OpenSSL source code is made available via openssl.org/source or the artfiles.org mirror. This Concourse resource allows you to watch for new releases and fetch them.
You can use the Docker image by defining a resource type in your pipeline YAML definition.
For example:
resource_types:
- name: openssl-source-code
type: docker-image
source:
repository: gstack/openssl-source-code-resource
resources:
- name: openssl-tarball
type: openssl-source-code
source:
family: "1.1.1"
To get the latest OpenSSL v1.1.1 tarball, use such following get
step in
your job's build plan.
jobs:
- name: compile
plan:
- get: openssl-tarball
# ...
family
: Required. The OpenSSL version family, like3.0
or1.1.1
(recommended), or the non-recommended1.1.0
,1.0.2
,1.0.1
,1.0.0
,0.9.8
,0.9.7
and0.9.6
.
Get the latest version of OpenSSL source code in the defined version family.
Downloads the source code tarball for a version.
Also creates these files in the output artifact directory:
version
file with the current versionfamily
file with the version familysha256
file with the SHA256 checksum from OpenSSL site (already verified at download by the resource)
Whenever the sha256
is not provided by the openssl.org download site, then
sha1
is tried and checked, then md5
. Which fingerprint is checked is
detailed in the resource logs, and related files are kept in the output artifact
directory. When non is ab-vailable, the resource fails. Whenever the sha256
file is missing, it is computed from the downloaded file, in order to honor the
resource contract.
Uploading a new OpenSSL source code tarball is not possible.
docker_user=gstack
docker build -t "${docker_user}/openssl-source-code-resource" .
docker push ${docker_user}/openssl-source-code-resource
The tests are run by the test
job of the concourse pipeline. You may run parts
or all of the Bash script defined in ci/settings.yml
. Pull requests are
welcome for improving this, extracting the Bash script, create some Makefile and
have them run locally with make test
.
Please make all pull requests to the master
branch and ensure tests pass
locally.
When submitting a Pull Request or pushing new commits, the Concourse CI/CD pipeline provides feedback with building the Dockerfile, which implies running the tests.
Copyright © 2021-present, Benjamin Gandon, Gstack
Like Concourse, the OpenSSL source code resource is released under the terms of the Apache 2.0 license.