# [greenlock-challenge-test](https://git.coolaj86.com/coolaj86/greenlock-challenge-test.js.git) | A [Root](https://rootprojects.org) Project | The test harness you should use when writing an ACME challenge strategy for [Greenlock](https://git.coolaj86.com/coolaj86/greenlock-express.js) v2.7+ (and v3). All implementations MUST pass these tests, which is a very easy thing to do (just `set()`, `get()`, and `remove()`). The tests account for single-domain certificates (`example.com`) as well as multiple domain certs (SAN / AltName), wildcards (`*.example.com`), and valid private / localhost certificates. As someone creating a challenge strategy that's not something you have to take special consideration for - just pass the tests. ## Install ```bash npm install --save-dev greenlock-challenge-test@3.x ``` ## Usage ```js var tester = require('greenlock-challenge-test'); //var challenger = require('greenlock-challenge-http').create({}); //var challenger = require('greenlock-challenge-dns').create({}); var challenger = require('./YOUR-CHALLENGE-STRATEGY').create({}); // The dry-run tests can pass on, literally, 'example.com' // but the integration tests require that you have control over the domain var domain = 'example.com'; tester.test('http-01', domain, challenger).then(function () { console.info("PASS"); }); ``` ## Overview ```js tester.test('http-01', 'example.com', { set: function (opts) { var ch = opts.challenge; // { type: 'http-01' // or 'dns-01' // , identifier: { type: 'dns', value: 'example.com' } // , wildcard: false // , token: 'xxxx' // , keyAuthorization: 'xxxx.yyyy' // , dnsHost: '_acme-challenge.example.com' // , dnsAuthorization: 'zzzz' } return API.set(...); } , get: function (query) { var ch = query.challenge; // { type: 'http-01' // or 'dns-01', 'tls-alpn-01', etc // , identifier: { type: 'dns', value: 'example.com' } // // http-01 only // , token: 'xxxx' // , url: '...' // for testing and debugging // // dns-01 only, for testing / dubgging // , altname: '...' // , dnsHost: '...' // , dnsAuthorization: '...' } // Note: query.identifier.value is different for http-01 than for dns-01 return API.get(...).then(function () { // http-01 return { identifier: { type: 'dns', value: 'example.com' }, keyAuthorization: 'xxxx.yyyy' }; // dns-01 //return { identifier: { type: 'dns', value: 'example.com' }, dnsAuthorization: 'zzzz' }; }); } , remove: function (opts) { var ch = opts.challenge; // same options as in `set()` (which are not the same as `get()` return API.remove(...); } }).then(function () { console.info("PASS"); }); ``` Note: The `API.get()`, `API.set()`, and `API.remove()` is where you do your magic up to upload a file to the correct location on an http serever, set DNS records, or add the appropriate data to the database that handles such things. ## Example See `example.js` (it works). Will post reference implementations here later...