#! /usr/bin/env perl # Copyright 2023-2024 The OpenSSL Project Authors. All Rights Reserved. # # Licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (the "License"). You may not use # this file except in compliance with the License. You can obtain a copy # in the file LICENSE in the source distribution or at # https://www.openssl.org/source/license.html use strict; use warnings; use File::Spec; use OpenSSL::Test qw(:DEFAULT pipe); use OpenSSL::Test::Utils; # These are special key generation tests for SM2 keys specifically, # as they could be said to be a bit special in their encoding. # This is an auxilliary test to 15-test_genec.t setup("test_gensm2"); plan skip_all => "This test is unsupported in a no-sm2 build" if disabled("sm2"); plan tests => 2; # According to the example in GM/T 0015-2012, appendix D.2, # generating an EC key with the named SM2 curve or generating # an SM2 key should end up with the same encoding (apart from # key private key field itself). This regular expressions # shows us what 'openssl asn1parse' should display. my $sm2_re = qr| ^ .*?\Qcons: SEQUENCE\E\s+?\R .*?\Qprim: INTEGER :00\E\R .*?\Qcons: SEQUENCE\E\s+?\R .*?\Qprim: OBJECT :id-ecPublicKey\E\R .*?\Qprim: OBJECT :sm2\E\R .*?\Qprim: OCTET STRING [HEX DUMP]:\E |mx; my $cmd_genec = app([ 'openssl', 'genpkey', '-algorithm', 'EC', '-pkeyopt', 'ec_paramgen_curve:SM2', '-pkeyopt', 'ec_param_enc:named_curve' ]); my $cmd_gensm2 = app([ 'openssl', 'genpkey', '-algorithm', 'SM2' ]); my $cmd_asn1parse = app([ 'openssl', 'asn1parse', '-i' ]); my $result_ec = join("", run(pipe($cmd_genec, $cmd_asn1parse), capture => 1)); like($result_ec, $sm2_re, "Check that 'genpkey -algorithm EC' resulted in a correctly encoded SM2 key"); my $result_sm2 = join("", run(pipe($cmd_gensm2, $cmd_asn1parse), capture => 1)); like($result_sm2, $sm2_re, "Check that 'genpkey -algorithm SM2' resulted in a correctly encoded SM2 key");