gecko/security/nss/cmd/bltest/tests
2009-01-21 04:43:31 +01:00
..
aes_cbc
aes_ecb
camellia_cbc
camellia_ecb
des3_cbc
des3_ecb
des_cbc
des_ecb
dsa
ecdsa
md2
md5
rc2_cbc
rc2_ecb
rc4
rc5_cbc
rc5_ecb
rsa
seed_cbc
seed_ecb
sha1
sha256
sha384
sha512
README

This directory contains a set of tests for each cipher supported by
BLAPI.  Each subdirectory contains known plaintext and ciphertext pairs
(and keys and/or iv's if needed).  The tests can be run as a full set
with:
    bltest -T
or as subsets, for example:
    bltest -T -m des_ecb,md2,rsa

In each subdirectory, the plaintext, key, and iv are ascii, and treated
as such.  The ciphertext is base64-encoded to avoid the hassle of binary
files.

To add a test, incremement the value in the numtests file.  Create a
plaintext, key, and iv file, such that the name of the file is
incrememted one from the last set of tests.  For example, if you are
adding the second test, put your data in files named plaintext1, key1,
and iv1 (ignoring key and iv if they are not needed, of course).  Make
sure your key and iv are the correct number of bytes for your cipher (a
trailing \n is okay, but any other trailing bytes will be used!).  Once
you have your input data, create output data by running bltest on a
trusted implementation.  For example, for a new DES ECB test, run
    bltest -E -m des_ecb -i plaintext1 -k key1 -o ciphertext1 -a in the
tests/des_ecb directory.  Then run
    bltest -T des_ecb from the cmd/bltest directory in the tree of the
implementation you want to test.

Note that the -a option above is important, it tells bltest to expect
the input to be straight ASCII, and not base64 encoded binary!

Special cases:

RC5:
RC5 can take additional parameters, the number of rounds to perform and
the wordsize to use.  The number of rounds is between is between 0 and
255, and the wordsize is either is either 16, 32, or 64 bits (at this
time only 32-bit is supported).  These parameters are specified in a
paramsN file, where N is an index as above.  The format of the file is
"rounds=R\nwordsize=W\n".

public key modes (RSA and DSA):
Asymmetric key ciphers use keys with special properties, so creating a
key file with "Mozilla!" in it will not get you very far!  To create a
public key, run bltest with the plaintext you want to encrypt, using a
trusted implementation.  bltest will generate a key and store it in
"tmp.key", rename that file to keyN.  For example:
    bltest -E -m rsa -i plaintext0 -o ciphertext0 -e 65537 -g 32 -a
    mv tmp.key key0

[note: specifying a keysize (-g) when using RSA is important!]