aflpp_driver is used to compile directly libfuzzer LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput()
targets.
Just do afl-clang-fast++ -o fuzz fuzzer_harness.cc libAFLDriver.a [plus required linking]
.
You can also sneakily do this little trick:
If this is the clang compile command to build for libfuzzer:
clang++ -o fuzz -fsanitize=fuzzer fuzzer_harness.cc -lfoo
then just switch clang++
with afl-clang-fast++
and our compiler will
magically insert libAFLDriver.a :)
To use shared-memory testcases, you need nothing to do.
To use stdin testcases give -
as the only command line parameter.
To use file input testcases give @@
as the only command line parameter.
IMPORTANT: if you use afl-cmin
or afl-cmin.bash
then either pass -
or @@
as command line parameters.
Note that you can use the driver too for frida_mode (-O
).
aflpp_qemu_driver is used for libfuzzer LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput()
targets that
are to be fuzzed in qemu_mode. So we compile them with clang/clang++, without
-fsantize=fuzzer or afl-clang-fast, and link in libAFLQemuDriver.a:
clang++ -o fuzz fuzzer_harness.cc libAFLQemuDriver.a [plus required linking]
.
Then just do (where the name of the binary is fuzz
):
AFL_QEMU_PERSISTENT_ADDR=0x$(nm fuzz | grep "T LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput" | awk '{print $1}')
AFL_QEMU_PERSISTENT_HOOK=/path/to/aflpp_qemu_driver_hook.so afl-fuzz -Q ... -- ./fuzz`
if you use afl-cmin or afl-showmap -C
with the aflpp_qemu_driver you need to
set the set same AFL_QEMU_... (or AFL_FRIDA_...) environment variables.
If you want to use afl-showmap (without -C) or afl-cmin.bash then you may not
set these environment variables and rather set AFL_QEMU_DRIVER_NO_HOOK=1
.