$ cd /home/jagger/src/honggfuzz/examples/terminal-emulators/ $ make ../../hfuzz_cc/hfuzz-clang-cc -std=c99 -o terminal-test terminal-test.c cc -std=c99 -shared -o libclose.so libclose.c
libclose.so serves one purpose: when preloaded (with LD_PRELOAD) it will prevent file-descriptors 1022 and 1023 (used by honggfuzz for coverage feedback accumulation) will not be closed by the fuzzed binary.
Add compiler-time instrumentation to your fuzzed terminal emulator. Typically it would consist of the following sequence of commands (for xterm):
$ cd xterm-327 $ CC=/home/jagger/src/honggfuzz/hfuzz_cc/hfuzz-clang-cc CXX=$CC ./configure ... ... $ CC=/home/jagger/src/honggfuzz/hfuzz_cc/hfuzz-clang-cc CXX=$CC make -j4
Alternatively, you might want to compile it with ASAN enabled, for better detection of memory corruption problems
$ cd xterm-327 $ HFUZZ_CC_ASAN=1 CC=/home/jagger/src/honggfuzz/hfuzz_cc/hfuzz-clang-cc CXX=$CC ./configure ... ... $ HFUZZ_CC_ASAN=1 CC=/home/jagger/src/honggfuzz/hfuzz_cc/hfuzz-clang-cc CXX=$CC make -j4
$ mkdir IN $ echo A >IN/1
$ /home/jagger/src/honggfuzz/honggfuzz -z -P -f IN/ -F1024 -E LD_PRELOAD=/home/jagger/src/honggfuzz/examples/terminal-emulators/libclose.so -- xterm-327/xterm -e /home/jagger/src/honggfuzz/examples/terminal-emulators/terminal-test
Typical output:
----------------------------[ honggfuzz v1.0alpha ]--------------------------- Iterations : 4,865,546 [4.87M] Phase : Dynamic Main (2/2) Run Time : 0 hrs 0 min 15 sec Input Dir : [865] 'IN/' Fuzzed Cmd : './xterm -e /home/jagger/src/honggfuzz/examples/terminal-em...' Threads : 4, CPUs: 8, CPU: 733% (91%/CPU) Speed : 320,951/sec (avg: 324,369) Crashes : 0 (unique: 0, blacklist: 0, verified: 0) Timeouts : 0 [10 sec.] Corpus Size : 265, max file size: 1,024 Coverage : bb: 850 cmp: 35,516 -----------------------------------[ LOGS ]----------------------------------- NEW, size:912 (i,b,sw,hw,cmp): 0/0/1/0/1, Tot:0/0/772/0/32216 NEW, size:940 (i,b,sw,hw,cmp): 0/0/1/0/32, Tot:0/0/773/0/32248 NEW, size:919 (i,b,sw,hw,cmp): 0/0/0/0/9, Tot:0/0/773/0/32257 NEW, size:1024 (i,b,sw,hw,cmp): 0/0/0/0/2, Tot:0/0/773/0/32259 NEW, size:1013 (i,b,sw,hw,cmp): 0/0/0/0/1, Tot:0/0/773/0/32260 ... ...
The term.log file will contain interesting data which can be fetched from the terminal emulator's input buffer. It will typically contains responses to ESC sequences requesting info about terminal size, or about the current color map. But, if you notice there arbitrary or binary data, basically something that a typical terminal shouldn't responsd with, try to investigate it. You might have just found and interesting case of RCE, where arbitrary data can be pushed into terminal's input buffer, and then read back (and potentially executed) with whatever runs under said emulator (e.g. /bin/bash)