open-consul/test/integration/connect/envoy/case-ingress-gateway-tls/verify.bats

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#!/usr/bin/env bats
load helpers
@test "ingress proxy admin is up on :20000" {
retry_default curl -f -s localhost:20000/stats -o /dev/null
}
@test "s1 proxy admin is up on :19000" {
retry_default curl -f -s localhost:19000/stats -o /dev/null
}
@test "s2 proxy admin is up on :19001" {
retry_default curl -f -s localhost:19001/stats -o /dev/null
}
@test "s1 proxy listener should be up and have right cert" {
assert_proxy_presents_cert_uri localhost:21000 s1
}
@test "ingress-gateway should have healthy endpoints for s1" {
assert_upstream_has_endpoints_in_status 127.0.0.1:20000 s1 HEALTHY 1
}
@test "should be able to connect to s1 through the TLS-enabled ingress port" {
assert_dnssan_in_cert localhost:9998 '\*.ingress.consul'
# Use the --resolve argument to fake dns resolution for now so we can use the
# s1.ingress.consul domain to validate the cert
run retry_default curl --cacert <(get_ca_root) -s -f -d hello \
--resolve s1.ingress.consul:9998:127.0.0.1 \
https://s1.ingress.consul:9998
[ "$status" -eq 0 ]
[[ "$output" == *"hello"* ]]
}
@test "should be able to connect to s1 through the TLS-enabled ingress port using the custom host" {
assert_dnssan_in_cert localhost:9999 'test.example.com'
run retry_default curl --cacert <(get_ca_root) -s -f -d hello \
--resolve test.example.com:9999:127.0.0.1 \
https://test.example.com:9999
[ "$status" -eq 0 ]
[[ "$output" == *"hello"* ]]
}