dash/doc/fuzzing.md

4.6 KiB

Fuzz-testing Dash Core

A special test harness in src/test/fuzz/ is provided for each fuzz target to provide an easy entry point for fuzzers and the like. In this document we'll describe how to use it with AFL and libFuzzer.

Preparing fuzzing

The fuzzer needs some inputs to work on, but the inputs or seeds can be used interchangeably between libFuzzer and AFL.

Extract the example seeds (or other starting inputs) into the inputs directory before starting fuzzing.

git clone https://github.com/bitcoin-core/qa-assets
export DIR_FUZZ_IN=$PWD/qa-assets/fuzz_seed_corpus

AFL needs an input directory with examples, and an output directory where it will place examples that it found. These can be anywhere in the file system, we'll define environment variables to make it easy to reference them.

So, only for AFL you need to configure the outputs path:

mkdir outputs
export AFLOUT=$PWD/outputs

libFuzzer will use the input directory as output directory.

AFL

Building AFL

It is recommended to always use the latest version of afl:

wget http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/afl/releases/afl-latest.tgz
tar -zxvf afl-latest.tgz
cd afl-<version>
make
export AFLPATH=$PWD

For macOS you may need to ignore x86 compilation checks when running make: AFL_NO_X86=1 make.

Instrumentation

To build Dash Core using AFL instrumentation (this assumes that the AFLPATH was set as above):

./configure --disable-shared --enable-tests --enable-fuzz CC=${AFLPATH}/afl-gcc CXX=${AFLPATH}/afl-g++
export AFL_HARDEN=1
make

If you are using clang you will need to substitute afl-gcc with afl-clang and afl-g++ with afl-clang++, so the first line above becomes:

./configure --disable-shared --enable-tests --enable-fuzz CC=${AFLPATH}/afl-clang CXX=${AFLPATH}/afl-clang++

We disable ccache because we don't want to pollute the ccache with instrumented objects, and similarly don't want to use non-instrumented cached objects linked in.

The fuzzing can be sped up significantly (~200x) by using afl-clang-fast and afl-clang-fast++ in place of afl-gcc and afl-g++ when compiling. When compiling using afl-clang-fast/afl-clang-fast++ the resulting binary will be instrumented in such a way that the AFL features "persistent mode" and "deferred forkserver" can be used. See https://github.com/google/AFL/tree/master/llvm_mode for details.

Fuzzing

To start the actual fuzzing use:

export FUZZ_TARGET=bech32  # Pick a fuzz_target
mkdir ${AFLOUT}/${FUZZ_TARGET}
$AFLPATH/afl-fuzz -i ${DIR_FUZZ_IN}/${FUZZ_TARGET} -o ${AFLOUT}/${FUZZ_TARGET} -m52 -- src/test/fuzz/${FUZZ_TARGET}

You may have to change a few kernel parameters to test optimally - afl-fuzz will print an error and suggestion if so.

On macOS you may need to set AFL_NO_FORKSRV=1 to get the target to run.

export FUZZ_TARGET=bech32  # Pick a fuzz_target
mkdir ${AFLOUT}/${FUZZ_TARGET}
AFL_NO_FORKSRV=1 $AFLPATH/afl-fuzz -i ${DIR_FUZZ_IN}/${FUZZ_TARGET} -o ${AFLOUT}/${FUZZ_TARGET} -m52 -- src/test/fuzz/${FUZZ_TARGET}

libFuzzer

A recent version of clang, the address/undefined sanitizers (ASan/UBSan) and libFuzzer is needed (all found in the compiler-rt runtime libraries package).

To build all fuzz targets with libFuzzer, run

./configure --enable-fuzz --with-sanitizers=fuzzer,address,undefined CC=clang CXX=clang++
make

See https://llvm.org/docs/LibFuzzer.html#running on how to run the libFuzzer instrumented executable.

Alternatively, you can run the script through the fuzzing test harness (only libFuzzer supported so far). You need to pass it the inputs directory and the specific test target you want to run.

./test/fuzz/test_runner.py ${DIR_FUZZ_IN} bech32

macOS hints for libFuzzer

The default clang/llvm version supplied by Apple on macOS does not include fuzzing libraries, so macOS users will need to install a full version, for example using brew install llvm.

Should you run into problems with the address sanitizer, it is possible you may need to run ./configure with --disable-asm to avoid errors with certain assembly code from Bitcoin Core's code. See developer notes on sanitizers for more information.

You may also need to take care of giving the correct path for clang and clang++, like CC=/path/to/clang CXX=/path/to/clang++ if the non-systems clang does not come first in your path.

Full configure that was tested on macOS Catalina with brew installed llvm:

./configure --enable-fuzz --with-sanitizers=fuzzer,address,undefined CC=/usr/local/opt/llvm/bin/clang CXX=/usr/local/opt/llvm/bin/clang++ --disable-asm