Mercurial > hg > nginx-tests
view stream_ssl_verify_client.t @ 1912:f61d1b4ac638
Tests: unbreak quic_ciphers.t with AEAD_AES_128_CCM enabled.
Although CCM ciphers are disabled in a stock OpenSSL as rarely used,
"to reduce ClientHello bloat", AEAD_AES_128_CCM is apparently turned
back in certain distributions such as RHEL. Previously, this caused
testing connections to fail as the CCM cipher being negotiated isn't
supported yet in nginx. Now the test is skipped instead on failure.
While here, fixed nearby style.
author | Sergey Kandaurov <pluknet@nginx.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 14 Jun 2023 16:57:01 +0400 |
parents | dbb7561a9441 |
children | b72a8c4a1bef |
line wrap: on
line source
#!/usr/bin/perl # (C) Sergey Kandaurov # (C) Andrey Zelenkov # (C) Nginx, Inc. # Tests for stream ssl module, ssl_verify_client. ############################################################################### use warnings; use strict; use Test::More; BEGIN { use FindBin; chdir($FindBin::Bin); } use lib 'lib'; use Test::Nginx; use Test::Nginx::Stream qw/ stream /; ############################################################################### select STDERR; $| = 1; select STDOUT; $| = 1; my $t = Test::Nginx->new()->has(qw/stream stream_ssl stream_return socket_ssl/) ->has_daemon('openssl'); $t->write_file_expand('nginx.conf', <<'EOF'); %%TEST_GLOBALS%% daemon off; events { } stream { %%TEST_GLOBALS_STREAM%% log_format status $status; ssl_certificate_key 1.example.com.key; ssl_certificate 1.example.com.crt; server { listen 127.0.0.1:8080; return $ssl_client_verify:$ssl_client_cert; ssl_verify_client on; ssl_client_certificate 2.example.com.crt; } server { listen 127.0.0.1:8081 ssl; return $ssl_client_verify:$ssl_client_cert; ssl_verify_client on; ssl_client_certificate 2.example.com.crt; access_log %%TESTDIR%%/status.log status; } server { listen 127.0.0.1:8082 ssl; return $ssl_client_verify:$ssl_client_cert; ssl_verify_client optional; ssl_client_certificate 2.example.com.crt; ssl_trusted_certificate 3.example.com.crt; } server { listen 127.0.0.1:8083 ssl; return $ssl_client_verify:$ssl_client_cert; ssl_verify_client optional_no_ca; ssl_client_certificate 2.example.com.crt; } server { listen 127.0.0.1:8084 ssl; return $ssl_protocol; } } EOF $t->write_file('openssl.conf', <<EOF); [ req ] default_bits = 2048 encrypt_key = no distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name [ req_distinguished_name ] EOF my $d = $t->testdir(); foreach my $name ('1.example.com', '2.example.com', '3.example.com') { system('openssl req -x509 -new ' . "-config $d/openssl.conf -subj /CN=$name/ " . "-out $d/$name.crt -keyout $d/$name.key " . ">>$d/openssl.out 2>&1") == 0 or die "Can't create certificate for $name: $!\n"; } $t->run()->plan(10); ############################################################################### is(stream('127.0.0.1:' . port(8080))->read(), ':', 'plain connection'); is(get(8081), '', 'no cert'); is(get(8082, '1.example.com'), '', 'bad optional cert'); is(get(8082), 'NONE:', 'no optional cert'); like(get(8083, '1.example.com'), qr/FAILED.*BEGIN/, 'bad optional_no_ca cert'); like(get(8081, '2.example.com'), qr/SUCCESS.*BEGIN/, 'good cert'); like(get(8082, '2.example.com'), qr/SUCCESS.*BEGIN/, 'good cert optional'); like(get(8082, '3.example.com'), qr/SUCCESS.*BEGIN/, 'good cert trusted'); SKIP: { skip 'Net::SSLeay version >= 1.36 required', 1 if $Net::SSLeay::VERSION < 1.36; TODO: { local $TODO = 'broken TLSv1.3 CA list in LibreSSL' if $t->has_module('LibreSSL') && test_tls13(); my $ca = join ' ', get(8082, '3.example.com'); is($ca, '/CN=2.example.com', 'no trusted sent'); } } $t->stop(); is($t->read_file('status.log'), "500\n200\n", 'log'); ############################################################################### sub test_tls13 { get(8084) =~ /TLSv1.3/; } sub get { my ($port, $cert) = @_; my $s = stream( PeerAddr => '127.0.0.1:' . port($port), SSL => 1, $cert ? ( SSL_cert_file => "$d/$cert.crt", SSL_key_file => "$d/$cert.key" ) : () ); return $s->read() unless wantarray(); # Note: this uses IO::Socket::SSL::_get_ssl_object() internal method. # While not exactly correct, it looks like there is no other way to # obtain CA list with IO::Socket::SSL, and this seems to be good # enough for tests. my $ssl = $s->socket()->_get_ssl_object(); my $list = Net::SSLeay::get_client_CA_list($ssl); my @names; for my $i (0 .. Net::SSLeay::sk_X509_NAME_num($list) - 1) { my $name = Net::SSLeay::sk_X509_NAME_value($list, $i); push @names, Net::SSLeay::X509_NAME_oneline($name); } return @names; } ###############################################################################