragment size will split handshake and 56 application data up between more `SSL_write` calls, thus allowing to exercise 57 different code paths. In particular, if the buffer size (64kB) is at least 58 four times as large as the maximum fragment, interleaved multi-buffer crypto 59 implementations may be used on some platforms. 60 61### Test expectations 62 63* ExpectedResult - expected handshake outcome. One of 64 - Success - handshake success 65 - ServerFail - serverside handshake failure 66 - ClientFail - clientside handshake failure 67 - InternalError - some other error 68 69* ExpectedClientAlert, ExpectedServerAlert - expected alert. See 70 `ssl_test_ctx.c` for known values. Note: the expected alert is currently 71 matched against the _last_ received alert (i.e., a fatal alert or a 72 `close_notify`). Warning alert expectations are not yet supported. (A warning 73 alert will not be correctly matched, if followed by a `close_notify` or 74 another alert.) 75 76* ExpectedProtocol - expected negotiated protocol. One of 77 SSLv3, TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2. 78 79* SessionTicketExpected - whether or not a session ticket is expected 80 - Ignore - do not check for a session ticket (default) 81 - Yes - a session ticket is expected 82 - No - a session ticket is not expected 83 84* SessionIdExpected - whether or not a session id is expected 85 - Ignore - do not check for a session id (default) 86 - Yes - a session id is expected 87 - No - a session id is not expected 88 89* ResumptionExpected - whether or not resumption is expected (Resume mode only) 90 - Yes - resumed handshake 91 - No - full handshake (default) 92 93* ExpectedNPNProtocol, ExpectedALPNProtocol - NPN and ALPN expectations. 94 95* ExpectedTmpKeyType - the expected algorithm or curve of server temp key 96 97* ExpectedServerCertType, ExpectedClientCertType - the expected algorithm or 98 curve of server or client certificate 99 100* ExpectedServerSignHash, ExpectedClientSignHash - the expected 101 signing hash used by server or client certificate 102 103* ExpectedServerSignType, ExpectedClientSignType - the expected 104 signature type used by server or client when signing messages 105 106* ExpectedClientCANames - for client auth list of CA names the server must 107 send. If this is "empty" the list is expected to be empty otherwise it 108 is a file of certificates whose subject names form the list. 109 110* ExpectedServerCANames - list of CA names the client must send, TLS 1.3 only. 111 If this is "empty" the list is expected to be empty otherwise it is a file 112 of certificates whose subject names form the list. 113 114## Configuring the client and server 115 116The client and server configurations can be any valid `SSL_CTX` 117configurations. For details, see the manpages for `SSL_CONF_cmd`. 118 119Give your configurations as a dictionary of CONF commands, e.g. 120 121``` 122server => { 123 "CipherString" => "DEFAULT", 124 "MinProtocol" => "TLSv1", 125} 126``` 127 128The following sections may optionally be defined: 129 130* server2 - this section configures a secondary context that is selected via the 131 ServerName test option. This context is used whenever a ServerNameCallback is 132 specified. If the server2 section is not present, then the configuration 133 matches server. 134* resume_server - this section configures the client to resume its session 135 against a different server. This context is used whenever HandshakeMode is 136 Resume. If the resume_server section is not present, then the configuration 137 matches server. 138* resume_client - this section configures the client to resume its session with 139 a different configuration. In practice this may occur when, for example, 140 upgraded clients reuse sessions persisted on disk. This context is used 141 whenever HandshakeMode is Resume. If the resume_client section is not present, 142 then the configuration matches client. 143 144### Configuring callbacks and additional options 145 146Additional handshake settings can be configured in the `extra` section of each 147client and server: 148 149``` 150client => { 151 "CipherString" => "DEFAULT", 152 extra => { 153 "ServerName" => "server2", 154 } 155} 156``` 157 158#### Supported client-side options 159 160* ClientVerifyCallback - the client's custom certificate verify callback. 161 Used to test callback behaviour. One of 162 - None - no custom callback (default) 163 - AcceptAll - accepts all certificates. 164 - RejectAll - rejects all certificates. 165 166* ServerName - the server the client should attempt to connect to. One of 167 - None - do not use SNI (default) 168 - server1 - the initial context 169 - server2 - the secondary context 170 - invalid - an unknown context 171 172* CTValidation - Certificate Transparency validation strategy. One of 173 - None - no validation (default) 174 - Permissive - SSL_CT_VALIDATION_PERMISSIVE 175 - Strict - SSL_CT_VALIDATION_STRICT 176 177#### Supported server-side options 178 179* ServerNameCallback - the SNI switching callback to use 180 - None - no callback (default) 181 - IgnoreMismatch - continue the handshake on SNI mismatch 182 - RejectMismatch - abort the handshake on SNI mismatch 183 184* BrokenSessionTicket - a special test case where the session ticket callback 185 does not initialize crypto. 186 - No (default) 187 - Yes 188 189#### Mutually supported options 190 191* NPNProtocols, ALPNProtocols - NPN and ALPN settings. Server and client 192 protocols can be specified as a comma-separated list, and a callback with the 193 recommended behaviour will be installed automatically. 194 195* SRPUser, SRPPassword - SRP settings. For client, this is the SRP user to 196 connect as; for server, this is a known SRP user. 197 198### Default server and client configurations 199 200The default server certificate and CA files are added to the configurations 201automatically. Server certificate verification is requested by default. 202 203You can override these options by redefining them: 204 205``` 206client => { 207 "VerifyCAFile" => "/path/to/custom/file" 208} 209``` 210 211or by deleting them 212 213``` 214client => { 215 "VerifyCAFile" => undef 216} 217``` 218 219## Adding a test to the test harness 220 2211. Add a new test configuration to `test/ssl-tests`, following the examples of 222 existing `*.conf.in` files (for example, `01-simple.conf.in`). 223 2242. Generate the generated `*.conf` test input file. You can do so by running 225 `generate_ssl_tests.pl`: 226 227``` 228$ ./config 229$ cd test 230$ TOP=.. perl -I ../util/perl/ generate_ssl_tests.pl ssl-tests/my.conf.in \ 231 > ssl-tests/my.conf 232``` 233 234where `my.conf.in` is your test input file. 235 236For example, to generate the test cases in `ssl-tests/01-simple.conf.in`, do 237 238``` 239$ TOP=.. perl -I ../util/perl/ generate_ssl_tests.pl ssl-tests/01-simple.conf.in > ssl-tests/01-simple.conf 240``` 241 242Alternatively (hackish but simple), you can comment out 243 244``` 245unlink glob $tmp_file; 246``` 247 248in `test/recipes/80-test_ssl_new.t` and run 249 250``` 251$ make TESTS=test_ssl_new test 252``` 253 254This will save the generated output in a `*.tmp` file in the build directory. 255 2563. Update the number of tests planned in `test/recipes/80-test_ssl_new.t`. If 257 the test suite has any skip conditions, update those too (see 258 `test/recipes/80-test_ssl_new.t` for details). 259 260## Running the tests with the test harness 261 262``` 263HARNESS_VERBOSE=yes make TESTS=test_ssl_new test 264``` 265 266## Running a test manually 267 268These steps are only needed during development. End users should run `make test` 269or follow the instructions above to run the SSL test suite. 270 271To run an SSL test manually from the command line, the `TEST_CERTS_DIR` 272environment variable to point to the location of the certs. E.g., from the root 273OpenSSL directory, do 274 275``` 276$ CTLOG_FILE=test/ct/log_list.conf TEST_CERTS_DIR=test/certs test/ssl_test \ 277 test/ssl-tests/01-simple.conf 278``` 279 280or for shared builds 281 282``` 283$ CTLOG_FILE=test/ct/log_list.conf TEST_CERTS_DIR=test/certs \ 284 util/shlib_wrap.sh test/ssl_test test/ssl-tests/01-simple.conf 285``` 286 287Note that the test expectations sometimes depend on the Configure settings. For 288example, the negotiated protocol depends on the set of available (enabled) 289protocols: a build with `enable-ssl3` has different test expectations than a 290build with `no-ssl3`. 291 292The Perl test harness automatically generates expected outputs, so users who 293just run `make test` do not need any extra steps. 294 295However, when running a test manually, keep in mind that the repository version 296of the generated `test/ssl-tests/*.conf` correspond to expected outputs in with 297the default Configure options. To run `ssl_test` manually from the command line 298in a build with a different configuration, you may need to generate the right 299`*.conf` file from the `*.conf.in` input first. 300