#!/bin/sh OPENSSL_CONF="${builddir}/openssl.cnf" export OPENSSL_CONF password='AT3S4PASSWD' key="${builddir}/client.key" pwdfile="${builddir}/passwd" # create an engine key for us sed 's/PRIVATE KEY/TEST ENGINE KEY/' < ${top_srcdir}/sample/sample-keys/client.key > ${key} echo "$password" > $pwdfile # our version of grep to output log.txt on failure in case it's an openssl # error mismatch and the grep expression needs updating loggrep() { egrep -q "$1" log.txt || { echo '---- begin log.txt ----'; cat log.txt; echo '--- end log.txt ---'; return 1; } } # note here we've induced a mismatch in the client key and the server # cert which openvpn should report and die. Check that it does. Note # also that this mismatch depends on openssl not openvpn, so it is # somewhat fragile ${top_builddir}/src/openvpn/openvpn --cd ${top_srcdir}/sample --config sample-config-files/loopback-server --engine testengine --key ${key} --askpass $pwdfile > log.txt 2>&1 # first off check we died because of a key mismatch. If this doesn't # pass, suspect openssl of returning different messages and update the # test accordingly loggrep '(X509_check_private_key:key values mismatch|func\(128\):reason\(116\))' log.txt || { echo "Key mismatch not detected"; exit 1; } # now look for the engine prints (these are under our control) loggrep 'ENGINE: engine_init called' || { echo "Engine initialization not detected"; exit 1; } loggrep 'ENGINE: engine_load_key called' || { echo "Key was not loaded from engine"; exit 1; } loggrep "ENGINE: engine_load_key got password ${password}" || { echo "Key password was not retrieved by the engine"; exit 1; } exit 0