#!/bin/bash . $(dirname $0)/../include.rc ping_file () { echo hello > $1 2> /dev/null } SSL_BASE=/etc/ssl SSL_KEY=$SSL_BASE/glusterfs.key SSL_CERT=$SSL_BASE/glusterfs.pem SSL_CA=$SSL_BASE/glusterfs.ca cleanup; rm -f $SSL_BASE/glusterfs.* mkdir -p $B0/1 mkdir -p $M0 TEST glusterd TEST pidof glusterd TEST $CLI volume info; TEST openssl genrsa -out $SSL_KEY 1024 TEST openssl req -new -x509 -key $SSL_KEY -subj /CN=Anyone -out $SSL_CERT ln $SSL_CERT $SSL_CA TEST $CLI volume create $V0 $H0:$B0/1 TEST $CLI volume set $V0 server.ssl on TEST $CLI volume set $V0 client.ssl on TEST $CLI volume set $V0 auth.ssl-allow Anyone TEST $CLI volume start $V0 # This mount should WORK. TEST glusterfs --volfile-server=$H0 --volfile-id=$V0 $M0 TEST ping_file $M0/before TEST umount $M0 # Change the authorized user name. Note that servers don't pick up changes # automagically like clients do, so we have to stop/start ourselves. TEST $CLI volume stop $V0 TEST $CLI volume set $V0 auth.ssl-allow NotYou TEST $CLI volume start $V0 # This mount should FAIL because the identity given by our certificate does not # match the allowed user. In other words, authentication works (they know who # we are) but authorization doesn't (we're not the right person). TEST $GFS --volfile-server=$H0 --volfile-id=$V0 $M0 # Looks like /*/bin/glusterfs isn't returning error status correctly (again). # Actually try doing something to get a real error. TEST ! ping_file $M0/after cleanup;