| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:05:59 -05:00
										 |  |  | ========
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Fuzzing
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ========
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | This document describes the virtual-device fuzzing infrastructure in QEMU and
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | how to use it to implement additional fuzzers.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Basics
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ------
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Fuzzing operates by passing inputs to an entry point/target function. The
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | fuzzer tracks the code coverage triggered by the input. Based on these
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | findings, the fuzzer mutates the input and repeats the fuzzing.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | To fuzz QEMU, we rely on libfuzzer. Unlike other fuzzers such as AFL, libfuzzer
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | is an *in-process* fuzzer. For the developer, this means that it is their
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | responsibility to ensure that state is reset between fuzzing-runs.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Building the fuzzers
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | --------------------
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | To build the fuzzers, install a recent version of clang:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Configure with (substitute the clang binaries with the version you installed).
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Here, enable-sanitizers, is optional but it allows us to reliably detect bugs
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | such as out-of-bounds accesses, use-after-frees, double-frees etc.::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     CC=clang-8 CXX=clang++-8 /path/to/configure --enable-fuzzing \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |                                                 --enable-sanitizers
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Fuzz targets are built similarly to system targets::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:06:00 -05:00
										 |  |  |     make qemu-fuzz-i386
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:05:59 -05:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:06:00 -05:00
										 |  |  | This builds ``./qemu-fuzz-i386``
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:05:59 -05:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | The first option to this command is: ``--fuzz-target=FUZZ_NAME``
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | To list all of the available fuzzers run ``qemu-fuzz-i386`` with no arguments.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | For example::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:06:00 -05:00
										 |  |  |     ./qemu-fuzz-i386 --fuzz-target=virtio-scsi-fuzz
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:05:59 -05:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Internally, libfuzzer parses all arguments that do not begin with ``"--"``.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Information about these is available by passing ``-help=1``
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Now the only thing left to do is wait for the fuzzer to trigger potential
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | crashes.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Useful libFuzzer flags
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ----------------------
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | As mentioned above, libFuzzer accepts some arguments. Passing ``-help=1`` will
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | list the available arguments. In particular, these arguments might be helpful:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | * ``CORPUS_DIR/`` : Specify a directory as the last argument to libFuzzer.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   libFuzzer stores each "interesting" input in this corpus directory. The next
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   time you run libFuzzer, it will read all of the inputs from the corpus, and
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   continue fuzzing from there. You can also specify multiple directories.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   libFuzzer loads existing inputs from all specified directories, but will only
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   write new ones to the first one specified.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | * ``-max_len=4096`` : specify the maximum byte-length of the inputs libFuzzer
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   will generate.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | * ``-close_fd_mask={1,2,3}`` : close, stderr, or both. Useful for targets that
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   trigger many debug/error messages, or create output on the serial console.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | * ``-jobs=4 -workers=4`` : These arguments configure libFuzzer to run 4 fuzzers in
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   parallel (4 fuzzing jobs in 4 worker processes). Alternatively, with only
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   ``-jobs=N``, libFuzzer automatically spawns a number of workers less than or equal
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   to half the available CPU cores. Replace 4 with a number appropriate for your
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   machine. Make sure to specify a ``CORPUS_DIR``, which will allow the parallel
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   fuzzers to share information about the interesting inputs they find.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | * ``-use_value_profile=1`` : For each comparison operation, libFuzzer computes
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   ``(caller_pc&4095) | (popcnt(Arg1 ^ Arg2) << 12)`` and places this in the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   coverage table. Useful for targets with "magic" constants. If Arg1 came from
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   the fuzzer's input and Arg2 is a magic constant, then each time the Hamming
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   distance between Arg1 and Arg2 decreases, libFuzzer adds the input to the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   corpus.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | * ``-shrink=1`` : Tries to make elements of the corpus "smaller". Might lead to
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   better coverage performance, depending on the target.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Note that libFuzzer's exact behavior will depend on the version of
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | clang and libFuzzer used to build the device fuzzers.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Generating Coverage Reports
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ---------------------------
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Code coverage is a crucial metric for evaluating a fuzzer's performance.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | libFuzzer's output provides a "cov: " column that provides a total number of
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | unique blocks/edges covered. To examine coverage on a line-by-line basis we
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | can use Clang coverage:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |  1. Configure libFuzzer to store a corpus of all interesting inputs (see
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     CORPUS_DIR above)
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |  2. ``./configure`` the QEMU build with ::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     --enable-fuzzing \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     --extra-cflags="-fprofile-instr-generate -fcoverage-mapping"
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |  3. Re-run the fuzzer. Specify $CORPUS_DIR/* as an argument, telling libfuzzer
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     to execute all of the inputs in $CORPUS_DIR and exit. Once the process
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     exits, you should find a file, "default.profraw" in the working directory.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |  4. Execute these commands to generate a detailed HTML coverage-report::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |       llvm-profdata merge -output=default.profdata default.profraw
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |       llvm-cov show ./path/to/qemu-fuzz-i386 -instr-profile=default.profdata \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |       --format html -output-dir=/path/to/output/report
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Adding a new fuzzer
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | -------------------
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Coverage over virtual devices can be improved by adding additional fuzzers.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Fuzzers are kept in ``tests/qtest/fuzz/`` and should be added to
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2021-01-17 15:10:13 -05:00
										 |  |  | ``tests/qtest/fuzz/meson.build``
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:05:59 -05:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Fuzzers can rely on both qtest and libqos to communicate with virtual devices.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 1. Create a new source file. For example ``tests/qtest/fuzz/foo-device-fuzz.c``.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 2. Write the fuzzing code using the libqtest/libqos API. See existing fuzzers
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |    for reference.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2021-01-17 15:10:13 -05:00
										 |  |  | 3. Add the fuzzer to ``tests/qtest/fuzz/meson.build``.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:05:59 -05:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Fuzzers can be more-or-less thought of as special qtest programs which can
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | modify the qtest commands and/or qtest command arguments based on inputs
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | provided by libfuzzer. Libfuzzer passes a byte array and length. Commonly the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | fuzzer loops over the byte-array interpreting it as a list of qtest commands,
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | addresses, or values.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | The Generic Fuzzer
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ------------------
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Writing a fuzz target can be a lot of effort (especially if a device driver has
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | not be built-out within libqos). Many devices can be fuzzed to some degree,
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | without any device-specific code, using the generic-fuzz target.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | The generic-fuzz target is capable of fuzzing devices over their PIO, MMIO,
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | and DMA input-spaces. To apply the generic-fuzz to a device, we need to define
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | two env-variables, at minimum:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | * ``QEMU_FUZZ_ARGS=`` is the set of QEMU arguments used to configure a machine, with
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   the device attached. For example, if we want to fuzz the virtio-net device
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   attached to a pc-i440fx machine, we can specify::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     QEMU_FUZZ_ARGS="-M pc -nodefaults -netdev user,id=user0 \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     -device virtio-net,netdev=user0"
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | * ``QEMU_FUZZ_OBJECTS=`` is a set of space-delimited strings used to identify
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   the MemoryRegions that will be fuzzed. These strings are compared against
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   MemoryRegion names and MemoryRegion owner names, to decide whether each
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   MemoryRegion should be fuzzed. These strings support globbing. For the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   virtio-net example, we could use one of ::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     QEMU_FUZZ_OBJECTS='virtio-net'
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     QEMU_FUZZ_OBJECTS='virtio*'
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     QEMU_FUZZ_OBJECTS='virtio* pcspk' # Fuzz the virtio devices and the speaker
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     QEMU_FUZZ_OBJECTS='*' # Fuzz the whole machine``
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | The ``"info mtree"`` and ``"info qom-tree"`` monitor commands can be especially
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | useful for identifying the ``MemoryRegion`` and ``Object`` names used for
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | matching.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | As a generic rule-of-thumb, the more ``MemoryRegions``/Devices we match, the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | greater the input-space, and the smaller the probability of finding crashing
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | inputs for individual devices. As such, it is usually a good idea to limit the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | fuzzer to only a few ``MemoryRegions``.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | To ensure that these env variables have been configured correctly, we can use::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     ./qemu-fuzz-i386 --fuzz-target=generic-fuzz -runs=0
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | The output should contain a complete list of matched MemoryRegions.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2021-01-17 18:09:23 -05:00
										 |  |  | OSS-Fuzz
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | --------
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2021-10-04 17:52:36 -04:00
										 |  |  | QEMU is continuously fuzzed on `OSS-Fuzz
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | <https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz>`_.  By default, the OSS-Fuzz build
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | will try to fuzz every fuzz-target. Since the generic-fuzz target
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | requires additional information provided in environment variables, we
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | pre-define some generic-fuzz configs in
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2021-01-17 18:09:23 -05:00
										 |  |  | ``tests/qtest/fuzz/generic_fuzz_configs.h``. Each config must specify:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - ``.name``: To identify the fuzzer config
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - ``.args`` OR ``.argfunc``: A string or pointer to a function returning a
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   string.  These strings are used to specify the ``QEMU_FUZZ_ARGS``
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   environment variable.  ``argfunc`` is useful when the config relies on e.g.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   a dynamically created temp directory, or a free tcp/udp port.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - ``.objects``: A string that specifies the ``QEMU_FUZZ_OBJECTS`` environment
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   variable.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | To fuzz additional devices/device configuration on OSS-Fuzz, send patches for
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | either a new device-specific fuzzer or a new generic-fuzz config.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Build details:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - The Dockerfile that sets up the environment for building QEMU's
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   fuzzers on OSS-Fuzz can be fund in the OSS-Fuzz repository
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   __(https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz/blob/master/projects/qemu/Dockerfile)
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - The script responsible for building the fuzzers can be found in the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   QEMU source tree at ``scripts/oss-fuzz/build.sh``
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2021-03-13 23:23:57 -05:00
										 |  |  | Building Crash Reproducers
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | -----------------------------------------
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | When we find a crash, we should try to create an independent reproducer, that
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | can be used on a non-fuzzer build of QEMU. This filters out any potential
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | false-positives, and improves the debugging experience for developers.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Here are the steps for building a reproducer for a crash found by the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | generic-fuzz target.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Ensure the crash reproduces::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     qemu-fuzz-i386 --fuzz-target... ./crash-...
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Gather the QTest output for the crash::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     QEMU_FUZZ_TIMEOUT=0 QTEST_LOG=1 FUZZ_SERIALIZE_QTEST=1 \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     qemu-fuzz-i386 --fuzz-target... ./crash-... &> /tmp/trace
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Reorder and clean-up the resulting trace::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     scripts/oss-fuzz/reorder_fuzzer_qtest_trace.py /tmp/trace > /tmp/reproducer
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Get the arguments needed to start qemu, and provide a path to qemu::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     less /tmp/trace # The args should be logged at the top of this file
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     export QEMU_ARGS="-machine ..."
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     export QEMU_PATH="path/to/qemu-system"
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Ensure the crash reproduces in qemu-system::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     $QEMU_PATH $QEMU_ARGS -qtest stdio < /tmp/reproducer
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - From the crash output, obtain some string that identifies the crash. This
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   can be a line in the stack-trace, for example::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     export CRASH_TOKEN="hw/usb/hcd-xhci.c:1865"
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Minimize the reproducer::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     scripts/oss-fuzz/minimize_qtest_trace.py -M1 -M2 \
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |       /tmp/reproducer /tmp/reproducer-minimized
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Confirm that the minimized reproducer still crashes::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     $QEMU_PATH $QEMU_ARGS -qtest stdio < /tmp/reproducer-minimized
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Create a one-liner reproducer that can be sent over email::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     ./scripts/oss-fuzz/output_reproducer.py -bash /tmp/reproducer-minimized
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Output the C source code for a test case that will reproduce the bug::
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     ./scripts/oss-fuzz/output_reproducer.py -owner "John Smith <john@smith.com>"\
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |       -name "test_function_name" /tmp/reproducer-minimized
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | - Report the bug and send a patch with the C reproducer upstream
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:05:59 -05:00
										 |  |  | Implementation Details / Fuzzer Lifecycle
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | -----------------------------------------
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | The fuzzer has two entrypoints that libfuzzer calls. libfuzzer provides it's
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | own ``main()``, which performs some setup, and calls the entrypoints:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ``LLVMFuzzerInitialize``: called prior to fuzzing. Used to initialize all of the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | necessary state
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ``LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput``: called for each fuzzing run. Processes the input and
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | resets the state at the end of each run.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | In more detail:
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ``LLVMFuzzerInitialize`` parses the arguments to the fuzzer (must start with two
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | dashes, so they are ignored by libfuzzer ``main()``). Currently, the arguments
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | select the fuzz target. Then, the qtest client is initialized. If the target
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | requires qos, qgraph is set up and the QOM/LIBQOS modules are initialized.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Then the QGraph is walked and the QEMU cmd_line is determined and saved.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2022-08-19 22:27:54 +09:00
										 |  |  | After this, the ``vl.c:main`` is called to set up the guest. There are
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | target-specific hooks that can be called before and after main, for
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:05:59 -05:00
										 |  |  | additional setup(e.g. PCI setup, or VM snapshotting).
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | ``LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput``: Uses qtest/qos functions to act based on the fuzz
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | input. It is also responsible for manually calling ``main_loop_wait`` to ensure
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | that bottom halves are executed and any cleanup required before the next input.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | Since the same process is reused for many fuzzing runs, QEMU state needs to
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2023-02-04 23:29:51 -05:00
										 |  |  | be reset at the end of each run. For example, this can be done by rebooting the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | VM, after each run.
 | 
					
						
							| 
									
										
										
										
											2020-11-06 13:05:59 -05:00
										 |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   - *Pros*: Straightforward and fast for simple fuzz targets.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   - *Cons*: Depending on the device, does not reset all device state. If the
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     device requires some initialization prior to being ready for fuzzing (common
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     for QOS-based targets), this initialization needs to be done after each
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |     reboot.
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  | 
 | 
					
						
							|  |  |  |   - *Example target*: ``i440fx-qtest-reboot-fuzz``
 |