X-Git-Url: https://git.exim.org/users/jgh/exim.git/blobdiff_plain/6d7c6175eda3aaa316d1960a89170a285510ad40..93a6fce2ebf117f490d7ee11f066f75280d32386:/test/README diff --git a/test/README b/test/README index 7e778eee7..e54485788 100644 --- a/test/README +++ b/test/README @@ -91,9 +91,10 @@ In order to run this test suite, the following requirements must be met: (5) Exim must be built with its user and group specified at build time, and with certain minimum facilities, namely: - Routers: accept, dnslookup, manualroute, redirect - Transports: appendfile, autoreply, pipe, smtp - Lookups: lsearch + Routers: accept, dnslookup, manualroute, redirect + Transports: appendfile, autoreply, pipe, smtp + Lookups: lsearch + Authenticators: plaintext Most Exim binaries will have these included. @@ -457,6 +458,9 @@ OTHER ISSUES be on by default and you'll see this problem, so make sure your umask is 022 and re-checkout the test/ subdirectory. +. Some tests will fail if the username and group name are different. It does + not have to be the primary group, a secondary group is sufficient. + OTHER SCRIPTS AND PROGRAMS -------------------------- @@ -673,7 +677,7 @@ only when DBM support is available in Exim, and typically follows the use of a "write" command (see below) that creates the input file. - dumpdb + dump This command runs the exim_dumpdb utility on the testing spool directory, using the database name given, for example: "dumpdb retry". @@ -727,7 +731,7 @@ to the screen. munge This command requests custom munging of the test outputs. The munge names -used are coded in the runtest script. +used are coded in the runtest script (look for 'name of munge'). need_ipv4 @@ -832,7 +836,7 @@ This command runs the auxiliary "client" program that simulates an SMTP client. It is controlled by a script read from its standard input, details of which are given below. There are two options. One is -t, which must be followed directly by a number, to specify the command timeout in seconds (e.g. -t5). The default -timeout is 1 second. The other option is -tls-on-connect, which causes the +timeout is 5 seconds. The other option is -tls-on-connect, which causes the client to try to start up a TLS session as soon as it has connected, without using the STARTTLS command. The client program connects to the given IP address and port, using the specified interface, if one is given. @@ -843,9 +847,11 @@ and port, using the specified interface, if one is given. When OpenSSL is available on the host, an alternative version of the client program is compiled, one that supports TLS using OpenSSL. The additional -arguments specify a certificate and key file when required. There is one -additional option, -tls-on-connect, that causes the client to initiate TLS -negotiation immediately on connection. +arguments specify a certificate and key file when required for the connection. +There are two additional options: -tls-on-connect, that causes the client to +initiate TLS negociation immediately on connection; -ocsp that causes the TLS +negotiation to include a certificate-status request. The latter takes a +filename argument, the CA info for verifying the stapled response. client-gnutls [] [] \ @@ -891,13 +897,15 @@ input, details of which are given below. A number of options are implemented: -d causes the server to output debugging information - -t sets a timeout in seconds (default 5) for when the server is + -t sets a timeout (default 5) for when the server is awaiting an incoming connection -noipv4 causes the server not to set up an IPv4 socket -noipv6 causes the server not to set up an IPv6 socket + -i sets an initial pause, to delay before creating the listen sockets + By default, in an IPv6 environment, both kinds of socket are set up. However, the test script knows which interfaces actually exist on the host, and it adds -noipv4 or -noipv6 to the server command as required. An error occurs if both