Browse Source

bpo-35045: Accept TLSv1 default in min max test (GH-11510)

Make ssl tests less strict and also accept TLSv1 as system default. The
changes unbreaks test_min_max_version on Fedora 29.

Signed-off-by: Christian Heimes <christian@python.org>
pull/11614/head
Christian Heimes 7 years ago
committed by Victor Stinner
parent
commit
34de2d312b
  1. 7
      Lib/test/test_ssl.py
  2. 2
      Misc/NEWS.d/next/Tests/2019-01-10-18-35-42.bpo-35045.qdd6d9.rst

7
Lib/test/test_ssl.py

@ -1088,8 +1088,11 @@ class ContextTests(unittest.TestCase):
"required OpenSSL 1.1.0g")
def test_min_max_version(self):
ctx = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLS_SERVER)
self.assertEqual(
ctx.minimum_version, ssl.TLSVersion.MINIMUM_SUPPORTED
# OpenSSL default is MINIMUM_SUPPORTED, however some vendors like
# Fedora override the setting to TLS 1.0.
self.assertIn(
ctx.minimum_version,
{ssl.TLSVersion.MINIMUM_SUPPORTED, ssl.TLSVersion.TLSv1}
)
self.assertEqual(
ctx.maximum_version, ssl.TLSVersion.MAXIMUM_SUPPORTED

2
Misc/NEWS.d/next/Tests/2019-01-10-18-35-42.bpo-35045.qdd6d9.rst

@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
Make ssl tests less strict and also accept TLSv1 as system default. The
changes unbreaks test_min_max_version on Fedora 29.
Loading…
Cancel
Save