Testing framework using Speculos and LedgerComm as backends


Keywords
ledger, python, speculos
License
Apache-2.0
Install
pip install ragger==1.9.1

Documentation

Ragger

codecov Quality Gate Status CodeQL

This library aims at reducing the cost of running code on both Speculos emulator or on a real device.

It mainly consists on an interface which is implemented by three backends:

  • an emulator-only backend, SpeculosBackend, which uses SpeculosClient to run an app on a Speculos emulator. With this backend, APDU can be send directly, without having to connect a device, start a docker or anything.

  • two physical backends (although technically they are agnostic, but the SpeculosClient is superior with an emulator), LedgerCommBackend and LedgewWalletbackend, which use respectively the LedgerComm library or the LedgerWallet library to discuss with a physical device. In these cases, the physical device must be started, with the expected application installed and running, and connected to the computer through USB.

More complete documentation can be found here.

Installation

Python package

Ragger is available on https://pypi.org. To install it fully, just run:

pip install ragger[all_backends]

You can also install it from sources. At the root of the git repository, run:

pip install '.[all_backends]'

Extras

Sometimes we just need some function embedded in the library, or just one backend. It can be bothersome (and heavy) to import all dependencies when just one or none are needed.

This is why backends are stored as extra in ragger. Installing ragger without extra means it comes without any backends.

Extra are straightforward: [speculos], [ledgercomm] and [ledgerwallet]. In the previous section, [all_backends] was used: it is a shortcut to [speculos,ledgercomm,ledgerwallet].

Speculos dependencies

If the Speculos extra is installed (to use the SpeculosBackend), system dependencies are needed. Check the doc for these.

Features

The src/ragger/backend/interface.py file describes the methods that can be implemented by the different backends and that allow to interact with a device (either a real device or emulated):

  • send: send a formatted APDU.
  • send_raw: send a raw APDU.
  • receive: receive a response ADPU.
  • exchange: send a formatted APDU and wait for a response (synchronous).
  • exchange_raw: send a raw APDU and wait for a response (synchronous).
  • exchange_async: send a formatted APDU and give back the control to the caller (asynchronous).
  • exchange_async_raw: send a raw APDU and give back the control to the caller.
  • right_click: perform a right click on a device.
  • left_click: perform a left click on a device.
  • both_click: perform a click on both buttons (left + right) of a device.
  • finger_touch: performs a finger touch on the device screen.
  • compare_screen_with_snapshot: compare the current device screen with the provided snapshot.
  • pause_ticker: pause the backend time.
  • resume_ticker: resume the backend time.
  • send_tick: request the backend to increase time by a single step.

The src/ragger/navigator/navigator.py file describes the methods that can be implemented by the different device navigators and that allow to interact with an emulated device:

  • navigate: navigate on the device according to a set of navigation instructions provided.
  • navigate_and_compare: navigate on the device according to a set of navigation instructions provided then compare each step screenshot with "golden images".
  • navigate_until_snap: navigate on the device until a snapshot is found and then validate.
  • navigate_until_text: navigate on the device until a text string is found on screen and then validate.
  • navigate_until_text_and_compare: same as navigate_until_text but compare screenshots taken at each step with "golden images".

Examples

With pytest

The backends can be easily integrated in a pytest test suite with the following files:

  • A conftest.py which can be heavily based on this template.
  • A usage.md which can be heavily based on this template.
  • Tests files which would looks like:
#---------- some_tests.py ----------

TESTS_ROOT_DIR = Path(__file__).parent


def test_something(backend, firmware):
    rapdu: RAPDU = backend.exchange(<whatever>)
    assert rapdu.status == 0x9000


def test_with_user_action_and_screenshot_comparison(backend, firmware, navigator, test_name):
    with backend.exchange_async(<whatever>)
        if firmware.device == "nanos":
            instructions = [
                NavIns(NavInsID.RIGHT_CLICK),
                NavIns(NavInsID.RIGHT_CLICK),
                NavIns(NavInsID.BOTH_CLICK),
            ]
        elif firmware.device == "stax":
            instructions = [
                    NavIns(NavInsID.USE_CASE_REVIEW_TAP),
                    NavIns(NavInsID.USE_CASE_REVIEW_TAP),
                    NavIns(NavInsID.USE_CASE_REVIEW_CONFIRM),
                    NavIns(NavInsID.USE_CASE_STATUS_WAIT)
                ]
        else:
            instructions = [
                NavIns(NavInsID.RIGHT_CLICK),
                NavIns(NavInsID.BOTH_CLICK),
            ]
        navigator.navigate_and_compare(TESTS_ROOT_DIR, test_name, instructions)
    rapdu: RAPDU = backend.last_async_response
    assert rapdu.status == 0x9000
    assert verify(rapdu.data)

The backend fixture used to discuss with the instantiated backend is documented here.

The navigator fixture used to navigate with the instantiated backend is documented here.

After implementing the tests, the test suite can be easily switched on the different backends:

pytest <tests/path>                                               # by default, will run tests on the Speculos emulator
pytest --backend [speculos|ledgercomm|ledgerwallet] <tests/path>  # will run tests on the selected backend

The tests of this repository are basically the same as this example, except the tests run on the three current firmwares (NanoS, NanoX and NanoS+).

Documentation

The complete documentation can be found here. If you want to generate it locally, you'll need the doc dependencies to generate the documentation:

pip install .[doc]

You will also need the graphviz package in order to generate some dependency diagrams:

apt-get install graphviz

Once done, you can generate the documentation:

(cd doc && make gen_resources && make html)

Repository deployment, versions & tags

Versions and changes are documented into the CHANGELOG.md file.

Merging on master or pushing a tag on the GitHub repository triggers a deployment. Python packages are deployed into pypi.org.

  • if triggered via a merge, the package will be a "pre-release", with a version matching <M>.<m>.<p+1>-dev<N> with:
    • M the major number of the latest version,
    • m the minor number of the latest version,
    • p the patch number of the latest version,
    • N the number of commits since the latest version.
  • if triggered via a tag, the package will be a release with the tag as the version. The version embedded into the tag must also fit with the latest version documented into the CHANGELOG.md file. If not, the CI will fail.