68 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
68 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
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# Fuzzing
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Surrealdb maintains a set of fuzz testing harnesses that are managed by
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[cargo-fuzz](https://github.com/rust-fuzz/cargo-fuzz).
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To build and run the fuzzer we will need to;
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- Install a specific version of the nightly compiler
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- Install cargo fuzz
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- Build a fuzz friendly version of surrealdb with our harnesses
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## Installing nightly
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One of the key requirements for high-performance fuzzing is the ability
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to collect code-coverage feedback at runtime. With the current stable
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version of rustc we can't instrument our fuzz-harnesses with coverage feedback.
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Because of this we need to use some of the more bleeding edge features
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available in the nightly release.
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Unfortunately for us the nightly release is a little unstable and there
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was a [bug](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/110475) in the
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latest version of the nightly compiler that prevents use from compiling
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some of surrealdb's depdendencies. To workaround this issue we've carefully
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picked a version of the nightly compiler that works with both cargo-fuzz
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and our dependencies. This version is `nightly-2023-04-21`. To install
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this version we simply need to run;
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`rustup install nightly-2023-04-21`
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## Installing cargo-fuzz
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Full details on the different install options are available, in the
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[cargo-fuzz book](https://rust-fuzz.github.io/book/cargo-fuzz/setup.html).
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but for the sake of brevity you can just install the basics with the
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command below.
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`cargo +nightly-2023-04-21 install cargo-fuzz`
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## Building the fuzzers
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Now that we've install cargo-fuzz we can go ahead and build our fuzzers.
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```
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cd lib
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# -O: Optimised build
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# --debug-assertions: Catch common bugs, e.g. integer overflow.
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cargo +nightly-2023-04-21 fuzz build -O --debug-assertions
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````
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## Running the fuzzer
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Now that the fuzzer has successfully built we can actually run them. To
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list the available fuzz harnesses we can use the command.
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```
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cargo +nightly-2023-04-21 fuzz list
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```
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Once we know what fuzzer (in this case fuzz_executor) we want to run we
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can it using the command;
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```
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cargo +nightly-2023-04-21 fuzz run -O --debug-assertions fuzz_executor
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```
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The previous command will run the fuzzer in libfuzzer's default mode,
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which means as a single thread. If you would like to speed fuzzing
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up we can make use of all cores, and use a dictionary file. e.g.
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```
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# -fork: Run N seperate process fuzzing in parralell in this case we
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# use nproc to match the number of processors on our local
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# machine.
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# -dict: Make use the fuzzer specific dictionary file.
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cargo +nightly-2023-04-21 fuzz run -O --debug-assertions \
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fuzz_executor -- -fork=$(nproc) \
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-dict=fuzz/fuzz_targets/fuzz_executor.dict
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```
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