What is it? ------ This directory contains fuzz targets. Fuzz targets are simple codes using the library. They are used with a so-called fuzz driver, which will generate inputs, try to process them with the fuzz target, and alert in case of an unwanted behavior (such as a buffer overflow for instance). These targets were meant to be used with oss-fuzz but can be used in other contexts. This code was contributed by Philippe Antoine ( Catena cyber ). How to run? ------ To run the fuzz targets like oss-fuzz: ``` git clone https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz cd oss-fuzz python infra/helper.py build_image mbedtls python infra/helper.py build_fuzzers --sanitizer address mbedtls python infra/helper.py run_fuzzer mbedtls fuzz_client ``` You can use `undefined` sanitizer as well as `address` sanitizer. And you can run any of the fuzz targets like `fuzz_client`. To run the fuzz targets without oss-fuzz, you first need to install one libFuzzingEngine (libFuzzer for instance). Then you need to compile the code with the compiler flags of the wished sanitizer. ``` perl scripts/config.py set MBEDTLS_PLATFORM_TIME_ALT mkdir build cd build cmake .. make ``` Finally, you can run the targets like `./test/fuzz/fuzz_client`. Corpus generation for network traffic targets ------ These targets use network traffic as inputs : * client : simulates a client against (fuzzed) server traffic * server : simulates a server against (fuzzed) client traffic * dtls_client * dtls_server They also use the last bytes as configuration options. To generate corpus for these targets, you can do the following, not fully automated steps : * Build mbedtls programs ssl_server2 and ssl_client2 * Run them one against the other with `reproducible` option turned on while capturing traffic into test.pcap * Extract tcp payloads, for instance with tshark : `tshark -Tfields -e tcp.dstport -e tcp.payload -r test.pcap > test.txt` * Run a dummy python script to output either client or server corpus file like `python dummy.py test.txt > test.cor` * Finally, you can add the options by appending the last bytes to the file test.cor Here is an example of dummy.py for extracting payload from client to server (if we used `tcp.dstport` in tshark command) ``` import sys import binascii f = open(sys.argv[1]) for l in f.readlines(): portAndPl=l.split() if len(portAndPl) == 2: # determine client or server based on port if portAndPl[0] == "4433": print(binascii.unhexlify(portAndPl[1].replace(":",""))) ```