2 \page testing_tools Testing and development tools
4 [ \ref eapol_test "eapol_test" |
5 \ref preauth_test "preauth_test" |
6 \ref driver_test "driver_test" |
7 \ref unit_tests "Unit tests" ]
9 %wpa_supplicant source tree includes number of testing and development
10 tools that make it easier to test the programs without having to setup
11 a full test setup with wireless cards. In addition, these tools can be
12 used to implement automatic tests suites.
14 \section eapol_test eapol_test - EAP peer and RADIUS client testing
16 eapol_test is a program that links together the same EAP peer
17 implementation that %wpa_supplicant is using and the RADIUS
18 authentication client code from hostapd. In addition, it has minimal
19 glue code to combine these two components in similar ways to IEEE
20 802.1X/EAPOL Authenticator state machines. In other words, it
21 integrates IEEE 802.1X Authenticator (normally, an access point) and
22 IEEE 802.1X Supplicant (normally, a wireless client) together to
23 generate a single program that can be used to test EAP methods without
24 having to setup an access point and a wireless client.
26 The main uses for eapol_test are in interoperability testing of EAP
27 methods against RADIUS servers and in development testing for new EAP
28 methods. It can be easily used to automate EAP testing for
29 interoperability and regression since the program can be run from
30 shell scripts without require additional test components apart from a
31 RADIUS server. For example, the automated EAP tests described in
32 eap_testing.txt are implemented with eapol_test. Similarly, eapol_test
33 could be used to implement an automated regression test suite for a
34 RADIUS authentication server.
36 eapol_test uses the same build time configuration file, .config, as
37 %wpa_supplicant. This file is used to select which EAP methods are
38 included in eapol_test. This program is not built with the default
39 Makefile target, so a separate make command needs to be used to
46 The resulting eapol_test binary has following command like options:
50 eapol_test [-nWS] -c<conf> [-a<AS IP>] [-p<AS port>] [-s<AS secret>] \
51 [-r<count>] [-t<timeout>] [-C<Connect-Info>] \
52 [-M<client MAC address>]
54 eapol_test sim <PIN> <num triplets> [debug]
57 -c<conf> = configuration file
58 -a<AS IP> = IP address of the authentication server, default 127.0.0.1
59 -p<AS port> = UDP port of the authentication server, default 1812
60 -s<AS secret> = shared secret with the authentication server, default 'radius'
61 -r<count> = number of re-authentications
62 -W = wait for a control interface monitor before starting
63 -S = save configuration after authentiation
64 -n = no MPPE keys expected
65 -t<timeout> = sets timeout in seconds (default: 30 s)
66 -C<Connect-Info> = RADIUS Connect-Info (default: CONNECT 11Mbps 802.11b)
67 -M<client MAC address> = Set own MAC address (Calling-Station-Id,
68 default: 02:00:00:00:00:01)
74 eapol_test -ctest.conf -a127.0.0.1 -p1812 -ssecret -r1
76 tries to complete EAP authentication based on the network
77 configuration from test.conf against the RADIUS server running on the
78 local host. A re-authentication is triggered to test fast
79 re-authentication. The configuration file uses the same format for
80 network blocks as %wpa_supplicant.
83 \section preauth_test preauth_test - WPA2 pre-authentication and EAP peer testing
85 preauth_test is similar to eapol_test in the sense that in combines
86 EAP peer implementation with something else, in this case, with WPA2
87 pre-authentication. This tool can be used to test pre-authentication
88 based on the code that %wpa_supplicant is using. As such, it tests
89 both the %wpa_supplicant implementation and the functionality of an
92 preauth_test is built with:
98 and it uses following command line arguments:
101 usage: preauth_test <conf> <target MAC address> <ifname>
106 preauth_test test.conf 02:11:22:33:44:55 eth0
108 would use network configuration from test.conf to try to complete
109 pre-authentication with AP using BSSID 02:11:22:33:44:55. The
110 pre-authentication packets would be sent using the eth0 interface.
113 \section driver_test driver_test - driver interface for testing wpa_supplicant
115 %wpa_supplicant was designed to support number of different ways to
116 communicate with a network device driver. This design uses \ref
117 driver_wrapper "driver interface API" and number of driver interface
118 implementations. One of these is driver_test.c, i.e., a test driver
119 interface that is actually not using any drivers. Instead, it provides
120 a mechanism for running %wpa_supplicant without having to have a
121 device driver or wireless LAN hardware for that matter.
123 driver_test can be used to talk directly with hostapd's driver_test
124 component to create a test setup where one or more clients and access
125 points can be tested within one test host and without having to have
126 multiple wireless cards. This makes it easier to test the core code in
127 %wpa_supplicant, and hostapd for that matter. Since driver_test uses
128 the same driver API than any other driver interface implementation,
129 the core code of %wpa_supplicant and hostapd can be tested with the
130 same coverage as one would get when using real wireless cards. The
131 only area that is not tested is the driver interface implementation
134 Having the possibility to use simulated network components makes it
135 much easier to do development testing while adding new features and to
136 reproduce reported bugs. As such, it is often easiest to just do most
137 of the development and bug fixing without using real hardware. Once
138 the driver_test setup has been used to implement a new feature or fix
139 a bug, the end result can be verified with wireless LAN cards. In many
140 cases, this may even be unnecessary, depending on what area the
141 feature/bug is relating to. Of course, changes to driver interfaces
142 will still require use of real hardware.
144 Since multiple components can be run within a single host, testing of
145 complex network configuration, e.g., large number of clients
146 association with an access point, becomes quite easy. All the tests
147 can also be automated without having to resort to complex test setup
148 using remote access to multiple computers.
150 driver_test can be included in the %wpa_supplicant build in the same
151 way as any other driver interface, i.e., by adding the following line
158 When running %wpa_supplicant, the test interface is selected by using
159 \a -Dtest command line argument. The interface name (\a -i argument)
160 can be selected arbitrarily, i.e., it does not need to match with any
161 existing network interface. The interface name is used to generate a
162 MAC address, so when using multiple clients, each should use a
163 different interface, e.g., \a sta1, \a sta2, and so on.
165 %wpa_supplicant and hostapd are configured in the same way as they
166 would be for normal use. Following example shows a simple test setup
169 hostapd is configured with following psk-test.conf configuration file:
176 logger_stdout_level=0
178 dump_file=/tmp/hostapd.dump
180 test_socket=/tmp/Test/ap1
187 wpa_passphrase=12345678
190 and started with following command:
193 hostapd psk-test.conf
196 %wpa_supplicant uses following configuration file:
199 driver_param=test_socket=/tmp/Test/ap1
208 %wpa_supplicant can then be started with following command:
211 wpa_supplicant -Dtest -cpsk-test.conf -ista1 -ddK
214 If run without debug information, i.e., with
217 wpa_supplicant -Dtest -cpsk-test.conf -ista1
220 %wpa_supplicant completes authentication and prints following events:
223 Trying to associate with 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a (SSID='jkm-test-psk' freq=0 MHz)
224 Associated with 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a
225 WPA: Key negotiation completed with 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a [PTK=TKIP GTK=TKIP]
226 CTRL-EVENT-CONNECTED - Connection to 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a completed (auth)
229 If test setup is using multiple clients, it is possible to run
230 multiple %wpa_supplicant processes. Alternatively, the support for
231 multiple interfaces can be used with just one process to save some
232 resources on single-CPU systems. For example, following command runs
236 ./wpa_supplicant -Dtest -cpsk-test.conf -ista1 \
237 -N -Dtest -cpsk-test.conf -ista2
240 This shows following event log:
243 Trying to associate with 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a (SSID='jkm-test-psk' freq=0 MHz)
244 Associated with 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a
245 WPA: Key negotiation completed with 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a [PTK=TKIP GTK=TKIP]
246 CTRL-EVENT-CONNECTED - Connection to 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a completed (auth)
247 Trying to associate with 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a (SSID='jkm-test-psk' freq=0 MHz)
248 Associated with 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a
249 WPA: Key negotiation completed with 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a [PTK=TKIP GTK=TKIP]
250 CTRL-EVENT-CONNECTED - Connection to 02:b8:a6:62:08:5a completed (auth)
253 hostapd shows this with following events:
256 ap1: STA 02:b5:64:63:30:63 IEEE 802.11: associated
257 ap1: STA 02:b5:64:63:30:63 WPA: pairwise key handshake completed (WPA)
258 ap1: STA 02:b5:64:63:30:63 WPA: group key handshake completed (WPA)
259 ap1: STA 02:2a:c4:18:5b:f3 IEEE 802.11: associated
260 ap1: STA 02:2a:c4:18:5b:f3 WPA: pairwise key handshake completed (WPA)
261 ap1: STA 02:2a:c4:18:5b:f3 WPA: group key handshake completed (WPA)
264 By default, driver_param is simulating a driver that uses the WPA/RSN
265 IE generated by %wpa_supplicant. Driver-generated IE and AssocInfo
266 events can be tested by adding \a use_associnfo=1 to the \a driver_param
267 line in the configuration file. For example:
270 driver_param=test_socket=/tmp/Test/ap1 use_associnfo=1
274 \section unit_tests Unit tests
276 Number of the components (.c files) used in %wpa_supplicant define
277 their own unit tests for automated validation of the basic
278 functionality. Most of the tests for cryptographic algorithms are
279 using standard test vectors to validate functionality. These tests can
280 be useful especially when verifying port to a new CPU target.
282 In most cases, these tests are implemented in the end of the same file
283 with functions that are normally commented out, but ca be included by
284 defining a pre-processor variable when building the file separately.
285 The details of the needed build options are included in the Makefile
286 (test-* targets). All automated unit tests can be run with
292 This make target builds and runs each test and terminates with zero
293 exit code if all tests were completed successfully.