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Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +00001=======================================================
2libFuzzer – a library for coverage-guided fuzz testing.
3=======================================================
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +00004.. contents::
5 :local:
Kostya Serebryanyd11dc172016-03-12 02:56:25 +00006 :depth: 1
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +00007
8Introduction
9============
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +000010
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000011LibFuzzer is a library for in-process, coverage-guided, evolutionary fuzzing
12of other libraries.
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +000013
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000014LibFuzzer is similar in concept to American Fuzzy Lop (AFL_), but it performs
15all of its fuzzing inside a single process. This in-process fuzzing can be more
16restrictive and fragile, but is potentially much faster as there is no overhead
17for process start-up.
Kostya Serebryanyd11dc172016-03-12 02:56:25 +000018
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000019The fuzzer is linked with the library under test, and feeds fuzzed inputs to the
20library via a specific fuzzing entrypoint (aka "target function"); the fuzzer
21then tracks which areas of the code are reached, and generates mutations on the
22corpus of input data in order to maximize the code coverage. The code coverage
23information for libFuzzer is provided by LLVM's SanitizerCoverage_
24instrumentation.
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +000025
26
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000027Versions
28========
Kostya Serebryanyd11dc172016-03-12 02:56:25 +000029
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000030LibFuzzer is under active development so a current (or at least very recent)
31version of Clang is the only supported variant.
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +000032
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000033(If `building Clang from trunk`_ is too time-consuming or difficult, then
34the Clang binaries that the Chromium developers build are likely to be
35fairly recent:
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +000036
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000037.. code-block:: console
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +000038
39 mkdir TMP_CLANG
40 cd TMP_CLANG
41 git clone https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/tools/clang
42 cd ..
43 TMP_CLANG/clang/scripts/update.py
44
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000045This installs the Clang binary as
46``./third_party/llvm-build/Release+Asserts/bin/clang``)
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +000047
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000048The libFuzzer code resides in the LLVM repository, and requires a recent Clang
49compiler to build (and is used to `fuzz various parts of LLVM itself`_).
50However the fuzzer itself does not (and should not) depend on any part of LLVM
51infrastructure and can be used for other projects without requiring the rest
52of LLVM.
Kostya Serebryanybfbe7fc2016-02-02 03:03:47 +000053
Kostya Serebryanybfbe7fc2016-02-02 03:03:47 +000054
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000055Corpus
56======
Kostya Serebryanybfbe7fc2016-02-02 03:03:47 +000057
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000058Coverage-guided fuzzers like libFuzzer rely on a corpus of sample inputs for the
59code under test. This corpus should ideally be seeded with a varied collection
60of valid and invalid inputs for the code under test; for example, for a graphics
61library the initial corpus might hold a variety of different small PNG/JPG/GIF
62files. The fuzzer generates random mutations based around the sample inputs in
63the current corpus. If a mutation triggers execution of a previously-uncovered
64path in the code under test, then that mutation is saved to the corpus for
65future variations.
Kostya Serebryanybfbe7fc2016-02-02 03:03:47 +000066
Kostya Serebryany61b07ac2016-05-09 19:11:36 +000067LibFuzzer will work without any initial seeds, but will be less
68efficient if the library under test accepts complex,
69structured inputs.
Kostya Serebryany2adfa3b2015-05-20 21:03:03 +000070
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000071The corpus can also act as a sanity/regression check, to confirm that the
72fuzzing entrypoint still works and that all of the sample inputs run through
73the code under test without problems.
74
Kostya Serebryany61b07ac2016-05-09 19:11:36 +000075If you have a large corpus (either generated by fuzzing or acquired by other means)
76you may want to minimize it while still preserving the full coverage. One way to do that
77is to use the `-merge=1` flag:
78
79.. code-block:: console
80
81 mkdir NEW_CORPUS_DIR # Store minimized corpus here.
82 ./my-fuzzer -merge=1 NEW_CORPUS_DIR FULL_CORPUS_DIR
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +000083
84Getting Started
85===============
86
87.. contents::
88 :local:
89 :depth: 1
90
91Building
92--------
93
94The first step for using libFuzzer on a library is to implement a fuzzing
95target function that accepts a sequence of bytes, like this:
96
97.. code-block:: c++
98
99 // fuzz_target.cc
100 extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *Data, size_t Size) {
101 DoSomethingInterestingWithMyAPI(Data, Size);
102 return 0; // Non-zero return values are reserved for future use.
103 }
104
105Next, build the libFuzzer library as a static archive, without any sanitizer
106options. Note that the libFuzzer library contains the ``main()`` function:
107
108.. code-block:: console
109
110 svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk/lib/Fuzzer
111 # Alternative: get libFuzzer from a dedicated git mirror:
112 # git clone https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Fuzzer
113 clang++ -c -g -O2 -std=c++11 Fuzzer/*.cpp -IFuzzer
114 ar ruv libFuzzer.a Fuzzer*.o
115
116Then build the fuzzing target function and the library under test using
117the SanitizerCoverage_ option, which instruments the code so that the fuzzer
118can retrieve code coverage information (to guide the fuzzing). Linking with
119the libFuzzer code then gives an fuzzer executable.
120
121You should also enable one or more of the *sanitizers*, which help to expose
122latent bugs by making incorrect behavior generate errors at runtime:
123
124 - AddressSanitizer_ detects memory access errors.
125 - MemorySanitizer_ detects uninitialized reads: code whose behavior relies on memory
126 contents that have not been initialized to a specific value.
127 - UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer_ detects the use of various features of C/C++ that are explicitly
128 listed as resulting in undefined behavior.
129
130Finally, link with ``libFuzzer.a``::
131
132 clang -fsanitize-coverage=edge -fsanitize=address your_lib.cc fuzz_target.cc libFuzzer.a -o my_fuzzer
133
134Running
135-------
136
137To run the fuzzer, first create a Corpus_ directory that holds the
138initial "seed" sample inputs:
139
140.. code-block:: console
141
142 mkdir CORPUS_DIR
143 cp /some/input/samples/* CORPUS_DIR
144
145Then run the fuzzer on the corpus directory:
146
147.. code-block:: console
148
149 ./my_fuzzer CORPUS_DIR # -max_len=1000 -jobs=20 ...
150
151As the fuzzer discovers new interesting test cases (i.e. test cases that
152trigger coverage of new paths through the code under test), those test cases
153will be added to the corpus directory.
154
155By default, the fuzzing process will continue indefinitely – at least until
156a bug is found. Any crashes or sanitizer failures will be reported as usual,
157stopping the fuzzing process, and the particular input that triggered the bug
Kostya Serebryany2fe93042016-04-29 18:49:55 +0000158will be written to disk (typically as ``crash-<sha1>``, ``leak-<sha1>``,
159or ``timeout-<sha1>``).
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000160
161
162Parallel Fuzzing
163----------------
164
165Each libFuzzer process is single-threaded, unless the library under test starts
166its own threads. However, it is possible to run multiple libFuzzer processes in
167parallel with a shared corpus directory; this has the advantage that any new
168inputs found by one fuzzer process will be available to the other fuzzer
169processes (unless you disable this with the ``-reload=0`` option).
170
171This is primarily controlled by the ``-jobs=N`` option, which indicates that
172that `N` fuzzing jobs should be run to completion (i.e. until a bug is found or
173time/iteration limits are reached). These jobs will be run across a set of
174worker processes, by default using half of the available CPU cores; the count of
175worker processes can be overridden by the ``-workers=N`` option. For example,
176running with ``-jobs=30`` on a 12-core machine would run 6 workers by default,
177with each worker averaging 5 bugs by completion of the entire process.
178
179
180Options
181=======
182
183To run the fuzzer, pass zero or more corpus directories as command line
184arguments. The fuzzer will read test inputs from each of these corpus
185directories, and any new test inputs that are generated will be written
186back to the first corpus directory:
187
188.. code-block:: console
189
190 ./fuzzer [-flag1=val1 [-flag2=val2 ...] ] [dir1 [dir2 ...] ]
191
192If a list of files (rather than directories) are passed to the fuzzer program,
193then it will re-run those files as test inputs but will not perform any fuzzing.
194In this mode the fuzzer binary can be used as a regression test (e.g. on a
195continuous integration system) to check the target function and saved inputs
196still work.
197
198The most important command line options are:
199
200``-help``
201 Print help message.
202``-seed``
203 Random seed. If 0 (the default), the seed is generated.
204``-runs``
205 Number of individual test runs, -1 (the default) to run indefinitely.
206``-max_len``
207 Maximum length of a test input. If 0 (the default), libFuzzer tries to guess
208 a good value based on the corpus (and reports it).
209``-timeout``
210 Timeout in seconds, default 1200. If an input takes longer than this timeout,
211 the process is treated as a failure case.
Kostya Serebryany8b8f7a32016-05-06 23:38:07 +0000212``-rss_limit_mb``
213 Memory usage limit in Mb, default 2048. Use 0 to disable the limit.
214 If an input requires more than this amount of RSS memory to execute,
215 the process is treated as a failure case.
216 The limit is checked in a separate thread every second.
217 If running w/o ASAN/MSAN, you may use 'ulimit -v' instead.
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000218``-timeout_exitcode``
219 Exit code (default 77) to emit when terminating due to timeout, when
220 ``-abort_on_timeout`` is not set.
221``-max_total_time``
222 If positive, indicates the maximum total time in seconds to run the fuzzer.
223 If 0 (the default), run indefinitely.
224``-merge``
225 If set to 1, any corpus inputs from the 2nd, 3rd etc. corpus directories
226 that trigger new code coverage will be merged into the first corpus
Kostya Serebryany61b07ac2016-05-09 19:11:36 +0000227 directory. Defaults to 0. This flag can be used to minimize a corpus.
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000228``-reload``
229 If set to 1 (the default), the corpus directory is re-read periodically to
230 check for new inputs; this allows detection of new inputs that were discovered
231 by other fuzzing processes.
232``-jobs``
233 Number of fuzzing jobs to run to completion. Default value is 0, which runs a
234 single fuzzing process until completion. If the value is >= 1, then this
235 number of jobs performing fuzzing are run, in a collection of parallel
236 separate worker processes; each such worker process has its
237 ``stdout``/``stderr`` redirected to ``fuzz-<JOB>.log``.
238``-workers``
239 Number of simultaneous worker processes to run the fuzzing jobs to completion
240 in. If 0 (the default), ``min(jobs, NumberOfCpuCores()/2)`` is used.
241``-dict``
242 Provide a dictionary of input keywords; see Dictionaries_.
243``-use_counters``
244 Use `coverage counters`_ to generate approximate counts of how often code
245 blocks are hit; defaults to 1.
246``-use_traces``
247 Use instruction traces (experimental, defaults to 0); see `Data-flow-guided fuzzing`_.
248``-only_ascii``
249 If 1, generate only ASCII (``isprint``+``isspace``) inputs. Defaults to 0.
250``-artifact_prefix``
251 Provide a prefix to use when saving fuzzing artifacts (crash, timeout, or
252 slow inputs) as ``$(artifact_prefix)file``. Defaults to empty.
253``-exact_artifact_path``
254 Ignored if empty (the default). If non-empty, write the single artifact on
255 failure (crash, timeout) as ``$(exact_artifact_path)``. This overrides
256 ``-artifact_prefix`` and will not use checksum in the file name. Do not use
257 the same path for several parallel processes.
258``-print_final_stats``
259 If 1, print statistics at exit. Defaults to 0.
Kostya Serebryanydced5d32016-04-29 19:28:24 +0000260``-detect-leaks``
261 If 1 (default) and if LeakSanitizer is enabled
262 try to detect memory leaks during fuzzing (i.e. not only at shut down).
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000263``-close_fd_mask``
264 Indicate output streams to close at startup. Be careful, this will also
265 remove diagnostic output from the tools in use; for example the messages
266 AddressSanitizer_ sends to ``stderr``/``stdout`` will also be lost.
267
268 - 0 (default): close neither ``stdout`` nor ``stderr``
269 - 1 : close ``stdout``
270 - 2 : close ``stderr``
271 - 3 : close both ``stdout`` and ``stderr``.
Kostya Serebryany2adfa3b2015-05-20 21:03:03 +0000272
273For the full list of flags run the fuzzer binary with ``-help=1``.
274
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000275Output
276======
277
278During operation the fuzzer prints information to ``stderr``, for example::
279
280 INFO: Seed: 3338750330
281 Loaded 1024/1211 files from corpus/
282 INFO: -max_len is not provided, using 64
283 #0 READ units: 1211 exec/s: 0
284 #1211 INITED cov: 2575 bits: 8855 indir: 5 units: 830 exec/s: 1211
285 #1422 NEW cov: 2580 bits: 8860 indir: 5 units: 831 exec/s: 1422 L: 21 MS: 1 ShuffleBytes-
286 #1688 NEW cov: 2581 bits: 8865 indir: 5 units: 832 exec/s: 1688 L: 19 MS: 2 EraseByte-CrossOver-
287 #1734 NEW cov: 2583 bits: 8879 indir: 5 units: 833 exec/s: 1734 L: 27 MS: 3 ChangeBit-EraseByte-ShuffleBytes-
288 ...
289
290The early parts of the output include information about the fuzzer options and
291configuration, including the current random seed (in the ``Seed:`` line; this
292can be overridden with the ``-seed=N`` flag).
293
294Further output lines have the form of an event code and statistics. The
295possible event codes are:
296
297``READ``
298 The fuzzer has read in all of the provided input samples from the corpus
299 directories.
300``INITED``
301 The fuzzer has completed initialization, which includes running each of
302 the initial input samples through the code under test.
303``NEW``
304 The fuzzer has created a test input that covers new areas of the code
305 under test. This input will be saved to the primary corpus directory.
306``pulse``
307 The fuzzer has generated 2\ :sup:`n` inputs (generated periodically to reassure
308 the user that the fuzzer is still working).
309``DONE``
310 The fuzzer has completed operation because it has reached the specified
311 iteration limit (``-runs``) or time limit (``-max_total_time``).
312``MIN<n>``
313 The fuzzer is minimizing the combination of input corpus directories into
314 a single unified corpus (due to the ``-merge`` command line option).
315``RELOAD``
316 The fuzzer is performing a periodic reload of inputs from the corpus
317 directory; this allows it to discover any inputs discovered by other
318 fuzzer processes (see `Parallel Fuzzing`_).
319
320Each output line also reports the following statistics (when non-zero):
321
322``cov:``
323 Total number of code blocks or edges covered by the executing the current
324 corpus.
325``bits:``
326 Rough measure of the number of code blocks or edges covered, and how often;
327 only valid if the fuzzer is run with ``-use_counters=1``.
328``indir:``
329 Number of distinct function `caller-callee pairs`_ executed with the
330 current corpus; only valid if the code under test was built with
331 ``-fsanitize-coverage=indirect-calls``.
332``units:``
333 Number of entries in the current input corpus.
334``exec/s:``
335 Number of fuzzer iterations per second.
336
337For ``NEW`` events, the output line also includes information about the mutation
338operation that produced the new input:
339
340``L:``
341 Size of the new input in bytes.
342``MS: <n> <operations>``
343 Count and list of the mutation operations used to generate the input.
344
345
346Examples
347========
Kostya Serebryanyd11dc172016-03-12 02:56:25 +0000348.. contents::
349 :local:
350 :depth: 1
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000351
352Toy example
353-----------
354
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000355A simple function that does something interesting if it receives the input
356"HI!"::
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000357
358 cat << EOF >> test_fuzzer.cc
Kostya Serebryany1c80b9d2015-11-26 00:12:57 +0000359 #include <stdint.h>
360 #include <stddef.h>
361 extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *data, size_t size) {
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000362 if (size > 0 && data[0] == 'H')
363 if (size > 1 && data[1] == 'I')
364 if (size > 2 && data[2] == '!')
365 __builtin_trap();
Kostya Serebryany20bb5e72015-10-02 23:34:06 +0000366 return 0;
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000367 }
368 EOF
Kostya Serebryanyabca88e2016-03-12 03:05:37 +0000369 # Build test_fuzzer.cc with asan and link against libFuzzer.a
370 clang++ -fsanitize=address -fsanitize-coverage=edge test_fuzzer.cc libFuzzer.a
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000371 # Run the fuzzer with no corpus.
372 ./a.out
373
Kostya Serebryanyabca88e2016-03-12 03:05:37 +0000374You should get an error pretty quickly::
375
376 #0 READ units: 1 exec/s: 0
377 #1 INITED cov: 3 units: 1 exec/s: 0
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000378 #2 NEW cov: 5 units: 2 exec/s: 0 L: 64 MS: 0
379 #19237 NEW cov: 9 units: 3 exec/s: 0 L: 64 MS: 0
Kostya Serebryanyabca88e2016-03-12 03:05:37 +0000380 #20595 NEW cov: 10 units: 4 exec/s: 0 L: 1 MS: 4 ChangeASCIIInt-ShuffleBytes-ChangeByte-CrossOver-
381 #34574 NEW cov: 13 units: 5 exec/s: 0 L: 2 MS: 3 ShuffleBytes-CrossOver-ChangeBit-
382 #34807 NEW cov: 15 units: 6 exec/s: 0 L: 3 MS: 1 CrossOver-
383 ==31511== ERROR: libFuzzer: deadly signal
384 ...
385 artifact_prefix='./'; Test unit written to ./crash-b13e8756b13a00cf168300179061fb4b91fefbed
386
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000387
388PCRE2
389-----
390
Kostya Serebryanyabca88e2016-03-12 03:05:37 +0000391Here we show how to use libFuzzer on something real, yet simple: pcre2_::
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000392
Alexey Samsonov21a33812015-05-07 23:33:24 +0000393 COV_FLAGS=" -fsanitize-coverage=edge,indirect-calls,8bit-counters"
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000394 # Get PCRE2
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000395 wget ftp://ftp.csx.cam.ac.uk/pub/software/programming/pcre/pcre2-10.20.tar.gz
396 tar xf pcre2-10.20.tar.gz
397 # Build PCRE2 with AddressSanitizer and coverage; requires autotools.
398 (cd pcre2-10.20; ./autogen.sh; CC="clang -fsanitize=address $COV_FLAGS" ./configure --prefix=`pwd`/../inst && make -j && make install)
Kostya Serebryanyabca88e2016-03-12 03:05:37 +0000399 # Build the fuzzing target function that does something interesting with PCRE2.
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000400 cat << EOF > pcre_fuzzer.cc
401 #include <string.h>
Kostya Serebryany1c80b9d2015-11-26 00:12:57 +0000402 #include <stdint.h>
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000403 #include "pcre2posix.h"
Kostya Serebryany1c80b9d2015-11-26 00:12:57 +0000404 extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *data, size_t size) {
Kostya Serebryany20bb5e72015-10-02 23:34:06 +0000405 if (size < 1) return 0;
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000406 char *str = new char[size+1];
407 memcpy(str, data, size);
408 str[size] = 0;
409 regex_t preg;
410 if (0 == regcomp(&preg, str, 0)) {
411 regexec(&preg, str, 0, 0, 0);
412 regfree(&preg);
413 }
414 delete [] str;
Kostya Serebryany20bb5e72015-10-02 23:34:06 +0000415 return 0;
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000416 }
417 EOF
418 clang++ -g -fsanitize=address $COV_FLAGS -c -std=c++11 -I inst/include/ pcre_fuzzer.cc
419 # Link.
Kostya Serebryanyabca88e2016-03-12 03:05:37 +0000420 clang++ -g -fsanitize=address -Wl,--whole-archive inst/lib/*.a -Wl,-no-whole-archive libFuzzer.a pcre_fuzzer.o -o pcre_fuzzer
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000421
422This will give you a binary of the fuzzer, called ``pcre_fuzzer``.
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000423Now, create a directory that will hold the test corpus:
424
425.. code-block:: console
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000426
427 mkdir -p CORPUS
428
429For simple input languages like regular expressions this is all you need.
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000430For more complicated/structured inputs, the fuzzer works much more efficiently
431if you can populate the corpus directory with a variety of valid and invalid
432inputs for the code under test.
433Now run the fuzzer with the corpus directory as the only parameter:
434
435.. code-block:: console
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000436
437 ./pcre_fuzzer ./CORPUS
438
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000439Initially, you will see Output_ like this::
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000440
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000441 INFO: Seed: 2938818941
442 INFO: -max_len is not provided, using 64
443 INFO: A corpus is not provided, starting from an empty corpus
444 #0 READ units: 1 exec/s: 0
445 #1 INITED cov: 3 bits: 3 units: 1 exec/s: 0
446 #2 NEW cov: 176 bits: 176 indir: 3 units: 2 exec/s: 0 L: 64 MS: 0
447 #8 NEW cov: 176 bits: 179 indir: 3 units: 3 exec/s: 0 L: 63 MS: 2 ChangeByte-EraseByte-
448 ...
449 #14004 NEW cov: 1500 bits: 4536 indir: 5 units: 406 exec/s: 0 L: 54 MS: 3 ChangeBit-ChangeBit-CrossOver-
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000450
451Now, interrupt the fuzzer and run it again the same way. You will see::
452
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000453 INFO: Seed: 3398349082
454 INFO: -max_len is not provided, using 64
455 #0 READ units: 405 exec/s: 0
456 #405 INITED cov: 1499 bits: 4535 indir: 5 units: 286 exec/s: 0
457 #587 NEW cov: 1499 bits: 4540 indir: 5 units: 287 exec/s: 0 L: 52 MS: 2 InsertByte-EraseByte-
458 #667 NEW cov: 1501 bits: 4542 indir: 5 units: 288 exec/s: 0 L: 39 MS: 2 ChangeBit-InsertByte-
459 #672 NEW cov: 1501 bits: 4543 indir: 5 units: 289 exec/s: 0 L: 15 MS: 2 ChangeASCIIInt-ChangeBit-
460 #739 NEW cov: 1501 bits: 4544 indir: 5 units: 290 exec/s: 0 L: 64 MS: 4 ShuffleBytes-ChangeASCIIInt-InsertByte-ChangeBit-
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000461 ...
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000462
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000463On the second execution the fuzzer has a non-empty input corpus (405 items). As
464the first step, the fuzzer minimized this corpus (the ``INITED`` line) to
465produce 286 interesting items, omitting inputs that do not hit any additional
466code.
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000467
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000468(Aside: although the fuzzer only saves new inputs that hit additional code, this
469does not mean that the corpus as a whole is kept minimized. For example, if
470an input hitting A-B-C then an input that hits A-B-C-D are generated,
471they will both be saved, even though the latter subsumes the former.)
472
473
474You may run ``N`` independent fuzzer jobs in parallel on ``M`` CPUs:
475
476.. code-block:: console
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000477
478 N=100; M=4; ./pcre_fuzzer ./CORPUS -jobs=$N -workers=$M
479
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000480By default (``-reload=1``) the fuzzer processes will periodically scan the corpus directory
Kostya Serebryany9690fcf2015-05-12 18:51:57 +0000481and reload any new tests. This way the test inputs found by one process will be picked up
482by all others.
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000483
Kostya Serebryany9690fcf2015-05-12 18:51:57 +0000484If ``-workers=$M`` is not supplied, ``min($N,NumberOfCpuCore/2)`` will be used.
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000485
Kostya Serebryany5e593a42015-04-08 06:16:11 +0000486Heartbleed
487----------
488Remember Heartbleed_?
489As it was recently `shown <https://blog.hboeck.de/archives/868-How-Heartbleed-couldve-been-found.html>`_,
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000490fuzzing with AddressSanitizer_ can find Heartbleed. Indeed, here are the step-by-step instructions
491to find Heartbleed with libFuzzer::
Kostya Serebryany5e593a42015-04-08 06:16:11 +0000492
493 wget https://www.openssl.org/source/openssl-1.0.1f.tar.gz
494 tar xf openssl-1.0.1f.tar.gz
Alexey Samsonov21a33812015-05-07 23:33:24 +0000495 COV_FLAGS="-fsanitize-coverage=edge,indirect-calls" # -fsanitize-coverage=8bit-counters
Kostya Serebryany5e593a42015-04-08 06:16:11 +0000496 (cd openssl-1.0.1f/ && ./config &&
497 make -j 32 CC="clang -g -fsanitize=address $COV_FLAGS")
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000498 # Get and build libFuzzer
Kostya Serebryany5e593a42015-04-08 06:16:11 +0000499 svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk/lib/Fuzzer
500 clang -c -g -O2 -std=c++11 Fuzzer/*.cpp -IFuzzer
501 # Get examples of key/pem files.
502 git clone https://github.com/hannob/selftls
503 cp selftls/server* . -v
504 cat << EOF > handshake-fuzz.cc
505 #include <openssl/ssl.h>
506 #include <openssl/err.h>
507 #include <assert.h>
Kostya Serebryany1c80b9d2015-11-26 00:12:57 +0000508 #include <stdint.h>
509 #include <stddef.h>
510
Kostya Serebryany5e593a42015-04-08 06:16:11 +0000511 SSL_CTX *sctx;
512 int Init() {
513 SSL_library_init();
514 SSL_load_error_strings();
515 ERR_load_BIO_strings();
516 OpenSSL_add_all_algorithms();
517 assert (sctx = SSL_CTX_new(TLSv1_method()));
518 assert (SSL_CTX_use_certificate_file(sctx, "server.pem", SSL_FILETYPE_PEM));
519 assert (SSL_CTX_use_PrivateKey_file(sctx, "server.key", SSL_FILETYPE_PEM));
520 return 0;
521 }
Kostya Serebryany1c80b9d2015-11-26 00:12:57 +0000522 extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *Data, size_t Size) {
Kostya Serebryany5e593a42015-04-08 06:16:11 +0000523 static int unused = Init();
524 SSL *server = SSL_new(sctx);
525 BIO *sinbio = BIO_new(BIO_s_mem());
526 BIO *soutbio = BIO_new(BIO_s_mem());
527 SSL_set_bio(server, sinbio, soutbio);
528 SSL_set_accept_state(server);
529 BIO_write(sinbio, Data, Size);
530 SSL_do_handshake(server);
531 SSL_free(server);
Kostya Serebryany20bb5e72015-10-02 23:34:06 +0000532 return 0;
Kostya Serebryany5e593a42015-04-08 06:16:11 +0000533 }
534 EOF
Mehdi Amini30618f92015-09-17 15:59:52 +0000535 # Build the fuzzer.
Kostya Serebryany5e593a42015-04-08 06:16:11 +0000536 clang++ -g handshake-fuzz.cc -fsanitize=address \
537 openssl-1.0.1f/libssl.a openssl-1.0.1f/libcrypto.a Fuzzer*.o
538 # Run 20 independent fuzzer jobs.
539 ./a.out -jobs=20 -workers=20
540
541Voila::
542
543 #1048576 pulse cov 3424 bits 0 units 9 exec/s 24385
544 =================================================================
545 ==17488==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-buffer-overflow on address 0x629000004748 at pc 0x00000048c979 bp 0x7fffe3e864f0 sp 0x7fffe3e85ca8
546 READ of size 60731 at 0x629000004748 thread T0
547 #0 0x48c978 in __asan_memcpy
548 #1 0x4db504 in tls1_process_heartbeat openssl-1.0.1f/ssl/t1_lib.c:2586:3
549 #2 0x580be3 in ssl3_read_bytes openssl-1.0.1f/ssl/s3_pkt.c:1092:4
550
Kostya Serebryany1c80b9d2015-11-26 00:12:57 +0000551Note: a `similar fuzzer <https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/+/HEAD/FUZZING.md>`_
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000552is now a part of the BoringSSL_ source tree.
Kostya Serebryany1c80b9d2015-11-26 00:12:57 +0000553
Kostya Serebryany043ab1c2015-04-01 21:33:20 +0000554Advanced features
555=================
Kostya Serebryanyd11dc172016-03-12 02:56:25 +0000556.. contents::
557 :local:
558 :depth: 1
Kostya Serebryany043ab1c2015-04-01 21:33:20 +0000559
Kostya Serebryany7d211662015-09-04 00:12:11 +0000560Dictionaries
561------------
Kostya Serebryany7d211662015-09-04 00:12:11 +0000562LibFuzzer supports user-supplied dictionaries with input language keywords
563or other interesting byte sequences (e.g. multi-byte magic values).
564Use ``-dict=DICTIONARY_FILE``. For some input languages using a dictionary
565may significantly improve the search speed.
566The dictionary syntax is similar to that used by AFL_ for its ``-x`` option::
567
568 # Lines starting with '#' and empty lines are ignored.
569
570 # Adds "blah" (w/o quotes) to the dictionary.
571 kw1="blah"
572 # Use \\ for backslash and \" for quotes.
573 kw2="\"ac\\dc\""
574 # Use \xAB for hex values
575 kw3="\xF7\xF8"
576 # the name of the keyword followed by '=' may be omitted:
577 "foo\x0Abar"
578
Kostya Serebryanyb17e2982015-07-31 21:48:10 +0000579Data-flow-guided fuzzing
580------------------------
581
582*EXPERIMENTAL*.
583With an additional compiler flag ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-cmp`` (see SanitizerCoverageTraceDataFlow_)
584and extra run-time flag ``-use_traces=1`` the fuzzer will try to apply *data-flow-guided fuzzing*.
585That is, the fuzzer will record the inputs to comparison instructions, switch statements,
Kostya Serebryany7f4227d2015-08-05 18:23:01 +0000586and several libc functions (``memcmp``, ``strcmp``, ``strncmp``, etc).
Kostya Serebryanyb17e2982015-07-31 21:48:10 +0000587It will later use those recorded inputs during mutations.
588
589This mode can be combined with DataFlowSanitizer_ to achieve better sensitivity.
590
Kostya Serebryany6bd016b2015-04-10 05:44:43 +0000591AFL compatibility
592-----------------
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +0000593LibFuzzer can be used together with AFL_ on the same test corpus.
Kostya Serebryany6bd016b2015-04-10 05:44:43 +0000594Both fuzzers expect the test corpus to reside in a directory, one file per input.
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000595You can run both fuzzers on the same corpus, one after another:
596
597.. code-block:: console
Kostya Serebryany6bd016b2015-04-10 05:44:43 +0000598
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +0000599 ./afl-fuzz -i testcase_dir -o findings_dir /path/to/program @@
Kostya Serebryany6bd016b2015-04-10 05:44:43 +0000600 ./llvm-fuzz testcase_dir findings_dir # Will write new tests to testcase_dir
601
602Periodically restart both fuzzers so that they can use each other's findings.
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +0000603Currently, there is no simple way to run both fuzzing engines in parallel while sharing the same corpus dir.
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000604
Kostya Serebryanycd073d52015-04-10 06:32:29 +0000605How good is my fuzzer?
606----------------------
607
Kostya Serebryany566bc5a2015-05-06 22:19:00 +0000608Once you implement your target function ``LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput`` and fuzz it to death,
Kostya Serebryanycd073d52015-04-10 06:32:29 +0000609you will want to know whether the function or the corpus can be improved further.
610One easy to use metric is, of course, code coverage.
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000611You can get the coverage for your corpus like this:
612
613.. code-block:: console
Kostya Serebryanycd073d52015-04-10 06:32:29 +0000614
Kostya Serebryanyec77af32016-05-05 18:07:09 +0000615 ASAN_OPTIONS=coverage=1:html_cov_report=1 ./fuzzer CORPUS_DIR -runs=0
Kostya Serebryanycd073d52015-04-10 06:32:29 +0000616
Kostya Serebryanyec77af32016-05-05 18:07:09 +0000617This will run all tests in the CORPUS_DIR but will not perform any fuzzing.
618At the end of the process it will dump a single html file with coverage information.
619See SanitizerCoverage_ for details.
620
621You may also use other ways to visualize coverage,
622e.g. `llvm-cov <http://llvm.org/docs/CommandGuide/llvm-cov.html>`_, but those will require
623you to rebuild the code with different compiler flags.
Kostya Serebryanycd073d52015-04-10 06:32:29 +0000624
Kostya Serebryany926b9bd2015-05-22 22:43:05 +0000625User-supplied mutators
626----------------------
627
628LibFuzzer allows to use custom (user-supplied) mutators,
629see FuzzerInterface.h_
630
Kostya Serebryanyaca76962016-01-16 01:23:12 +0000631Startup initialization
632----------------------
633If the library being tested needs to be initialized, there are several options.
634
Kostya Serebryanyceca4762016-05-06 23:51:28 +0000635The simplest way is to have a statically initialized global object inside
636`LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput` (or in global scope if that works for you):
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000637
638.. code-block:: c++
Kostya Serebryanyaca76962016-01-16 01:23:12 +0000639
Kostya Serebryanyceca4762016-05-06 23:51:28 +0000640 extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *Data, size_t Size) {
641 static bool Initialized = DoInitialization();
642 ...
Kostya Serebryanyaca76962016-01-16 01:23:12 +0000643
644Alternatively, you may define an optional init function and it will receive
Kostya Serebryanyceca4762016-05-06 23:51:28 +0000645the program arguments that you can read and modify. Do this **only** if you
646realy need to access ``argv``/``argc``.
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000647
648.. code-block:: c++
Kostya Serebryanyaca76962016-01-16 01:23:12 +0000649
650 extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerInitialize(int *argc, char ***argv) {
651 ReadAndMaybeModify(argc, argv);
652 return 0;
653 }
654
Kostya Serebryanyaca76962016-01-16 01:23:12 +0000655
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +0000656Leaks
657-----
658
Kostya Serebryany2fe93042016-04-29 18:49:55 +0000659Binaries built with AddressSanitizer_ or LeakSanitizer_ will try to detect
660memory leaks at the process shutdown.
661For in-process fuzzing this is inconvenient
662since the fuzzer needs to report a leak with a reproducer as soon as the leaky
663mutation is found. However, running full leak detection after every mutation
664is expensive.
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +0000665
Kostya Serebryany2fe93042016-04-29 18:49:55 +0000666By default (``-detect_leaks=1``) libFuzzer will count the number of
667``malloc`` and ``free`` calls when executing every mutation.
668If the numbers don't match (which by itself doesn't mean there is a leak)
669libFuzzer will invoke the more expensive LeakSanitizer_
670pass and if the actual leak is found, it will be reported with the reproducer
671and the process will exit.
672
673If your target has massive leaks and the leak detection is disabled
Kostya Serebryany1ed1aea2016-05-06 23:41:11 +0000674you will eventually run out of RAM (see the ``-rss_limit_mb`` flag).
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +0000675
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +0000676
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000677Fuzzing components of LLVM
678==========================
Kostya Serebryanyd11dc172016-03-12 02:56:25 +0000679.. contents::
680 :local:
681 :depth: 1
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000682
683clang-format-fuzzer
684-------------------
685The inputs are random pieces of C++-like text.
686
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000687Build (make sure to use fresh clang as the host compiler):
688
689.. code-block:: console
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000690
691 cmake -GNinja -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++ -DLLVM_USE_SANITIZER=Address -DLLVM_USE_SANITIZE_COVERAGE=YES -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release /path/to/llvm
692 ninja clang-format-fuzzer
693 mkdir CORPUS_DIR
694 ./bin/clang-format-fuzzer CORPUS_DIR
695
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000696Optionally build other kinds of binaries (ASan+Debug, MSan, UBSan, etc).
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000697
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000698Tracking bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23052
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000699
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000700clang-fuzzer
701------------
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000702
Kostya Serebryany866e0d12015-09-02 22:44:46 +0000703The behavior is very similar to ``clang-format-fuzzer``.
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000704
705Tracking bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23057
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000706
Kostya Serebryanyb98e3272015-08-31 18:57:24 +0000707llvm-as-fuzzer
708--------------
709
710Tracking bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24639
711
Daniel Sanders5151b202015-09-18 10:47:45 +0000712llvm-mc-fuzzer
713--------------
714
715This tool fuzzes the MC layer. Currently it is only able to fuzz the
716disassembler but it is hoped that assembly, and round-trip verification will be
717added in future.
718
719When run in dissassembly mode, the inputs are opcodes to be disassembled. The
720fuzzer will consume as many instructions as possible and will stop when it
721finds an invalid instruction or runs out of data.
722
Daniel Sanders4fe1c8b2015-09-26 17:09:01 +0000723Please note that the command line interface differs slightly from that of other
724fuzzers. The fuzzer arguments should follow ``--fuzzer-args`` and should have
725a single dash, while other arguments control the operation mode and target in a
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000726similar manner to ``llvm-mc`` and should have two dashes. For example:
727
728.. code-block:: console
Daniel Sanders5151b202015-09-18 10:47:45 +0000729
Daniel Sanders4fe1c8b2015-09-26 17:09:01 +0000730 llvm-mc-fuzzer --triple=aarch64-linux-gnu --disassemble --fuzzer-args -max_len=4 -jobs=10
Daniel Sanders5151b202015-09-18 10:47:45 +0000731
Kostya Serebryanyfb2f3312015-05-13 22:42:28 +0000732Buildbot
733--------
734
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000735A buildbot continuously runs the above fuzzers for LLVM components, with results
736shown at http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-fuzzer .
Kostya Serebryanyfb2f3312015-05-13 22:42:28 +0000737
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000738FAQ
739=========================
740
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000741Q. Why doesn't libFuzzer use any of the LLVM support?
742-----------------------------------------------------
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000743
744There are two reasons.
745
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000746First, we want this library to be used outside of the LLVM without users having to
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000747build the rest of LLVM. This may sound unconvincing for many LLVM folks,
748but in practice the need for building the whole LLVM frightens many potential
749users -- and we want more users to use this code.
750
751Second, there is a subtle technical reason not to rely on the rest of LLVM, or
752any other large body of code (maybe not even STL). When coverage instrumentation
753is enabled, it will also instrument the LLVM support code which will blow up the
754coverage set of the process (since the fuzzer is in-process). In other words, by
755using more external dependencies we will slow down the fuzzer while the main
756reason for it to exist is extreme speed.
757
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000758Q. What about Windows then? The fuzzer contains code that does not build on Windows.
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000759------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
760
Kostya Serebryany241fb612016-03-12 03:23:02 +0000761Volunteers are welcome.
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000762
763Q. When this Fuzzer is not a good solution for a problem?
764---------------------------------------------------------
765
766* If the test inputs are validated by the target library and the validator
Kostya Serebryany241fb612016-03-12 03:23:02 +0000767 asserts/crashes on invalid inputs, in-process fuzzing is not applicable.
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000768* Bugs in the target library may accumulate without being detected. E.g. a memory
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000769 corruption that goes undetected at first and then leads to a crash while
770 testing another input. This is why it is highly recommended to run this
771 in-process fuzzer with all sanitizers to detect most bugs on the spot.
772* It is harder to protect the in-process fuzzer from excessive memory
773 consumption and infinite loops in the target library (still possible).
774* The target library should not have significant global state that is not
775 reset between the runs.
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000776* Many interesting target libraries are not designed in a way that supports
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000777 the in-process fuzzer interface (e.g. require a file path instead of a
778 byte array).
779* If a single test run takes a considerable fraction of a second (or
780 more) the speed benefit from the in-process fuzzer is negligible.
781* If the target library runs persistent threads (that outlive
782 execution of one test) the fuzzing results will be unreliable.
783
784Q. So, what exactly this Fuzzer is good for?
785--------------------------------------------
786
787This Fuzzer might be a good choice for testing libraries that have relatively
Kostya Serebryany241fb612016-03-12 03:23:02 +0000788small inputs, each input takes < 10ms to run, and the library code is not expected
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000789to crash on invalid inputs.
Kostya Serebryany241fb612016-03-12 03:23:02 +0000790Examples: regular expression matchers, text or binary format parsers, compression,
791network, crypto.
Kostya Serebryany35ce8632015-03-30 23:05:30 +0000792
Kostya Serebryanyfab4fba2015-08-11 01:53:45 +0000793Trophies
794========
795* GLIBC: https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/FuzzingLibc
Kostya Serebryanyfdf44182015-08-11 04:16:37 +0000796
Kostya Serebryanyfab4fba2015-08-11 01:53:45 +0000797* MUSL LIBC:
Kostya Serebryanyfdf44182015-08-11 04:16:37 +0000798
799 * http://git.musl-libc.org/cgit/musl/commit/?id=39dfd58417ef642307d90306e1c7e50aaec5a35c
800 * http://www.openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2015/03/30/3
801
Kostya Serebryany928eb332015-10-12 18:15:42 +0000802* `pugixml <https://github.com/zeux/pugixml/issues/39>`_
Kostya Serebryanyfdf44182015-08-11 04:16:37 +0000803
Kostya Serebryany45dac2a2015-10-10 02:14:18 +0000804* PCRE: Search for "LLVM fuzzer" in http://vcs.pcre.org/pcre2/code/trunk/ChangeLog?view=markup;
Kostya Serebryany928eb332015-10-12 18:15:42 +0000805 also in `bugzilla <https://bugs.exim.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=__all__&content=libfuzzer&no_redirect=1&order=Importance&product=PCRE&query_format=specific>`_
Kostya Serebryanyfdf44182015-08-11 04:16:37 +0000806
Kostya Serebryany928eb332015-10-12 18:15:42 +0000807* `ICU <http://bugs.icu-project.org/trac/ticket/11838>`_
Kostya Serebryanyed483772015-08-11 20:34:48 +0000808
Kostya Serebryany928eb332015-10-12 18:15:42 +0000809* `Freetype <https://savannah.nongnu.org/search/?words=LibFuzzer&type_of_search=bugs&Search=Search&exact=1#options>`_
Kostya Serebryany62921282015-09-11 16:34:14 +0000810
Kostya Serebryany928eb332015-10-12 18:15:42 +0000811* `Harfbuzz <https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/139>`_
812
Kostya Serebryany240a1592015-11-11 05:25:24 +0000813* `SQLite <http://www3.sqlite.org/cgi/src/info/088009efdd56160b>`_
Kostya Serebryany65e71262015-11-11 05:20:55 +0000814
Kostya Serebryany12fa3b52015-11-13 02:44:16 +0000815* `Python <http://bugs.python.org/issue25388>`_
816
Kostya Serebryanyfece6742016-04-18 18:41:25 +0000817* OpenSSL/BoringSSL: `[1] <https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/+/cb852981cd61733a7a1ae4fd8755b7ff950e857d>`_ `[2] <https://openssl.org/news/secadv/20160301.txt>`_ `[3] <https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/+/2b07fa4b22198ac02e0cee8f37f3337c3dba91bc>`_ `[4] <https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/+/6b6e0b20893e2be0e68af605a60ffa2cbb0ffa64>`_ `[5] <https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/931/commits/dd5ac557f052cc2b7f718ac44a8cb7ac6f77dca8>`_ `[6] <https://github.com/openssl/openssl/pull/931/commits/19b5b9194071d1d84e38ac9a952e715afbc85a81>`_
Kostya Serebryany064a6722015-12-05 02:23:49 +0000818
Kostya Serebryany928eb332015-10-12 18:15:42 +0000819* `Libxml2
Kostya Serebryany0d234c32016-03-29 23:13:25 +0000820 <https://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=__all__&content=libFuzzer&list_id=68957&order=Importance&product=libxml2&query_format=specific>`_ and `[HT206167] <https://support.apple.com/en-gb/HT206167>`_ (CVE-2015-5312, CVE-2015-7500, CVE-2015-7942)
Kostya Serebryany45dac2a2015-10-10 02:14:18 +0000821
Kostya Serebryany240a1592015-11-11 05:25:24 +0000822* `Linux Kernel's BPF verifier <https://github.com/iovisor/bpf-fuzzer>`_
Kostya Serebryany62921282015-09-11 16:34:14 +0000823
Kostya Serebryanyc138b642016-04-19 22:37:44 +0000824* Capstone: `[1] <https://github.com/aquynh/capstone/issues/600>`__ `[2] <https://github.com/aquynh/capstone/commit/6b88d1d51eadf7175a8f8a11b690684443b11359>`__
825
826* Radare2: `[1] <https://github.com/revskills?tab=contributions&from=2016-04-09>`__
827
828* gRPC: `[1] <https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/6071/commits/df04c1f7f6aec6e95722ec0b023a6b29b6ea871c>`__ `[2] <https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/6071/commits/22a3dfd95468daa0db7245a4e8e6679a52847579>`__ `[3] <https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/6071/commits/9cac2a12d9e181d130841092e9d40fa3309d7aa7>`__ `[4] <https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/6012/commits/82a91c91d01ce9b999c8821ed13515883468e203>`__ `[5] <https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/6202/commits/2e3e0039b30edaf89fb93bfb2c1d0909098519fa>`__ `[6] <https://github.com/grpc/grpc/pull/6106/files>`__
829
Kostya Serebryany62023f22016-05-06 20:14:48 +0000830* WOFF2: `[1] <https://github.com/google/woff2/commit/a15a8ab>`__
831
Kostya Serebryany240a1592015-11-11 05:25:24 +0000832* LLVM: `Clang <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23057>`_, `Clang-format <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23052>`_, `libc++ <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24411>`_, `llvm-as <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24639>`_, Disassembler: http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247405, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247414, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247416, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247417, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247420, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247422.
Kostya Serebryanyfab4fba2015-08-11 01:53:45 +0000833
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000834.. _pcre2: http://www.pcre.org/
Kostya Serebryany79677382015-03-31 21:39:38 +0000835.. _AFL: http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/afl/
Alexey Samsonov675e5392015-04-27 22:50:06 +0000836.. _SanitizerCoverage: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerCoverage.html
Kostya Serebryanyb17e2982015-07-31 21:48:10 +0000837.. _SanitizerCoverageTraceDataFlow: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerCoverage.html#tracing-data-flow
838.. _DataFlowSanitizer: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/DataFlowSanitizer.html
Kostya Serebryany9e1a2382016-03-29 23:07:36 +0000839.. _AddressSanitizer: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/AddressSanitizer.html
Kostya Serebryany2fe93042016-04-29 18:49:55 +0000840.. _LeakSanitizer: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/LeakSanitizer.html
Kostya Serebryany5e593a42015-04-08 06:16:11 +0000841.. _Heartbleed: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heartbleed
Kostya Serebryany926b9bd2015-05-22 22:43:05 +0000842.. _FuzzerInterface.h: https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm/blob/master/lib/Fuzzer/FuzzerInterface.h
Kostya Serebryany7456af52016-04-28 15:19:05 +0000843.. _3.7.0: http://llvm.org/releases/3.7.0/docs/LibFuzzer.html
844.. _building Clang from trunk: http://clang.llvm.org/get_started.html
845.. _MemorySanitizer: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/MemorySanitizer.html
846.. _UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer.html
847.. _`coverage counters`: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerCoverage.html#coverage-counters
848.. _`caller-callee pairs`: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerCoverage.html#caller-callee-coverage
849.. _BoringSSL: https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/
850.. _`fuzz various parts of LLVM itself`: `Fuzzing components of LLVM`_