Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
52 lines (39 loc) · 2.32 KB

fuzzing_browsertests.md

File metadata and controls

52 lines (39 loc) · 2.32 KB

Fuzzing browsertests

Fuzzing is effective if either:

  • it's guided by code coverage, and can execute incredible numbers of test cases per second to explore the codebase (thousands); or
  • it has a smart mutator of some kind (out of scope here).

If you have an API to be fuzzed, make a simple libfuzzer fuzzer for just that API, to get the speed required to explore its attack surface. If however we want to fuzz a larger, more complex set of Chromium code, we usually need an entire browser process environment around us. The browser process takes seconds to start, preventing coverage guided fuzzing from being effective.

We now have an experimental 'in process fuzz test' framework which attempts to:

  • Start the browser process once
  • Execute lots of fuzz cases in that pre-existing browser. This may amortize the start up cost sufficiently to make such coverage-guided fuzzing plausible. We don't yet know. But this document shows how to use it, just in case.

Writing an in process fuzz case

  • Use the template chrome/test/in_process_fuzz_test.gni
  • Provide a source code file which inherits from InProcessFuzzTest. This must override the Fuzz method. You'll find that your base class inherits from the full browser test infrastructure, so you can do anything you'd do in a normal Chrome browser test.
  • In your cc file, also use the macro REGISTER_IN_PROCESS_FUZZER to declare that this is the one and only such fuzzer in your executable.

Running such an in process fuzz case

These cases can be run either with libfuzzer or centipede.

For libfuzzer, provide gn arguments use_sanitizer_coverage = true, use_libfuzzer = true, is_component_build = false and is_asan = true (other permutations may work).

This will give you a single binary you can run like this: my_fuzzer /tmp/corpus -rss_limit_mb=81920

However, you'll more likely want to use centipede which has an out-of-process co-ordinator.

To use centipede, specify use_centipede = true instead of use_libfuzzer = true. You'll then want to run centipede using some command like:

export ASAN_OPTIONS=detect_odr_violations=0 $BIN_DIR/centipede --binary=~/chromium/src/out/ASAN/html_in_process_fuzz_tests --workdir=$WD --shmem_size_mb 4096 --rss_limit_mb 0  --batch_size 100 --log_features_shards 2 --exit_on_crash 1