12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334 |
- Fuzzing the lwIP stack (afl-fuzz requires linux/unix or similar)
- This directory contains a small app that reads Ethernet frames from stdin and
- processes them. It is used together with the 'american fuzzy lop' tool (found
- at http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/afl/) and the sample inputs to test how
- unexpected inputs are handled. The afl tool will read the known inputs, and
- try to modify them to exercise as many code paths as possible, by instrumenting
- the code and keeping track of which code is executed.
- Just running make will produce the test program.
- Then run afl with:
- afl-fuzz -i inputs/<INPUT> -o output ./lwip_fuzz
- and it should start working. It will probably complain about CPU scheduler,
- set AFL_SKIP_CPUFREQ=1 to ignore it.
- If it complains about invalid "/proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern" setting, try
- executing "sudo bash -c 'echo core > /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern'".
- The input is split into different subdirectories since they test different
- parts of the code, and since you want to run one instance of afl-fuzz on each
- core.
- When afl finds a crash or a hang, the input that caused it will be placed in
- the output directory. If you have hexdump and text2pcap tools installed,
- running output_to_pcap.sh <outputdir> will create pcap files for each input
- file to simplify viewing in wireshark.
- The lwipopts.h file needs to have checksum checking off, otherwise almost every
- packet will be discarded because of that. The other options can be tuned to
- expose different parts of the code.
|