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124 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
124 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
= Fuzzing Tor
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== The simple version (no fuzzing, only tests)
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Check out fuzzing-corpora, and set TOR_FUZZ_CORPORA to point to the place
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where you checked it out.
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To run the fuzzing test cases in a deterministic fashion, use:
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make test-fuzz-corpora
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This won't actually fuzz Tor! It will just run all the fuzz binaries
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on our existing set of testcases for the fuzzer.
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== Different kinds of fuzzing
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Right now we support three different kinds of fuzzer.
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First, there's American Fuzzy Lop (AFL), a fuzzer that works by forking
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a target binary and passing it lots of different inputs on stdin. It's the
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trickiest one to set up, so I'll be describing it more below.
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Second, there's libFuzzer, a llvm-based fuzzer that you link in as a library,
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and it runs a target function over and over. To use this one, you'll need to
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have a reasonably recent clang and libfuzzer installed. At that point, you
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just build with --enable-expensive-hardening and --enable-libfuzzer. That
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will produce a set of binaries in src/test/fuzz/lf-fuzz-* . These programs
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take as input a series of directories full of fuzzing examples. For more
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information on libfuzzer, see http://llvm.org/docs/LibFuzzer.html
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Third, there's Google's OSS-Fuzz infrastructure, which expects to get all of
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its. For more on this, see https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz and the
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projects/tor subdirectory. You'll need to mess around with Docker a bit to
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test this one out; it's meant to run on Google's infrastructure.
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In all cases, you'll need some starting examples to give the fuzzer when it
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starts out. There's a set in the "fuzzing-corpora" git repository. Try
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setting TOR_FUZZ_CORPORA to point to a checkout of that repository
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== Writing Tor fuzzers
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A tor fuzzing harness should have:
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* a fuzz_init() function to set up any necessary global state.
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* a fuzz_main() function to receive input and pass it to a parser.
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* a fuzz_cleanup() function to clear global state.
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Most fuzzing frameworks will produce many invalid inputs - a tor fuzzing
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harness should rejecting invalid inputs without crashing or behaving badly.
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But the fuzzing harness should crash if tor fails an assertion, triggers a
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bug, or accesses memory it shouldn't. This helps fuzzing frameworks detect
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"interesting" cases.
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== Guided Fuzzing with AFL
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There is no HTTPS, hash, or signature for American Fuzzy Lop's source code, so
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its integrity can't be verified. That said, you really shouldn't fuzz on a
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machine you care about, anyway.
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To Build:
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Get AFL from http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/afl/ and unpack it
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cd afl
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make
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cd ../tor
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PATH=$PATH:../afl/ CC="../afl/afl-gcc" ./configure --enable-expensive-hardening
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AFL_HARDEN=1 make clean fuzzers
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To Find The ASAN Memory Limit: (64-bit only)
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On 64-bit platforms, afl needs to know how much memory ASAN uses,
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because ASAN tends to allocate a ridiculous amount of virtual memory,
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and then not actually use it.
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Read afl/docs/notes_for_asan.txt for more details.
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Download recidivm from http://jwilk.net/software/recidivm
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Download the signature
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Check the signature
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tar xvzf recidivm*.tar.gz
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cd recidivm*
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make
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/path/to/recidivm -v src/test/fuzz/fuzz-http
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Use the final "ok" figure as the input to -m when calling afl-fuzz
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(Normally, recidivm would output a figure automatically, but in some cases,
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the fuzzing harness will hang when the memory limit is too small.)
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You could also just say "none" instead of the memory limit below, if you
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don't care about memory limits.
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To Run:
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mkdir -p src/test/fuzz/fuzz_http_findings
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../afl/afl-fuzz -i ${TOR_FUZZ_CORPORA}/http -o src/test/fuzz/fuzz_http_findings -m <asan-memory-limit> -- src/test/fuzz/fuzz-http
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AFL has a multi-core mode, check the documentation for details.
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You might find the included fuzz-multi.sh script useful for this.
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macOS (OS X) requires slightly more preparation, including:
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* using afl-clang (or afl-clang-fast from the llvm directory)
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* disabling external crash reporting (AFL will guide you through this step)
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== Triaging Issues
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Crashes are usually interesting, particularly if using AFL_HARDEN=1 and --enable-expensive-hardening. Sometimes crashes are due to bugs in the harness code.
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Hangs might be interesting, but they might also be spurious machine slowdowns.
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Check if a hang is reproducible before reporting it. Sometimes, processing
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valid inputs may take a second or so, particularly with the fuzzer and
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sanitizers enabled.
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To see what fuzz-http is doing with a test case, call it like this:
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src/test/fuzz/fuzz-http --debug < /path/to/test.case
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(Logging is disabled while fuzzing to increase fuzzing speed.)
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== Reporting Issues
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Please report any issues discovered using the process in Tor's security issue
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policy:
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https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/org/meetings/2016SummerDevMeeting/Notes/SecurityIssuePolicy
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