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Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard63e7eba2015-07-28 14:17:48 +02001# mbed TLS selftest programs
2
3This application runs the various selftest function of individual mbed TLS components. It serves as a basic sanity check for mbed TLS on your platform. In the future, a wider portion of the mbed TLS test suite will be ported on mbed OS.
4
5## Pre-requisites
6
7To build and run this example the requirements below are necessary:
8
9* A computer with the following software installed:
10 * [CMake](http://www.cmake.org/download/).
11 * [yotta](https://github.com/ARMmbed/yotta). Please note that **yotta has its own set of dependencies**, listed in the [installation instructions](http://armmbed.github.io/yotta/#installing-on-windows).
12 * [Python](https://www.python.org/downloads/).
13 * [ARM GCC toolchain](https://launchpad.net/gcc-arm-embedded).
14 * A serial terminal emulator (e.g. screen, pySerial, cu).
15* An [FRDM-K64F](http://developer.mbed.org/platforms/FRDM-K64F/) development board, or another board supported by mbed OS (in that case you'll have to substitute frdm-k64f-gcc with the appropriate target below).
16* A micro-USB cable.
17* If your OS is Windows, please follow the installation instructions [for the serial port driver](https://developer.mbed.org/handbook/Windows-serial-configuration).
18
19## Getting started
20
211. Connect the FRDM-K64F to the computer with the micro-USB cable, being careful to use the micro-usb port labeled "OpenSDA".
22
232. Navigate to the mbedtls directory supplied with your release and open a terminal.
24
253. Set the yotta target:
26
27 ```
28 yotta target frdm-k64f-gcc
29 ```
30
Brian Daniels3c405ae2015-08-18 10:52:57 -0700314. Build mbedtls and the examples. This will take a long time if it is the first time:
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard63e7eba2015-07-28 14:17:48 +020032
33 ```
34 $ yt build
35 ```
36
Brian Daniels3c405ae2015-08-18 10:52:57 -0700375. Copy `build/frdm-k64f-gcc/test/mbedtls-test-example-selftest.bin` to your mbed board and wait until the LED next to the USB port stops blinking.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard63e7eba2015-07-28 14:17:48 +020038
Brian Daniels3c405ae2015-08-18 10:52:57 -0700396. Start the serial terminal emulator and connect to the virtual serial port presented by FRDM-K64F. For settings, use 115200 baud, 8N1, no flow control. **Warning:** for this example, the baud rate is not the default 9600, it is 115200.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard63e7eba2015-07-28 14:17:48 +020040
Brian Daniels3c405ae2015-08-18 10:52:57 -0700417. Press the reset button on the board.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard63e7eba2015-07-28 14:17:48 +020042
Brian Daniels3c405ae2015-08-18 10:52:57 -0700438. The output in the terminal window should look like:
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard63e7eba2015-07-28 14:17:48 +020044
45 ```
46 {{timeout;40}}
47 {{host_test_name;default}}
48 {{description;mbed TLS selftest program}}
49 {{test_id;MBEDTLS_SELFTEST}}
50 {{start}}
51
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard63e7eba2015-07-28 14:17:48 +020052 SHA-224 test #1: passed
53 SHA-224 test #2: passed
54 SHA-224 test #3: passed
55 SHA-256 test #1: passed
56 SHA-256 test #2: passed
57 SHA-256 test #3: passed
58
59 [ ... several lines omitted ... ]
60
61 CTR_DRBG (PR = TRUE) : passed
62 CTR_DRBG (PR = FALSE): passed
63
64 HMAC_DRBG (PR = True) : passed
65 HMAC_DRBG (PR = False) : passed
66
67 ECP test #1 (constant op_count, base point G): passed
68 ECP test #2 (constant op_count, other point): passed
69
70 ENTROPY test: passed
71
72 [ All tests passed ]
73
74 {{success}}
75 {{end}}
76 ```