boringssl/ssl/test
David Benjamin 45bdb2e1e3 Remove identical tests.
I'm not sure what happened here. These are both the same as
MissingKeyShare-Client.

Change-Id: I6601ed378d8639c1b59034f1e96c09a683bb62ca
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/11007
CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Steven Valdez <svaldez@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
2016-09-13 15:50:35 +00:00
..
runner Remove identical tests. 2016-09-13 15:50:35 +00:00
async_bio.cc Replace Scoped* heap types with bssl::UniquePtr. 2016-09-01 22:22:54 +00:00
async_bio.h Replace Scoped* heap types with bssl::UniquePtr. 2016-09-01 22:22:54 +00:00
bssl_shim.cc Fold stack-allocated types into headers. 2016-09-07 21:50:05 +00:00
CMakeLists.txt
packeted_bio.cc Replace Scoped* heap types with bssl::UniquePtr. 2016-09-01 22:22:54 +00:00
packeted_bio.h Replace Scoped* heap types with bssl::UniquePtr. 2016-09-01 22:22:54 +00:00
PORTING.md Fix typo. 2016-08-16 18:05:47 +00:00
README.md Adding PORTING.md for instructions on how to port the test runner 2016-08-16 17:53:28 +00:00
test_config.cc Test resuming renewed sessions. 2016-08-18 23:53:19 +00:00
test_config.h Test resuming renewed sessions. 2016-08-18 23:53:19 +00:00

BoringSSL SSL Tests

This directory contains BoringSSL's protocol-level test suite.

Testing a TLS implementation can be difficult. We need to produce invalid but sufficiently correct handshakes to get our implementation close to its edge cases. TLS's cryptographic steps mean we cannot use a transcript and effectively need a TLS implementation on the other end. But we do not wish to litter BoringSSL with options for bugs to test against.

Instead, we use a fork of the Go crypto/tls package, heavily patched with configurable bugs. This code, along with a test suite and harness written in Go, lives in the runner directory. The harness runs BoringSSL via a C/C++ shim binary which lives in this directory. All communication with the shim binary occurs with command-line flags, sockets, and standard I/O.

This strategy also ensures we always test against a second implementation. All features should be implemented twice, once in C for BoringSSL and once in Go for testing. If possible, the Go code should be suitable for potentially upstreaming. However, sometimes test code has different needs. For example, our test DTLS code enforces strict ordering on sequence numbers and has controlled packet drop simulation.

To run the tests manually, run go test from the runner directory. It takes command-line flags found at the top of runner/runner.go. The -help option also works after using go test -c to make a runner.test binary first.

If adding a new test, these files may be a good starting point:

  • runner/runner.go: the test harness and all the individual tests.
  • runner/common.go: contains the Config and ProtocolBugs struct which control the Go TLS implementation's behavior.
  • test_config.h, test_config.cc: the command-line flags which control the shim's behavior.
  • bssl_shim.cc: the shim binary itself.

For porting the test suite to a different implementation see PORTING.md.