Make sure line number reported is correct for the overly long line, and
change the message to be more readable.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
As I descovered, a changelog entry with a line length greater than 80
characters would still pass CI. This is a quick change to the script to
make it detect these descrepancies and fail.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
Write a simple unit test for mbedtls_ecp_muladd().
Add just one pair of test cases. One of them causes the argument to
fix_negative to have an argument with an all-bits-zero least
significant limb which briefly triggered a branch in Mbed TLS 2.26+.
See https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbedtls/issues/4296 and
https://github.com/ARMmbed/mbedtls/pull/4297.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
Move the handling of the sign out of the base-specific loops. This
both simplifies the code, and corrects an edge case: the code in the
non-hexadecimal case depended on mbedtls_mpi_mul_int() preserving the
sign bit when multiplying a "negative zero" MPI by an integer, which
used to be the case but stopped with PR #2512.
Fix#4295. Thanks to Guido Vranken for analyzing the cause of the bug.
Credit to OSS-Fuzz.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
tests/suites/helpers.function and tests/suites/*_test.function contain
"#line" directives. This causes the TAGS file to contain references
pointing to the file path named in the "#line" directives, which is
relative to the "tests" directory rather than to the toplevel. Fix
this by telling etags to ignore "#line" directives, which is ok since
we aren't actually running it on any generated code.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
In a case exprssion, `|` separates patterns so it needs to be quoted.
Also `\` was not actually part of the set since it was quoting another
character.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
If `$FILTER` (`-f`) and `$EXCLUDE` (`-e`) are simple selections that
can be expressed as shell patterns, use a case statement instead of
calling grep to determine whether a test case should be executed.
Using a case statement significantly reduces the time it takes to
determine that a test case is excluded (but the improvement is small
compared to running the test).
This noticeably speeds up running a single test or a small number of
tests. Before:
```
tests/ssl-opt.sh -f Default 1.75s user 0.54s system 79% cpu 2.885 total
```
After:
```
tests/ssl-opt.sh -f Default 0.37s user 0.14s system 29% cpu 1.715 total
```
There is no perceptible difference when running a large number of tests.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
Avoid using the external command grep for simple string-based checks.
Prefer a case statement. This improves performance.
The performance improvement is moderate but noticeable when skipping
most tests. When a test is run, the cost of the associated grep calls
is negligible. In this commit, I focused on the uses of grep that can
be easily replaced and that are executed a large number of times.
Signed-off-by: Gilles Peskine <Gilles.Peskine@arm.com>
Multiplication is not constant flow on any CPU we are generally
targetting, so replace this with bit twiddling.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>
Marked dirty memory ends up in the result buffer after encoding (due to
the input having been marked dirty), and then the final comparison
to make sure that we got what we expected was triggering the constant
flow checker.
Signed-off-by: Paul Elliott <paul.elliott@arm.com>