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Fredrik Hessecc207bc2021-09-28 21:06:08 +02001# Mbed TLS driver interface test strategy
Gilles Peskineb26c8d82019-09-04 19:26:17 +02002
Fredrik Hessecc207bc2021-09-28 21:06:08 +02003This document describes the test strategy for the driver interfaces in Mbed TLS. Mbed TLS has interfaces for secure element drivers, accelerator drivers and entropy drivers. This document is about testing Mbed TLS itself; testing drivers is out of scope.
Gilles Peskineb26c8d82019-09-04 19:26:17 +02004
5The driver interfaces are standardized through PSA Cryptography functional specifications.
6
Gilles Peskinef0e28532020-11-30 17:51:14 +01007## Secure element driver interface testing
Gilles Peskineb26c8d82019-09-04 19:26:17 +02008
Gilles Peskinef0e28532020-11-30 17:51:14 +01009### Secure element driver interfaces
10
11#### Opaque driver interface
12
13The [unified driver interface](../../proposed/psa-driver-interface.md) supports both transparent drivers (for accelerators) and opaque drivers (for secure elements).
14
15Drivers exposing this interface need to be registered at compile time by declaring their JSON description file.
16
17#### Dynamic secure element driver interface
18
Fredrik Hessecc207bc2021-09-28 21:06:08 +020019The dynamic secure element driver interface (SE interface for short) is defined by [`psa/crypto_se_driver.h`](../../../include/psa/crypto_se_driver.h). This is an interface between Mbed TLS and one or more third-party drivers.
Gilles Peskineb26c8d82019-09-04 19:26:17 +020020
Fredrik Hessecc207bc2021-09-28 21:06:08 +020021The SE interface consists of one function provided by Mbed TLS (`psa_register_se_driver`) and many functions that drivers must implement. To make a driver usable by Mbed TLS, the initialization code must call `psa_register_se_driver` with a structure that describes the driver. The structure mostly contains function pointers, pointing to the driver's methods. All calls to a driver function are triggered by a call to a PSA crypto API function.
Gilles Peskineb26c8d82019-09-04 19:26:17 +020022
Gilles Peskine92bcfdb2019-09-04 19:26:50 +020023### SE driver interface unit tests
24
25This section describes unit tests that must be implemented to validate the secure element driver interface. Note that a test case may cover multiple requirements; for example a “good case” test can validate that the proper function is called, that it receives the expected inputs and that it produces the expected outputs.
26
27Many SE driver interface unit tests could be covered by running the existing API tests with a key in a secure element.
28
29#### SE driver registration
30
Gilles Peskinef0e28532020-11-30 17:51:14 +010031This applies to dynamic drivers only.
32
Gilles Peskine92bcfdb2019-09-04 19:26:50 +020033* Test `psa_register_se_driver` with valid and with invalid arguments.
34* Make at least one failing call to `psa_register_se_driver` followed by a successful call.
35* Make at least one test that successfully registers the maximum number of drivers and fails to register one more.
36
37#### Dispatch to SE driver
38
39For each API function that can lead to a driver call (more precisely, for each driver method call site, but this is practically equivalent):
40
41* Make at least one test with a key in a secure element that checks that the driver method is called. A few API functions involve multiple driver methods; these should validate that all the expected driver methods are called.
42* Make at least one test with a key that is not in a secure element that checks that the driver method is not called.
43* Make at least one test with a key in a secure element with a driver that does not have the requisite method (i.e. the method pointer is `NULL`) but has the substructure containing that method, and check that the return value is `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`.
44* Make at least one test with a key in a secure element with a driver that does not have the substructure containing that method (i.e. the pointer to the substructure is `NULL`), and check that the return value is `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED`.
45* At least one test should register multiple drivers with a key in each driver and check that the expected driver is called. This does not need to be done for all operations (use a white-box approach to determine if operations may use different code paths to choose the driver).
46* At least one test should register the same driver structure with multiple lifetime values and check that the driver receives the expected lifetime value.
47
48Some methods only make sense as a group (for example a driver that provides the MAC methods must provide all or none). In those cases, test with all of them null and none of them null.
49
50#### SE driver inputs
51
52For each API function that can lead to a driver call (more precisely, for each driver method call site, but this is practically equivalent):
53
54* Wherever the specification guarantees parameters that satisfy certain preconditions, check these preconditions whenever practical.
55* If the API function can take parameters that are invalid and must not reach the driver, call the API function with such parameters and verify that the driver method is not called.
Gilles Peskine8b193c12019-09-05 17:58:13 +020056* Check that the expected inputs reach the driver. This may be implicit in a test that checks the outputs if the only realistic way to obtain the correct outputs is to start from the expected inputs (as is often the case for cryptographic material, but not for metadata).
Gilles Peskine92bcfdb2019-09-04 19:26:50 +020057
58#### SE driver outputs
59
Fredrik Hessecc207bc2021-09-28 21:06:08 +020060For each API function that leads to a driver call, call it with parameters that cause a driver to be invoked and check how Mbed TLS handles the outputs.
Gilles Peskine92bcfdb2019-09-04 19:26:50 +020061
62* Correct outputs.
63* Incorrect outputs such as an invalid output length.
64* Expected errors (e.g. `PSA_ERROR_INVALID_SIGNATURE` from a signature verification method).
65* Unexpected errors. At least test that if the driver returns `PSA_ERROR_GENERIC_ERROR`, this is propagated correctly.
66
67Key creation functions invoke multiple methods and need more complex error handling:
68
69* Check the consequence of errors detected at each stage (slot number allocation or validation, key creation method, storage accesses).
70* Check that the storage ends up in the expected state. At least make sure that no intermediate file remains after a failure.
71
72#### Persistence of SE keys
73
74The following tests must be performed at least one for each key creation method (import, generate, ...).
75
76* Test that keys in a secure element survive `psa_close_key(); psa_open_key()`.
77* Test that keys in a secure element survive `mbedtls_psa_crypto_free(); psa_crypto_init()`.
78* Test that the driver's persistent data survives `mbedtls_psa_crypto_free(); psa_crypto_init()`.
79* Test that `psa_destroy_key()` does not leave any trace of the key.
80
81#### Resilience for SE drivers
82
83Creating or removing a key in a secure element involves multiple storage modifications (M<sub>1</sub>, ..., M<sub>n</sub>). If the operation is interrupted by a reset at any point, it must be either rolled back or completed.
84
85* For each potential interruption point (before M<sub>1</sub>, between M<sub>1</sub> and M<sub>2</sub>, ..., after M<sub>n</sub>), call `mbedtls_psa_crypto_free(); psa_crypto_init()` at that point and check that this either rolls back or completes the operation that was started.
86* This must be done for each key creation method and for key destruction.
87* This must be done for each possible flow, including error cases (e.g. a key creation that fails midway due to `OUT_OF_MEMORY`).
88* The recovery during `psa_crypto_init` can itself be interrupted. Test those interruptions too.
89* Two things need to be tested: the key that is being created or destroyed, and the driver's persistent storage.
bootstrap-prime6dbbf442022-05-17 19:30:44 -040090* Check both that the storage has the expected content (this can be done by e.g. using a key that is supposed to be present) and does not have any unexpected content (for keys, this can be done by checking that `psa_open_key` fails with `PSA_ERROR_DOES_NOT_EXIST`).
Gilles Peskine92bcfdb2019-09-04 19:26:50 +020091
92This requires instrumenting the storage implementation, either to force it to fail at each point or to record successive storage states and replay each of them. Each `psa_its_xxx` function call is assumed to be atomic.
93
94### SE driver system tests
95
96#### Real-world use case
97
98We must have at least one driver that is close to real-world conditions:
99
100* With its own source tree.
101* Running on actual hardware.
102* Run the full driver validation test suite (which does not yet exist).
103* Run at least one test application (e.g. the Mbed OS TLS example).
104
Gilles Peskine545c28b2019-09-04 19:41:16 +0200105This requirement shall be fulfilled by the [Microchip ATECC508A driver](https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbed-os-atecc608a/).
Gilles Peskine92bcfdb2019-09-04 19:26:50 +0200106
107#### Complete driver
108
109We should have at least one driver that covers the whole interface:
110
111* With its own source tree.
112* Implementing all the methods.
113* Run the full driver validation test suite (which does not yet exist).
114
115A PKCS#11 driver would be a good candidate. It would be useful as part of our product offering.
Gilles Peskine24cebf62020-11-30 17:51:53 +0100116
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100117## Unified driver interface testing
Gilles Peskine24cebf62020-11-30 17:51:53 +0100118
119The [unified driver interface](../../proposed/psa-driver-interface.md) defines interfaces for accelerators.
120
121### Test requirements
122
123#### Requirements for transparent driver testing
124
125Every cryptographic mechanism for which a transparent driver interface exists (key creation, cryptographic operations, …) must be exercised in at least one build. The test must verify that the driver code is called.
126
127#### Requirements for fallback
128
129The driver interface includes a fallback mechanism so that a driver can reject a request at runtime and let another driver handle the request. For each entry point, there must be at least three test runs with two or more drivers available with driver A configured to fall back to driver B, with one run where A returns `PSA_SUCCESS`, one where A returns `PSA_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED` and B is invoked, and one where A returns a different error and B is not invoked.
130
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100131### Test drivers
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100132
133We have test drivers that are enabled by `PSA_CRYPTO_DRIVER_TEST` (not present
134in the usual config files, must be defined on the command line or in a custom
135config file). Those test drivers are implemented in `tests/src/drivers/*.c`
136and their API is declared in `tests/include/test/drivers/*.h`.
137
138We have two test driver registered: `mbedtls_test_opaque_driver` and
139`mbedtls_test_transparent_driver`. These are described in
140`scripts/data_files/driver_jsons/mbedtls_test_xxx_driver.json` (as much as our
141JSON support currently allows). Each of the drivers can potentially implement
142support for several mechanism; conversely, each of the file mentioned in the
143previous paragraph can potentially contribute to both the opaque and the
144transparent test driver.
145
146Each entry point is instrumented to record the number of hits for each part of
147the driver (same division as the files) and the status of the last call. It is
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100148also possible to force the next call to return a specified status, and
149sometimes more things can be forced: see the various
150`mbedtls_test_driver_XXX_hooks_t` structures declared by each driver.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100151
152The drivers can use one of two back-ends:
153- internal: this requires the built-in implementation to be present.
154- libtestdriver1: this allows the built-in implementation to be omitted from
155 the build.
156
157Historical note: internal was initially the only back-end; then support for
158libtestdriver1 was added gradually.
159
160Question: if/when we have complete libtestdriver1 support, do we still need
161internal? Thoughts:
162- It's useful to have builds with both a driver and the built-in, in
163order to test fallback to built-in, but this could be achieved with
164libtestdriver1 too.
165 - Performance might be better with internal though?
166- The instrumentation works the same with both back-ends.
167
168Our implementation of PSA Crypto is structured in a way that the built-in
169implementation of each operation follows the driver API, see
170[`../architecture/psa-crypto-implementation-structure.md`](../architecture/psa-crypto-implementation-structure.html).
171This makes implementing the test drivers very easy: each entry point has a
172corresponding `mbedtls_psa_xxx()` function that it can call as its
173implementation - with the `libtestdriver1` back-end the function is called
174`libtestdriver1_mbedtls_psa_xxx()` instead.
175
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100176A nice consequence of that strategy is that when an entry point has
177test-driver support, most of the time, it automatically works for all
178algorithms and key types supported by the library. (The exception being when
179the driver needs to call a different function for different key types, as is
180the case with some asymmetric key management operations.)
181
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100182The renaming process for `libtestdriver1` is implemented as a few Perl regexes
183applied to a copy of the library code, see the `libtestdriver1.a` target in
184`tests/Makefile`. Another modification that's done to this copy is appending
185`tests/include/test/drivers/crypto_config_test_driver_extension.h` to
186`psa/crypto_config.h`. This file reverses the `ACCEL`/`BUILTIN` macros so that
187`libtestdriver1` includes as built-in what the main `libmbedcrypto.a` will
188have accelerated; see that file's initial comment for details. See also
189`helper_libtestdriver1_` functions and the preceding comment in `all.sh` for
190how libtestdriver is used in practice.
191
192This general framework needs specific code for each family of operations. At a
193given point in time, not all operations have the same level of support. The
194following sub-sections describe the status of the test driver support, mostly
195following the structure and order of sections 9.6 and 10.2 to 10.10 of the
196[PSA Crypto standard](https://arm-software.github.io/psa-api/crypto/1.1/) as
197that is also a natural division for implementing test drivers (that's how the
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100198code is divided into files).
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100199
200#### Key management
201
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100202The following entry points are declared in `test/drivers/key_management.h`:
203
204- `"init"` (transparent and opaque)
205- `"generate_key"` (transparent and opaque)
206- `"export_public_key"` (transparent and opaque)
207- `"import_key"` (transparent and opaque)
208- `"export_key"` (opaque only)
209- `"get_builtin_key"` (opaque only)
210- `"copy_key"` (opaque only)
211
212The transparent driver fully implements the declared entry points, and can use
213any backend: internal or libtestdriver1.
214
215The opaque's driver implementation status is as follows:
216- `"generate_key"`: not implemented, always returns `NOT_SUPPORTED`.
217- `"export_public_key"`: implemented only for ECC and RSA keys, both backends.
218- `"import_key"`: implemented except for DH keys, both backends.
219- `"export_key"`: implemented for built-in keys (ECC and AES), and for
220 non-builtin keys except DH keys. (Backend not relevant.)
221- `"get_builtin_key"`: implemented - provisioned keys: AES-128 and ECC
222 secp2456r1. (Backend not relevant.)
223- `"copy_key"`: implemented - emulates a SE without storage. (Backend not
224 relevant.)
225
226Note: the `"init"` entry point is not part of the "key management" family, but
227listed here as it's declared and implemented in the same file. With the
228transparent driver and the libtestdriver1 backend, it calls
229`libtestdriver1_psa_crypto_init()`, which partially but not fully ensures
230that this entry point is called before other entry points in the test drivers.
231With the opaque driver, this entry point just does nothing an returns success.
232
233The following entry points are defined by the driver interface but missing
234from our test drivers:
235- `"allocate_key"`, `"destroy_key"`: this is for opaque drivers that store the
236 key material internally.
237
238Note: the instrumentation also allows forcing the output and its length.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100239
240#### Message digests (Hashes)
241
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100242The following entry points are declared (transparent only):
243- `"hash_compute"`
244- `"hash_setup"`
245- `"hash_clone"`
246- `"hash_update"`
247- `"hash_finish"`
248- `"hash_abort"`
249
250The transparent driver fully implements the declared entry points, and can use
251any backend: internal or libtestdriver1.
252
253This familly is not part of the opaque driver as it doesn't use keys.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100254
255#### Message authentication codes (MAC)
256
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100257The following entry points are declared (transparent and opaque):
258- `"mac_compute"`
259- `"mac_sign_setup"`
260- `"mac_verify_setup"`
261- `"mac_update"`
262- `"mac_sign_finish"`
263- `"mac_verify_finish"`
264- `"mac_abort"`
265
266The transparent driver fully implements the declared entry points, and can use
267any backend: internal or libtestdriver1.
268
269The opaque driver only implements the instrumentation but not the actual
270operations: entry points will always return `NOT_SUPPORTED`, unless another
271status is forced.
272
273The following entry points are not implemented:
274- `mac_verify`: this mostly makes sense for opaque drivers; the code will fall
275 back to using `"mac_compute"` if this is not implemented. So, perhaps
276ideally we should test both with `"mac_verify"` implemented and with it not
277implemented? Anyway, we have a test gap here.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100278
279#### Unauthenticated ciphers
280
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100281The following entry points are declared (transparent and opaque):
282- `"cipher_encrypt"`
283- `"cipher_decrypt"`
284- `"cipher_encrypt_setup"`
285- `"cipher_decrypt_setup"`
286- `"cipher_set_iv"`
287- `"cipher_update"`
288- `"cipher_finish"`
289- `"cipher_abort"`
290
291The transparent driver fully implements the declared entry points, and can use
292any backend: internal or libtestdriver1.
293
294The opaque driver is not implemented at all, neither instumentation nor the
295operation: entry points always return `NOT_SUPPORTED`.
296
297Note: the instrumentation also allows forcing a specific output and output
298length.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100299
300#### Authenticated encryption with associated data (AEAD)
301
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100302The following entry points are declared (transparent only):
303- `"aead_encrypt"`
304- `"aead_decrypt"`
305- `"aead_encrypt_setup"`
306- `"aead_decrypt_setup"`
307- `"aead_set_nonce"`
308- `"aead_set_lengths"`
309- `"aead_update_ad"`
310- `"aead_update"`
311- `"aead_finish"`
312- `"aead_verify"`
313- `"aead_abort"`
314
315The transparent driver fully implements the declared entry points, and can use
316any backend: internal or libtestdriver1.
317
318The opaque driver does not implement or even declare entry points for this
319family.
320
321Note: the instrumentation records the number of hits per entry point, not just
322the total number of hits for this family.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100323
324#### Key derivation
325
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100326Not covered at all by the test drivers.
327
328That's a gap in our testing, as the driver interface does define a key
329derivation family of entry points. This gap is probably related to the fact
330that our internal code structure doesn't obey the guidelines and is not
331aligned with the driver interface, see #5488 and related issues.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100332
333#### Asymmetric signature
334
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100335The following entry points are declared (transparent and opaque):
336
337- `"sign_message"`
338- `"verify_message"`
339- `"sign_hash"`
340- `"verify_hash"`
341
342The transparent driver fully implements the declared entry points, and can use
343any backend: internal or libtestdriver1.
344
345The opaque driver is not implemented at all, neither instumentation nor the
346operation: entry points always return `NOT_SUPPORTED`.
347
348Note: the instrumentation also allows forcing a specific output and output
349length, and has two instance of the hooks structure: one for sign, the other
350for verify.
351
352Note: when a driver implements only the `"xxx_hash"` entry points, the core is
353supposed to implement the `psa_xxx_message()` functions by computing the hash
354itself before calling the `"xxx_hash"` entry point. Since the test driver does
355implement the `"xxx_message"` entry point, it's not exercising that part of
356the core's expected behaviour.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100357
358#### Asymmetric encryption
359
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100360The following entry points are declared (transparent and opaque):
361
362- `"asymmetric_encrypt"`
363- `"asymmetric_decrypt"`
364
365The transparent driver fully implements the declared entry points, and can use
366any backend: internal or libtestdriver1.
367
368The opaque driver is not implemented at all, neither instumentation nor the
369operation: entry points always return `NOT_SUPPORTED`.
370
371Note: the instrumentation also allows forcing a specific output and output
372length.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100373
374#### Key agreement
375
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100376The following entry points are declared (transparent and opaque):
377
378- `"key_agreement"`
379
380The transparent driver fully implements the declared entry points, and can use
381any backend: internal or libtestdriver1.
382
383The opaque driver is not implemented at all, neither instumentation nor the
384operation: entry points always return `NOT_SUPPORTED`.
385
386Note: the instrumentation also allows forcing a specific output and output
387length.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard1a827a32023-11-13 10:01:21 +0100388
389#### Other cryptographic services (Random number generation)
Gilles Peskine24cebf62020-11-30 17:51:53 +0100390
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnardb66f9db2023-11-13 11:32:37 +0100391Not covered at all by the test drivers.
392
393The driver interface defines a `"get_entropy"` entry point, as well as a
394"Random generation" family of entry points. None of those are currently
395implemented in the library. Part of it will be planned for 4.0, see #8150.
396
397#### PAKE extension
398
399The following entry points are declared (transparent only):
400- `"pake_setup"`
401- `"pake_output"`
402- `"pake_input"`
403- `"pake_get_implicit_key"`
404- `"pake_abort"`
405
406Note: the instrumentation records hits per entry point and allows forcing the
407output and its length, as well as forcing the status of setup independently
408from the others.
409
410The transparent driver fully implements the declared entry points, and can use
411any backend: internal or libtestdriver1.
412
413The opaque driver does not implement or even declare entry points for this
414family.
Manuel Pégourié-Gonnard6a96f422023-11-16 13:01:22 +0100415
416### Driver wrapper test suite
417
418We have a test suite dedicated to driver dispatch, which takes advantage of the
419instrumentation in the test drivers described in the previous section, in
420order to check that drivers are called when they're supposed to, and that the
421core behaves as expected when they return errors (in particular, that we fall
422back to the built-in implementation when the driver returns `NOT_SUPPORTED).
423
424This is `test_suite_psa_crypto_driver_wrappers`, which is maintained manually
425(that is, the test cases in the `.data` files are not auto-generated). The
426entire test suite depends on the test drivers being enabled
427(`PSA_CRYPTO_DRIVER_TEST`), which is not the case in the default or full
428config.
429
430#### Configurations coverage
431
432The driver wrappers test suite has cases that expect both the driver and the
433built-in to be present, and also cases that expect the driver to be present
434but not the built-in. As such, it's impossible for a single configuration to
435run all test cases, and we need at least two: driver+built-in, and
436driver-only.
437
438- The driver+built-in case is covered by `test_psa_crypto_drivers` in `all.sh`.
439This covers all areas (key types and algs) at once.
440- The driver-only case is split into multiple `all.sh` components whose names
441 start with `test_psa_crypto_config_accel`; we have one or more component per
442area, see below.
443
444Here's a summary of driver-only coverage, grouped by families of key types.
445
446Hash (key types: none)
447- `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_hash`: all algs, default config, no parity
448 testing.
449- `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_hash_use_psa`: all algs, full config, with
450 parity testing.
451
452HMAC (key type: HMAC)
453- No driver-only testing here, see #8564.
454
455Cipher, AEAD and CMAC (key types: DES, AES, ARIA, CHACHA20, CAMELLIA):
456- `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_cipher_aead`: all key types and algs, full
457 config with a few exclusions (PKCS5, PKCS12, NIST-KW), with parity testing.
458- `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_cipher`: only DES (with all algs), full
459 config, no parity testing.
460- `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_aead`: only AEAD algs (with all relevant key
461 types), full config, no parity testing.
462
463Key derivation (key types: `DERIVE`, `RAW_DATA`, `PASSWORD`, `PEPPER`,
464`PASSWORD_HASH`):
465- No testing as we don't have test driver support yet (see previous section).
466
467RSA (key types: `RSA_KEY_PAIR_xxx`, `RSA_PUBLIC_KEY`):
468- `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_rsa_signature`: only signature algorithms,
469 default config, no parity testing.
470- No testing of driver-only encryption yet, see #8553.
471
472DH (key types: `DH_KEY_PAIR_xxx`, `DH_PUBLIC_KEY`):
473- `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ffdh`: all key types and algs, full config,
474 with parity testing.
475- `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecc_ffdh_no_bignum`: with also bignum removed.
476
477ECC (key types: `ECC_KEY_PAIR_xxx`, `ECC_PUBLIC_KEY`):
478- Single algorithm accelerated (both key types, all curves):
479 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecdh`: default config, no parity testing.
480 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecdsa`: default config, no parity testing.
481 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_pake`: full config, no parity testing.
482- All key types, algs and curves accelerated (full config with exceptions,
483 with parity testing):
484 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecc_ecp_light_only`: `ECP_C` mostly disabled
485 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecc_no_ecp_at_all`: `ECP_C` fully disabled
486 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecc_no_bignum`: `BIGNUM_C` disabled (DH disabled)
487 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecc_ffdh_no_bignum`: `BIGNUM_C` disabled (DH accelerated)
488- Other - all algs accelerated but only some algs/curves (full config with
489 exceptions, no parity testing):
490 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecc_some_key_types`
491 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecc_non_weierstrass_curves`
492 - `test_psa_crypto_config_accel_ecc_weierstrass_curves`
493
494Note: `analyze_outcomes.py` provides a list of test cases that are not
495executed in any configuration tested on the CI. Currently it flags some RSA
496"fallback not available" tests, which is consistent with the fact that we're
497missing testing driver-only RSA-encrypt testing. However, we're also missing
498driver-only HMAC testing, but no test is flagged as never executed there; this
499reveals we don't have "fallback not available" cases for MAC, see #8565.
500
501#### Test case coverage
502
503Since `test_suite_psa_crypto_driver_wrappers.data` is maintained manually,
504we need to make sure it exercises all the cases that need to be tested.
505
506One way to evaluate this is to look at line coverage in test driver
507implementaitons - this doesn't reveal all gaps, but it does reveal cases where
508we thought about something when writing the test driver, but not when writing
509test functions/data.
510
511Key management:
512- `mbedtls_test_opaque_unwrap_key()` is never called.
513- `mbedtls_test_transparent_generate_key()` is not tested with RSA keys.
514- `mbedtls_test_transparent_import_key()` is not tested with DH keys.
515- `mbedtls_test_opaque_import_key()` is not tested with unstructured keys nor
516 with RSA keys (nor DH keys since that's not implemented).
517- `mbedtls_test_opaque_export_key()` is not tested with non-built-in keys.
518- `mbedtls_test_transparent_export_public_key()` is not tested with RSA or DH keys.
519- `mbedtls_test_opaque_export_public_key()` is not tested with non-built-in keys.
520- `mbedtls_test_opaque_copy_key()` is not tested at all.
521
522Hash:
523- `mbedtls_test_transparent_hash_finish()` is not tested with a forced status.
524
525MAC:
526- The following are not tested with a forced status:
527 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_mac_sign_setup()`
528 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_mac_verify_setup()`
529 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_mac_update()`
530 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_mac_verify_finish()`
531 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_mac_abort()`
532- No opaque entry point is tested (they're not implemented either).
533
534Cipher:
535- The following are not tested with a forced status nor with a forced output:
536 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_cipher_encrypt()`
537 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_cipher_finish()`
538- No opaque entry point is tested (they're not implemented either).
539
540AEAD:
541- The following are not tested with a forced status:
542 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_aead_set_nonce()`
543 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_aead_set_lengths()`
544 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_aead_update_ad()`
545 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_aead_update()`
546 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_aead_finish()`
547 - `mbedtls_test_transparent_aead_verify()`
548- `mbedtls_test_transparent_aead_verify()` is not tested with an invalid tag
549 (though it might be in another test suite).
550
551Signature:
552- `sign_hash()` is not tested with RSA-PSS
553- No opaque entry point is tested (they're not implemented either).
554
555Asymmetric encryption:
556- No opaque entry point is tested (they're not implemented either).
557
558Key agreement:
559- `mbedtls_test_transparent_key_agreement()` is not tested with FFDH.
560- No opaque entry point is tested (they're not implemented either).
561
562PAKE:
563- All lines are covered.