This mode relies on dynamic instrumentation using DynamoRIO (http://dynamorio.org/) to measure and extract target coverage. This approach has been found to introduce an overhead about 2x compared to the native execution speed, which is comparable to the original AFL in binary instrumentation mode.
In order to use it you need to
-
download and build DynamoRIO sources or download DynamoRIO Windows binary package from https://github.com/DynamoRIO/dynamorio/wiki/Downloads
-
Specify the
-DDynamoRIO_DIR
option when building WinAFL
The following instrumentation options are supported in the DynamoRIO mode:
-covtype - the type of coverage being recorded. Supported options are
bb (basic block, default) or edge.
-coverage_module - module for which to record coverage. Multiple module flags
are supported.
-target_module - module which contains the target function to be fuzzed.
Either -target_method or -target_offset need to be
specified together with this option.
-target_method - name of the method to fuzz in persistent mode. For this to
work either the method needs to be exported or the symbols
for target_module need to be available. Otherwise use
-target_offset instead.
-target_offset - offset of the method to fuzz from the start of the module.
-fuzz_iterations - Maximum number of iterations for the target function to run
before restarting the target process.
-nargs - Number of arguments the fuzzed method takes. This is used
to save/restore the arguments between runs.
-call_convention - The default calling convention is cdecl on 32-bit x86
platforms and Microsoft x64 for Visual Studio 64-bit
applications. Possible values:
* fastcall: fastcall
* ms64: Microsoft x64 (Visual Studio)
* stdcall: cdecl or stdcall
* thiscall: thiscall
-debug - Debug mode. Does not try to connect to the server. Outputs
a log file containing loaded modules, opened files and
coverage information.
-logdir - specifies in which directory the log file will be written
(only to be used with -debug).
-thread_coverage - If set, WinAFL will only collect coverage from a thread
that executed the target function
Note: If you are using pre-built binaries you'll need to download DynamoRIO release 7.1.0-1 from https://github.com/DynamoRIO/dynamorio/wiki/Downloads. If you built WinAFL from source, you can use whatever version of DynamoRIO you used to build WinAFL.
In general, you should perform the following steps when fuzzing a new target:
-
Make sure your target is running correctly without instrumentations.
-
Open the target binary in WinDbg and locate the function you want to fuzz. Note the offset of the function from the start of the module. For example, if you want to fuzz the main function and happen to have symbols around, you can use the following windbg command:
x test!main
- Make sure that the target is running correctly under DynamoRIO. For this purpose you can use the standalone debug mode of WinAFL client which does not require connecting to afl-fuzz. Make sure you use the drrun.exe and winafl.dll version which corresponds to your target (32 vs. 64 bit).
Example command line:
path\to\DynamoRIO\bin64\drrun.exe -c winafl.dll -debug
-target_module test_gdiplus.exe -target_offset 0x16e0 -fuzz_iterations 10
-nargs 2 -- test_gdiplus.exe input.bmp
You should see the output corresponding to your target function being run 10 times after which the target executable will exit. A .log file should be created in the current directory. The log file contains useful information such as the files and modules loaded by the target as well as the dump of AFL coverage map. In the log you should see pre_fuzz_handler and post_fuzz_handler being run exactly 10 times as well as your input file being open in each iteration. Note the list of loaded modules for setting the -coverage_module flag. Note that you must use the same values for module names as seen in the log file (not case sensitive).
- Now you should be ready to fuzz the target. First, make sure that both afl-fuzz.exe and winafl.dll are in the current directory. As stated earlier, the command line for afl-fuzz on Windows is:
afl-fuzz [afl options] -- [instrumentation options] -- target_cmd_line
Please refer above for the list of supported AFL and instrumentation options.
In AFL options, you must specify the DynamoRIO binaries directory via the new -D option. You need to match the DynamoRIO and winafl.dll build (32 vs. 64 bit) to the target binary. -t (timeout) option is mandatory for WinAFL as execution time can vary significantly under instrumentation so it's not a good idea to rely on the auto-determined values.
You can use the same WinAFL options as in step 2 but remember to exclude the -debug flag and you'll probably want to increase the iteration count.
As in afl-fuzz on Linux you can replace the input file parameter of the target binary with @@.
An example command line would look like:
afl-fuzz.exe -i in -o out -D C:\work\winafl\DynamoRIO\bin64 -t 20000 --
-coverage_module gdiplus.dll -coverage_module WindowsCodecs.dll
-fuzz_iterations 5000 -target_module test_gdiplus.exe -target_offset 0x16e0
-nargs 2 -- test_gdiplus.exe @@
Alternately, if symbols for test_gdiplus.exe are available, you can use -target_method instead of -target_offset like so:
afl-fuzz.exe -i in -o out -D C:\work\winafl\DynamoRIO\bin64 -t 20000 --
-coverage_module gdiplus.dll -coverage_module WindowsCodecs.dll
-fuzz_iterations 5000 -target_module test_gdiplus.exe -target_method main
-nargs 2 -- test_gdiplus.exe @@
That's it. Happy fuzzing!
This feature is a tweak for the traditional "target function" approach and aims to loosen the requirements of the target function to do both reading an input file and processing the input file.
In some applications it's quite challenging to find a target function that with a simple execution redirection won't break global states and will do both reading and processing of inputs.
This mode assumes that the target application will actually loop the target function by itself, and will handle properly its global state. For example a udp server handling packets or a js interpreter running inside a while loop.
This mode works as following:
- Your target runs until hitting the target function.
- The afl server starts instrumenting the target.
- Your target runs until hitting the target function again.
- The afl server stops instrumenting current cycle and starts a new one.
Usage:
Add the following option to the winafl arguments:
-persistence_mode in_app
-nargs
isn't necessary in this mode.
Example usage on the supplied test.exe:
afl-fuzz.exe -i in -o out -D <dynamorio bin path> -t 100+ -- -coverage_module test.exe -fuzz_iterations 5000 -target_module test.exe -target_offset 0x1000 -persistence_mode in_app -- test.exe @@ loop
The DynamoRIO client implemented in the winafl.dll
can be packaged up with
DynamoRIO to create an end-user tool, hence using drrun
for WinAFL is made
simpler by the -t
option. This is possible by running afl-fuzz.exe
in
expert mode enabled by the -e
switch.
First, create a file in the tools
subdirectory of the root of DynamoRIO called
winafl.drrun32
or winafl.drrun64
, depending on the target architecture. The
CLIENT_REL
or CLIENT_ABS
options enable drrun
to locate the WinAFL client
library. This file can also modify the default DynamoRIO runtime options (see
DynamoRIO Runtime Options) via DR_OP=
lines. As an example for a 32-bit build,
this file should contain at least the following line:
CLIENT_REL=tools/lib32/release/winafl.dll
The -msgbox_mask
option controls whether DynamoRIO uses pop-up message boxes
when presenting information. As an example, append the following lines to this
file to disable out of memory notices in case the target process reaches the
memory limit specified with the -m
option:
DR_OP=-msgbox_mask
DR_OP=0x0
Tool options can also be specified via TOOL_OP=
lines. As an example, append
the following lines to this file for a complete configuration to start fuzzing
using the supplied test_gdiplus.exe
:
TOOL_OP=-covtype
TOOL_OP=edge
TOOL_OP=-coverage_module
TOOL_OP=gdiplus.dll
TOOL_OP=-fuzz_iterations
TOOL_OP=1000
TOOL_OP=-target_module
TOOL_OP=test_gdiplus.exe
TOOL_OP=-target_method
TOOL_OP=main
TOOL_OP=-nargs
TOOL_OP=2
Now you can omit the client parameters from the command line as all the required options are set in the tool configuration file.
Make sure that the target is running correctly using WinAFL as a DynamoRIO tool:
drrun.exe -t winafl -debug -- test_gdiplus.exe input.bmp
If everything appears to be working correctly, launch afl-fuzz.exe
in expert
mode using the -e
switch:
afl-fuzz.exe -e -i in -o out -D <dynamorio bin path> -t 100+ -- -- test_gdiplus.exe @@