488 lines
20 KiB
Groff
488 lines
20 KiB
Groff
.TH zzuf 1 "2010-01-31" "zzuf @PACKAGE_VERSION@"
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.SH NAME
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zzuf \- multiple purpose fuzzer
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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\fBzzuf\fR [\fB\-aAcdimnqSvx\fR]
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[\fB\-s\fR \fIseed\fR|\fB\-s\fR \fIstart:stop\fR]
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[\fB\-r\fR \fIratio\fR|\fB\-r\fR \fImin:max\fR]
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[\fB\-f\fR \fIfuzzing\fR] [\fB\-D\fR \fIdelay\fR] [\fB\-j\fR \fIjobs\fR]
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[\fB\-C\fR \fIcrashes\fR] [\fB\-B\fR \fIbytes\fR] [\fB\-t\fR \fIseconds\fR]
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[\fB\-T\fR \fIseconds\fR] [\fB\-U\fR \fIseconds\fR] [\fB\-M\fR \fImebibytes\fR]
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[\fB\-b\fR \fIranges\fR] [\fB\-p\fR \fIports\fR] [\fB\-P\fR \fIprotect\fR]
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[\fB\-R\fR \fIrefuse\fR] [\fB\-l\fR \fIlist\fR] [\fB\-I\fR \fIinclude\fR]
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[\fB\-E\fR \fIexclude\fR] [\fB\-O\fR \fIopmode\fR]
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[\fIPROGRAM\fR [\fIARGS\fR]...]
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.br
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\fBzzuf \-h\fR | \fB\-\-help\fR
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.br
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\fBzzuf \-V\fR | \fB\-\-version\fR
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.PP
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\fBzzuf\fR is a transparent application input fuzzer. It works by intercepting
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file and network operations and changing random bits in the program's input.
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\fBzzuf\fR's behaviour is deterministic, making it easy to reproduce bugs.
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.SH USAGE
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.PP
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\fBzzuf\fR will run an application specified on its command line, one or
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several times, with optional arguments, and will report the application's
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relevant behaviour on the standard error channel, eg:
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.PP
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\fB zzuf cat /dev/zero\fR
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.PP
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Flags found after the application name are considered arguments for the
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application, not for \fBzzuf\fR. For instance, \fB\-v\fR below is an
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argument for \fBcat\fR:
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.PP
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\fB zzuf \-B 1000 cat \-v /dev/zero\fR
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.PP
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When no program is specified, \fBzzuf\fR simply fuzzes the standard input, as
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if the \fBcat\fR utility had been called:
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.PP
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\fB zzuf < /dev/zero\fR
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.SH OPTIONS
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.TP
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\fB\-a\fR, \fB\-\-allow\fR=\fIlist\fR
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Only fuzz network input for IPs in \fIlist\fR, a comma-separated list of
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IP addresses. If the list starts with \fB!\fR, the flag meaning is reversed
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and all addresses are fuzzed except the ones in the list.
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As of now, this flag only understands INET (IPv4) addresses.
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This option requires network fuzzing to be activated using \fB\-n\fR.
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.TP
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\fB\-A\fR, \fB\-\-autoinc\fR
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Increment random seed each time a new file is opened. This is only required
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if one instance of the application is expected to open the same file several
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times and you want to test a different seed each time.
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.TP
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\fB\-b\fR, \fB\-\-bytes\fR=\fIranges\fR
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Restrict fuzzing to bytes whose offsets in the file are within \fIranges\fR.
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Range values start at zero and are inclusive. Use dashes between range values
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and commas between ranges. If the right-hand part of a range is ommited, it
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means end of file. For instance, to restrict fuzzing to bytes 0, 3, 4, 5 and
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all bytes after offset 31, use \(oq\fB\-b0,3\-5,31\-\fR\(cq.
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This option is useful to preserve file headers or corrupt only a specific
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portion of a file.
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.TP
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\fB\-B\fR, \fB\-\-max\-bytes\fR=\fIn\fR
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Automatically stop after \fIn\fR bytes have been output.
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This either terminates child processes that output more than \fIn\fR bytes
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on the standard output and standard error channels, or stop reading from
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standard input if no program is being fuzzed.
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This is useful to detect infinite loops. See also the \fB\-U\fR and \fB\-T\fR
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flags.
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.TP
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\fB\-c\fR, \fB\-\-cmdline\fR
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Only fuzz files whose name is specified in the target application's command
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line. This is mostly a shortcut to avoid specifying the argument twice:
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\fB zzuf \-c cat file.txt\fR
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has the same effect as
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\fB zzuf \-I \(aq^file\\.txt$\(aq cat file.txt\fR
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See the \fB\-I\fR flag for more information on restricting fuzzing to
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specific files.
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.TP
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\fB\-C\fR, \fB\-\-max\-crashes\fR=\fIn\fR
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Stop forking when at least \fIn\fR children have crashed. The default value
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is 1, meaning \fBzzuf\fR will stop as soon as one child has crashed. A value
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of 0 tells \fBzzuf\fR to never stop.
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Note that \fBzzuf\fR will not kill any remaining children once \fIn\fR is
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reached. To ensure that processes do not last forever, see the \fB\-U\fR
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flag.
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A process is considered to have crashed if any signal (such as, but not limited
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to, \fBSIGSEGV\fR) caused it to exit. If the \fB\-x\fR flag is used, this will
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also include processes that exit with a non-zero status.
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This option is only relevant if the \fB\-s\fR flag is used with a range
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argument. See also the \fB\-t\fR flag.
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.TP
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\fB\-d\fR, \fB\-\-debug\fR
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Activate the display of debug messages. Can be specified multiple times for
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increased verbosity.
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.TP
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\fB\-D\fR, \fB\-\-delay\fR=\fIdelay\fR
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Do not launch more than one process every \fIdelay\fR seconds. This option
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should be used together with \fB\-j\fR to avoid fork bombs.
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.TP
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\fB\-E\fR, \fB\-\-exclude\fR=\fIregex\fR
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Do not fuzz files whose name matches the \fIregex\fR regular expression. This
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option supersedes anything that is specified by the \fB\-I\fR flag. Use this
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for instance if you are unsure of what files your application is going to read
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and do not want it to fuzz files in the \fB/etc\fR directory.
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Multiple \fB\-E\fR flags can be specified, in which case files matching any one
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of the regular expressions will be ignored.
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.TP
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\fB\-f\fR, \fB\-\-fuzzing\fR=\fImode\fR
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Select how the input is fuzzed. Valid values for \fImode\fR are:
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.RS
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.TP
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\fBxor\fR
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randomly set and unset bits
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.TP
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\fBset\fR
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only set bits
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.TP
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\fBunset\fR
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only unset bits
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.RE
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.IP
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The default value for \fImode\fR is \fBxor\fR.
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.TP
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\fB\-j\fR, \fB\-\-jobs\fR=\fIjobs\fR
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Specify the number of simultaneous children that can be run. By default,
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\fBzzuf\fR only launches one process at a time.
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This option is only relevant if the \fB\-s\fR flag is used with a range
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argument. See also the \fB\-D\fR flag.
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.TP
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\fB\-i\fR, \fB\-\-stdin\fR
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Fuzz the application's standard input. By default \fBzzuf\fR only fuzzes files.
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.TP
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\fB\-I\fR, \fB\-\-include\fR=\fIregex\fR
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Only fuzz files whose name matches the \fIregex\fR regular expression. Use
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this for instance if your application reads configuration files at startup
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and you only want specific files to be fuzzed.
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Multiple \fB\-I\fR flags can be specified, in which case files matching any one
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of the regular expressions will be fuzzed. See also the \fB\-c\fR flag.
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.TP
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\fB\-l\fR, \fB\-\-list\fR=\fIlist\fR
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Cherry-pick the list of file descriptors that get fuzzed. The Nth descriptor
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will really be fuzzed only if N is in \fIlist\fR.
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Values start at 1 and ranges are inclusive. Use dashes between values and
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commas between ranges. If the right-hand part of a range is ommited, it means
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all subsequent file descriptors. For instance, to restrict fuzzing to the
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first opened descriptor and all descriptors starting from the 10th, use
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\(oq\fB\-l1,10\-\fR\(cq.
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Note that this option only affects file descriptors that would otherwise be
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fuzzed. Even if 10 write-only descriptors are opened at the beginning of the
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program, only the next descriptor with a read flag will be the first one
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considered by the \fB\-l\fR flag.
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.TP
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\fB\-m\fR, \fB\-\-md5\fR
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Instead of displaying the program's \fIstandard output\fR, just print its MD5
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digest to \fBzzuf\fR's standard output. The standard error channel is left
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untouched.
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.TP
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\fB\-M\fR, \fB\-\-max\-memory\fR=\fImebibytes\fR
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Specify the maximum amount of memory, in mebibytes (1 MiB = 1,048,576 bytes),
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that children are allowed to allocate. This is useful to detect infinite loops
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that eat up a lot of memory.
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The value should be set reasonably high so as not to interfer with normal
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program operation. By default, it is set to 1024 MiB in order to avoid
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accidental excessive swapping. To disable the limitation, set the maximum
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memory usage to -1 instead.
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\fBzzuf\fR uses the \fBsetrlimit\fR() call to set memory usage limitations and
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relies on the operating system's ability to enforce such limitations.
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.TP
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\fB\-n\fR, \fB\-\-network\fR
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Fuzz the application's network input. By default \fBzzuf\fR only fuzzes files.
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Only INET (IPv4) and INET6 (IPv6) connections are fuzzed. Other protocol
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families are not yet supported.
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.TP
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\fB\-O\fR, \fB\-\-opmode\fR=\fImode\fR
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Use operating mode \fImode\fR. Valid values for \fImode\fR are:
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.RS
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.TP
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\fBpreload\fR
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override functions by preloading libzzuf into the executable using the
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system's dynamic linker
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.TP
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\fBcopy\fR
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temporarily copy files that need to be fuzzed
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.RE
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.IP
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The default value for \fImode\fR is \fBpreload\fR. \fBcopy\fR is useful on
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platforms that do not support dynamic linker injection, for instance when
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fuzzing a Cocoa application on Mac OS X.
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.TP
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\fB\-p\fR, \fB\-\-ports\fR=\fIranges\fR
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Only fuzz network ports that are in \fIranges\fR. By default \fBzzuf\fR
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fuzzes all ports. The port considered is the listening port if the socket
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is listening and the destination port if the socket is connecting, because
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most of the time the source port cannot be predicted.
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Range values start at zero and are inclusive. Use dashes between range values
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and commas between ranges. If the right-hand part of a range is ommited, it
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means end of file. For instance, to restrict fuzzing to the HTTP and HTTPS
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ports and to all unprivileged ports, use \(oq\fB\-p80,443,1024\-\fR\(cq.
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This option requires network fuzzing to be activated using \fB\-n\fR.
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.TP
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\fB\-P\fR, \fB\-\-protect\fR=\fIlist\fR
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Protect a list of characters so that if they appear in input data that would
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normally be fuzzed, they are left unmodified instead.
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Characters in \fIlist\fR can be expressed verbatim or through escape sequences.
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The sequences interpreted by \fBzzuf\fR are:
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.RS
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.TP
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\fB\\n\fR
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new line
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.TP
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\fB\\r\fR
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return
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.TP
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\fB\\t\fR
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tabulation
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.TP
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\fB\\\fR\fINNN\fR
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the byte whose octal value is \fINNN\fR
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.TP
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\fB\\x\fR\fINN\fR
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the byte whose hexadecimal value is \fINN\fR
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.TP
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\fB\\\\\fR
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backslash (\(oq\\\(cq)
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.RE
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.IP
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You can use \(oq\fB\-\fR\(cq to specify ranges. For instance, to protect all
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bytes from \(oq\\001\(cq to \(oq/\(cq, use \(oq\fB\-P\ \(aq\\001\-/\(aq\fR\(cq.
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The statistical outcome of this option should not be overlooked: if characters
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are protected, the effect of the \(oq\fB\-r\fR\(cq flag will vary depending
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on the data being fuzzed. For instance, asking to fuzz 1% of input bits
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(\fB\-r0.01\fR) and to protect lowercase characters (\fB\-P\ a\-z\fR) will
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result in an actual average fuzzing ratio of 0.9% with truly random data,
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0.3% with random ASCII data and 0.2% with standard English text.
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See also the \fB\-R\fR flag.
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.TP
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\fB\-q\fR, \fB\-\-quiet\fR
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Hide the output of the fuzzed application. This is useful if the application
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is very verbose but only its exit code or signaled status is really useful to
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you.
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.TP
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\fB\-r\fR, \fB\-\-ratio\fR=\fIratio\fR
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.PD 0
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.TP
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\fB\-r\fR, \fB\-\-ratio\fR=\fImin:max\fR
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.PD
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Specify the proportion of bits that will be randomly fuzzed. A value of 0
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will not fuzz anything. A value of 0.05 will fuzz 5% of the open files'
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bits. A value of 1.0 or more will fuzz all the bytes, theoretically making
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the input files undiscernible from random data. The default fuzzing ratio
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is 0.004 (fuzz 0.4% of the files' bits).
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A range can also be specified. When doing so, \fBzzuf\fR will pick ratio
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values from the interval. The choice is deterministic and only depends on
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the interval bounds and the current seed.
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.TP
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\fB\-R\fR, \fB\-\-refuse\fR=\fIlist\fR
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Refuse a list of characters by not fuzzing bytes that would otherwise be
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changed to a character that is in \fIlist\fR. This does not prevent characters
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from appearing in the output if the original byte was already in \fIlist\fR.
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See the \fB\-P\fR option for a description of \fIlist\fR.
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.TP
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\fB\-s\fR, \fB\-\-seed\fR=\fIseed\fR
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.PD 0
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.TP
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\fB\-s\fR, \fB\-\-seed\fR=\fIstart:stop\fR
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.PD
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Specify the random seed to use for fuzzing, or a range of random seeds.
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Running \fBzzuf\fR twice with the same random seed will fuzz the files exactly
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the same way, even with a different target application. The purpose of this is
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to use simple utilities such as \fBcat\fR or \fBcp\fR to generate a file that
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causes the target application to crash.
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If a range is specified, \fBzzuf\fR will run the application several times,
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each time with a different seed, and report the behaviour of each run. If the
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\(oq:\(cq character is used but the second part of the range is omitted,
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\fBzzuf\fR will increment the seed value indefinitely.
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.TP
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\fB\-S\fR, \fB\-\-signal\fR
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Prevent children from installing signal handlers for signals that usually
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cause coredumps. These signals are \fBSIGABRT\fR, \fBSIGFPE\fR, \fBSIGILL\fR,
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\fBSIGQUIT\fR, \fBSIGSEGV\fR, \fBSIGTRAP\fR and, if available on the running
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platform, \fBSIGSYS\fR, \fBSIGEMT\fR, \fBSIGBUS\fR, \fBSIGXCPU\fR and
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\fBSIGXFSZ\fR. Instead of calling the signal handler, the application will
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simply crash. If you do not want core dumps, you should set appropriate limits
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with the \fBlimit coredumpsize\fR command. See your shell's documentation on
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how to set such limits.
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.TP
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\fB\-t\fR, \fB\-\-max\-time\fR=\fIn\fR
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Stop forking after \fIn\fR seconds. By default, \fBzzuf\fR runs until the
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end of the seed range is reached.
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Note that \fBzzuf\fR will not kill any remaining children once \fIn\fR is
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reached. To ensure that processes do not last forever, see the \fB\-U\fR
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flag.
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This option is only relevant if the \fB\-s\fR flag is used with a range
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argument. See also the \fB\-C\fR flag.
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.TP
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\fB\-T\fR, \fB\-\-max\-cputime\fR=\fIn\fR
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Automatically terminate child processes that use more than \fIn\fR seconds
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of CPU time.
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\fBzzuf\fR uses the \fBsetrlimit\fR() call to set CPU usage limitations and
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relies on the operating system's ability to enforce such limitations. If the
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system sends \fBSIGXCPU\fR signals and the application catches that signal,
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it will receive a \fBSIGKILL\fR signal after 5 seconds.
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This is more accurate than \fB\-U\fR because the behaviour should be
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independent from the system load, but it does not detect processes stuck into
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infinite \fBselect\fR() calls because they use very little CPU time. See also
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the \fB\-B\fR and \fB\-U\fR flags.
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.TP
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\fB\-U\fR, \fB\-\-max\-usertime\fR=\fIn\fR
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Automatically terminate child processes that run for more than \fIn\fR
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seconds. This is useful to detect infinite loops or processes stuck in other
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situations. See also the \fB\-B\fR and \fB\-T\fR flags.
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.TP
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\fB\-v\fR, \fB\-\-verbose\fR
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Print information during the run, such as the current seed, what processes
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get run, their exit status, etc.
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.TP
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\fB\-x\fR, \fB\-\-check\-exit\fR
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Report processes that exit with a non-zero status. By default only processes
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that crash due to a signal are reported.
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.TP
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\fB\-h\fR, \fB\-\-help\fR
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Display a short help message and exit.
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.TP
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\fB\-V\fR, \fB\-\-version\fR
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Output version information and exit.
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.SH DIAGNOSTICS
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.PP
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Exit status is zero if no child process crashed. If one or several children
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crashed, \fBzzuf\fR exits with status 1.
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.SH EXAMPLES
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.PP
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Fuzz the input of the \fBcat\fR program using default settings:
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.PP
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\fB zzuf cat /etc/motd\fR
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.PP
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Fuzz 1% of the input bits of the \fBcat\fR program using seed 94324:
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.PP
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\fB zzuf \-s94324 \-r0.01 cat /etc/motd\fR
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.PP
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Fuzz the input of the \fBcat\fR program but do not fuzz newline characters
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and prevent non-ASCII characters from appearing in the output:
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.PP
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\fB zzuf \-P \(aq\\n\(aq \-R \(aq\\x00\-\\x1f\\x7f\-\\xff\(aq cat /etc/motd\fR
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.PP
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Fuzz the input of the \fBconvert\fR program, using file \fBfoo.jpeg\fR as the
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original input and excluding \fB.xml\fR files from fuzzing (because
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\fBconvert\fR will also open its own XML configuration files and we do not
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want \fBzzuf\fR to fuzz them):
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.PP
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\fB zzuf \-E \(aq\\.xml$\(aq convert foo.jpeg \-format tga /dev/null\fR
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.PP
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Fuzz the input of VLC, using file \fBmovie.avi\fR as the original input
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and restricting fuzzing to filenames that appear on the command line
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(\fB\-c\fR), then generate \fBfuzzy\-movie.avi\fR which is a file that
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can be read by VLC to reproduce the same behaviour without using
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\fBzzuf\fR:
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.PP
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\fB zzuf \-c \-s87423 \-r0.01 vlc movie.avi\fR
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.br
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\fB zzuf \-c \-s87423 \-r0.01 <movie.avi >fuzzy\-movie.avi\fR
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.br
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\fB vlc fuzzy\-movie.avi\fR
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|
.PP
|
|
Fuzz between 0.1% and 2% of MPlayer's input bits (\fB\-r0.001:0.02\fR)
|
|
with seeds 0 to 9999 (\fB\-s0:10000\fR), preserving the AVI 4-byte header
|
|
by restricting fuzzing to offsets after 4 (\fB\-b4\-\fR), disabling its
|
|
standard output messages (\fB\-q\fR), launching up to five simultaneous child
|
|
processes (\fB\-j5\fR) but waiting at least half a second between launches
|
|
(\fB\-D0.5\fR), killing MPlayer if it takes more than one minute to
|
|
read the file (\fB\-T60\fR) and disabling its \fBSIGSEGV\fR signal handler
|
|
(\fB\-S\fR):
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fB zzuf \-c \-r0.001:0.02 \-s0:10000 \-b4\- \-q \-j5 \-D0.5 \-T60 \-S \\\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB mplayer \-benchmark \-vo null \-fps 1000 movie.avi\fR
|
|
.PP
|
|
A more advanced VLC fuzzing example, stopping only at the first crash:
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fB zzuf \-j4 \-vqc \-r0.000001:0.01 \-s0: vlc \-v \-I dummy movie.avi \\\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB \-\-sout \(aq#transcode{acodec=s16l,vcodec=I420}:dummy\(aq vlc:quit
|
|
.PP
|
|
Create an HTML-like file that loads 200 times the same \fBhello.jpg\fR image
|
|
and open it in Firefox\(tm in auto-increment mode (\fB\-A\fR):
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fB seq \-f \(aq<img src="hello.jpg#%g">\(aq 1 200 > hello.html\fR
|
|
.br
|
|
(or: \fBjot \-w \(aq<img src="hello.jpg#%d">\(aq 200 1 > hello.html\fR)
|
|
.br
|
|
\fB zzuf \-A \-I \(aqhello[.]jpg\(aq \-r0.001 firefox hello.html\fR
|
|
.PP
|
|
Run a simple HTTP redirector on the local host using \fBsocat\fR and
|
|
corrupt each network connection (\fB\-n\fR) in a different way (\fB\-A\fR)
|
|
after one megabyte of data was received on it (\fB\-b1000000\-\fR):
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fB zzuf \-n \-A \-b1000000\- \\\fR
|
|
\fB socat TCP4\-LISTEN:8080,reuseaddr,fork TCP4:192.168.1.42:80\fR
|
|
.PP
|
|
Browse the intarweb (\fB\-n\fR) using Firefox\(tm without fuzzing local files
|
|
(\fB\-E.\fR) or non-HTTP connections (\fB\-p80,8010,8080\fR), preserving
|
|
the beginning of the data sent with each HTTP response (\fB\-b4000\-\fR)
|
|
and using another seed on each connection (\fB\-A\fR):
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fB zzuf \-r 0.0001 \-n \-E. \-p80,8010,8080 \-b4000\- \-A firefox\fR
|
|
.SH RESTRICTIONS
|
|
.PP
|
|
Due to \fBzzuf\fR using shared object preloading (\fBLD_PRELOAD\fR,
|
|
\fB_RLD_LIST\fB, \fBDYLD_INSERT_LIBRARIES\fR, etc.) to run its child
|
|
processes, it will fail in the presence of any mechanism that disables
|
|
preloading. For instance setuid root binaries will not be fuzzed when run
|
|
as an unprivileged user.
|
|
.PP
|
|
For the same reasons, \fBzzuf\fR will also not work with statically linked
|
|
binaries. Bear this in mind when using \fBzzuf\fR on the OpenBSD platform,
|
|
where \fBcat\fR, \fBcp\fR and \fBdd\fR are static binaries.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Though best efforts are made, identical behaviour for different versions of
|
|
\fBzzuf\fR is not guaranteed. The reproducibility for subsequent calls on
|
|
different operating systems and with different target programs is only
|
|
guaranteed when the same version of \fBzzuf\fR is being used.
|
|
.SH BUGS
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fBzzuf\fR probably does not behave correctly with 64-bit offsets.
|
|
.PP
|
|
It is not yet possible to insert or drop bytes from the input, to fuzz
|
|
according to the file format, to swap bytes, etc. More advanced fuzzing
|
|
methods are planned.
|
|
.PP
|
|
As of now, \fBzzuf\fR does not really support multithreaded applications. The
|
|
behaviour with multithreaded applications where more than one thread does file
|
|
descriptor operations is undefined.
|
|
.SH HISTORY
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fBzzuf\fR started its life in 2002 as the \fBstreamfucker\fR tool, a small
|
|
multimedia stream corrupter used to find bugs in the VLC media player.
|
|
.SH SEE ALSO
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fBlibzzuf(3)\fR, \fBzzat(1)\fR
|
|
.SH AUTHOR
|
|
.PP
|
|
Copyright \(co 2002\-2010 Sam Hocevar <sam@hocevar.net>.
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fBzzuf\fR and this manual page are free software. They come without any
|
|
warranty, to the extent permitted by applicable law. You can redistribute
|
|
them and/or modify them under the terms of the Do What The Fuck You Want
|
|
To Public License, Version 2, as published by Sam Hocevar. See
|
|
\fBhttp://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/COPYING\fR for more details.
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fBzzuf\fR's webpage can be found at \fBhttp://caca.zoy.org/wiki/zzuf\fR.
|
|
An overview of the architecture and inner works is at
|
|
\fBhttp://caca.zoy.org/wiki/zzuf/internals\fR.
|