This file describes how you can implement custom mutations to be used in AFL. For now, we support C/C++ library and Python module, collectivelly named as the custom mutator.
There is also experimental support for Rust in custom_mutators/rust
.
Please refer to that directory for documentation.
Run cargo doc -p custom_mutator --open
in that directory to view the
documentation in your web browser.
Implemented by
- C/C++ library (
*.so
): Khaled Yakdan from Code Intelligence ([email protected]) - Python module: Christian Holler from Mozilla ([email protected])
Custom mutators can be passed to afl-fuzz
to perform custom mutations on test
cases beyond those available in AFL. For example, to enable structure-aware
fuzzing by using libraries that perform mutations according to a given grammar.
The custom mutator is passed to afl-fuzz
via the AFL_CUSTOM_MUTATOR_LIBRARY
or AFL_PYTHON_MODULE
environment variable, and must export a fuzz function.
Now afl also supports multiple custom mutators which can be specified in the same AFL_CUSTOM_MUTATOR_LIBRARY
environment variable like this.
export AFL_CUSTOM_MUTATOR_LIBRARY="full/path/to/mutator_first.so;full/path/to/mutator_second.so"
Please see APIs and Usage for detail.
The custom mutation stage is set to be the first non-deterministic stage (right before the havoc stage).
Note: If AFL_CUSTOM_MUTATOR_ONLY
is set, all mutations will solely be
performed with the custom mutator.
C/C++:
void *afl_custom_init(afl_state_t *afl, unsigned int seed);
unsigned int afl_custom_fuzz_count(void *data, const unsigned char *buf, size_t buf_size);
size_t afl_custom_fuzz(void *data, unsigned char *buf, size_t buf_size, unsigned char **out_buf, unsigned char *add_buf, size_t add_buf_size, size_t max_size);
const char *afl_custom_describe(void *data, size_t max_description_len);
size_t afl_custom_post_process(void *data, unsigned char *buf, size_t buf_size, unsigned char **out_buf);
int afl_custom_init_trim(void *data, unsigned char *buf, size_t buf_size);
size_t afl_custom_trim(void *data, unsigned char **out_buf);
int afl_custom_post_trim(void *data, unsigned char success);
size_t afl_custom_havoc_mutation(void *data, unsigned char *buf, size_t buf_size, unsigned char **out_buf, size_t max_size);
unsigned char afl_custom_havoc_mutation_probability(void *data);
unsigned char afl_custom_queue_get(void *data, const unsigned char *filename);
void afl_custom_queue_new_entry(void *data, const unsigned char *filename_new_queue, const unsigned int *filename_orig_queue);
const char* afl_custom_introspection(my_mutator_t *data);
void afl_custom_deinit(void *data);
Python:
def init(seed):
pass
def fuzz_count(buf, add_buf, max_size):
return cnt
def fuzz(buf, add_buf, max_size):
return mutated_out
def describe(max_description_length):
return "description_of_current_mutation"
def post_process(buf):
return out_buf
def init_trim(buf):
return cnt
def trim():
return out_buf
def post_trim(success):
return next_index
def havoc_mutation(buf, max_size):
return mutated_out
def havoc_mutation_probability():
return probability # int in [0, 100]
def queue_get(filename):
return True
def queue_new_entry(filename_new_queue, filename_orig_queue):
pass
def introspection():
return string
-
init
:This method is called when AFL++ starts up and is used to seed RNG and set up buffers and state.
-
queue_get
(optional):This method determines whether the custom fuzzer should fuzz the current queue entry or not
-
fuzz_count
(optional):When a queue entry is selected to be fuzzed, afl-fuzz selects the number of fuzzing attempts with this input based on a few factors. If however the custom mutator wants to set this number instead on how often it is called for a specific queue entry, use this function. This function is most useful if
AFL_CUSTOM_MUTATOR_ONLY
is not used. -
fuzz
(optional):This method performs custom mutations on a given input. It also accepts an additional test case. Note that this function is optional - but it makes sense to use it. You would only skip this if
post_process
is used to fix checksums etc. so if you are using it e.g. as a post processing library. -
describe
(optional):When this function is called, it shall describe the current testcase, generated by the last mutation. This will be called, for example, to name the written testcase file after a crash occurred. Using it can help to reproduce crashing mutations.
-
havoc_mutation
andhavoc_mutation_probability
(optional):havoc_mutation
performs a single custom mutation on a given input. This mutation is stacked with other mutations in havoc. The other method,havoc_mutation_probability
, returns the probability thathavoc_mutation
is called in havoc. By default, it is 6%. -
post_process
(optional):For some cases, the format of the mutated data returned from the custom mutator is not suitable to directly execute the target with this input. For example, when using libprotobuf-mutator, the data returned is in a protobuf format which corresponds to a given grammar. In order to execute the target, the protobuf data must be converted to the plain-text format expected by the target. In such scenarios, the user can define the
post_process
function. This function is then transforming the data into the format expected by the API before executing the target.This can return any python object that implements the buffer protocol and supports PyBUF_SIMPLE. These include bytes, bytearray, etc.
-
queue_new_entry
(optional):This methods is called after adding a new test case to the queue.
-
introspection
(optional):This method is called after a new queue entry, crash or timeout is discovered if compiled with INTROSPECTION. The custom mutator can then return a string (const char *) that reports the exact mutations used.
-
deinit
:The last method to be called, deinitializing the state.
Note that there are also three functions for trimming as described in the next section.
The generic trimming routines implemented in AFL++ can easily destroy the structure of complex formats, possibly leading to a point where you have a lot of test cases in the queue that your Python module cannot process anymore but your target application still accepts. This is especially the case when your target can process a part of the input (causing coverage) and then errors out on the remaining input.
In such cases, it makes sense to implement a custom trimming routine. The API consists of multiple methods because after each trimming step, we have to go back into the C code to check if the coverage bitmap is still the same for the trimmed input. Here's a quick API description:
-
init_trim
(optional):This method is called at the start of each trimming operation and receives the initial buffer. It should return the amount of iteration steps possible on this input (e.g. if your input has n elements and you want to remove them one by one, return n, if you do a binary search, return log(n), and so on).
If your trimming algorithm doesn't allow to determine the amount of (remaining) steps easily (esp. while running), then you can alternatively return 1 here and always return 0 in
post_trim
until you are finished and no steps remain. In that case, returning 1 inpost_trim
will end the trimming routine. The whole current index/max iterations stuff is only used to show progress. -
trim
(optional)This method is called for each trimming operation. It doesn't have any arguments because we already have the initial buffer from
init_trim
and we can memorize the current state in the data variables. This can also save reparsing steps for each iteration. It should return the trimmed input buffer, where the returned data must not exceed the initial input data in length. Returning anything that is larger than the original data (passed toinit_trim
) will result in a fatal abort of AFL++. -
post_trim
(optional)This method is called after each trim operation to inform you if your trimming step was successful or not (in terms of coverage). If you receive a failure here, you should reset your input to the last known good state. In any case, this method must return the next trim iteration index (from 0 to the maximum amount of steps you returned in
init_trim
).
Omitting any of three trimming methods will cause the trimming to be disabled and trigger a fallback to the builtin default trimming routine.
Optionally, the following environment variables are supported:
-
AFL_CUSTOM_MUTATOR_ONLY
Disable all other mutation stages. This can prevent broken testcases (those that your Python module can't work with anymore) to fill up your queue. Best combined with a custom trimming routine (see below) because trimming can cause the same test breakage like havoc and splice.
-
AFL_PYTHON_ONLY
Deprecated and removed, use
AFL_CUSTOM_MUTATOR_ONLY
instead. -
AFL_DEBUG
When combined with
AFL_NO_UI
, this causes the C trimming code to emit additional messages about the performance and actions of your custom trimmer. Use this to see if it works :)
For Python mutators, the python 3 or 2 development package is required. On Debian/Ubuntu/Kali it can be installed like this:
sudo apt install python3-dev
# or
sudo apt install python-dev
Then, AFL++ can be compiled with Python support. The AFL++ Makefile detects
Python 2 and 3 through python-config
if it is in the PATH and compiles
afl-fuzz
with the feature if available.
Note: for some distributions, you might also need the package python[23]-apt
.
In case your setup is different, set the necessary variables like this:
PYTHON_INCLUDE=/path/to/python/include LDFLAGS=-L/path/to/python/lib make
.
For C/C++ mutators, the source code must be compiled as a shared object:
gcc -shared -Wall -O3 example.c -o example.so
Note that if you specify multiple custom mutators, the corresponding functions will
be called in the order in which they are specified. e.g first post_process
function of
example_first.so
will be called and then that of example_second.so
.
C/C++
export AFL_CUSTOM_MUTATOR_LIBRARY="/full/path/to/example_first.so;/full/path/to/example_second.so"
afl-fuzz /path/to/program
Python
export PYTHONPATH=`dirname /full/path/to/example.py`
export AFL_PYTHON_MODULE=example
afl-fuzz /path/to/program
Please see example.c and example.py