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README

      1 DexFuzz
      2 =======
      3 
      4 DexFuzz is primarily a tool for fuzzing DEX files. Fuzzing is the introduction of
      5 subtle changes ("mutations") to a file to produce a new test case. These test cases
      6 can be used to test the various modes of execution available to ART (Interpreter,
      7 Quick compiler, Optimizing compiler) to check for bugs in these modes of execution.
      8 This is done by differential testing - each test file is executed with each mode of
      9 execution, and any differences between the resulting outputs may be an indication of
     10 a bug in one of the modes.
     11 
     12 For a wider overview of DexFuzz, see:
     13 
     14 http://community.arm.com/groups/android-community/blog/2014/11/26/the-art-of-fuzz-testing
     15 
     16 In typical operation, you provide DexFuzz with a set of DEX files that are the "seeds"
     17 for mutation - e.g. some tests taken from the ART test suite - and point it at an
     18 ADB-connected Android device, and it will fuzz these seed files, and execute the
     19 resulting new tests on the Android device.
     20 
     21 How to run DexFuzz
     22 ==================
     23 
     24 DexFuzz can run its test programs on either an ADB-connected device, or a host-build of
     25 ART locally.
     26 
     27 Execution on an ADB-connected device
     28 ------------------------------------
     29 
     30 1. Build dexfuzz with mmma tools/dexfuzz from within art/.
     31 2. Make sure you have an Android device connected via ADB, that is capable of
     32    having DEX files pushed to it and executed with the dalvikvm command.
     33 3. Make sure you're in the Android build environment!
     34    (That is, . build/envsetup.sh && lunch)
     35 4. Create a new directory, and place some DEX files in here. These are the seed files
     36    that are mutated to form new tests.
     37 5. Create a directory on your device that mutated test files can be pushed to and
     38    executed in, using dalvikvm. For example, /data/art-test/
     39 6. If you currently have multiple devices connected via ADB, find out the name of
     40    your device using "adb devices -l".
     41 7. Run this command:
     42 
     43 dexfuzz --inputs=<seeds dir> --execute --repeat=<attempts> \
     44     --dump-output <combination of ISA(s) and and backend(s)>
     45 
     46 You MUST specify one of the following ISAs:
     47   --arm
     48   --arm64
     49   --x86
     50   --x86_64
     51   --mips
     52   --mips64
     53 
     54 And also at least two of the following backends:
     55   --interpreter
     56   --quick
     57   --optimizing
     58 
     59 Note that if you wanted to test both ARM and ARM64 on an ARM64 device, you can use
     60 --allarm. Also in this case only one backend is needed, if i.e., you wanted to test
     61 ARM Quick Backend vs. ARM64 Quick Backend.
     62 
     63 Some legal examples:
     64   --arm --quick --optimizing
     65   --x86 --quick --optimizing --interpreter
     66   --allarm --quick
     67 
     68 Add in --device=<device name, e.g. device:generic> if you want to specify a device.
     69 Add in --execute-dir=<dir on device> if you want to specify an execution directory.
     70   (The default is /data/art-test/)
     71 
     72 Host Execution
     73 --------------
     74 
     75 DexFuzz now supports execution on your host machine.
     76 Follow steps 1, 3, 4, and 7 as above, but also observe the following:
     77  - instead of specifying an ISA, use --host
     78  - ANDROID_DATA must be set, pointing to a location where dex2oat will place
     79    OAT files after compilation.
     80  - Files will always be executed in the same directory where you are executing DexFuzz.
     81 
     82 Fuzzer Operation
     83 ----------------
     84 
     85 As the fuzzer works, you'll see output like:
     86 
     87 |-----------------------------------------------------------------|
     88 |Iterations|VerifyFail|MutateFail|Timed Out |Successful|Divergence|
     89 |-----------------------------------------------------------------|
     90 | 48       | 37       | 4        | 0        | 6        | 1        |
     91 
     92 Iterations - number of attempts we've made to mutate DEX files.
     93 VerifyFail - the number of mutated files that ended up failing to verify, either
     94              on the host, or the target.
     95 MutateFail - because mutation is a random process, and has attempt thresholds to
     96              avoid attempting to mutate a file indefinitely, it is possible that
     97              an attempt to mutate a file doesn't actually mutate it. This counts
     98              those occurrences.
     99 Timed Out  - mutated files that timed out for one or more backends.
    100              Current timeouts are:
    101                Quick - 5 seconds
    102                Optimizing - 5 seconds
    103                Intepreter - 30 seconds
    104               (use --short-timeouts to set all backends to 2 seconds.)
    105 Successful - mutated files that executed and all backends agreed on the resulting
    106              output. NB: if all backends crashed with the same output, this would
    107              be considered a success - proper detection of crashes is still to come.
    108 Divergence - mutated files that executed and some backend disagreed about the
    109              resulting output. Divergent programs are run multiple times with a
    110              single backend, to check if they diverge from themselves, and these are
    111              not included in the count. If multiple architectures are being used
    112              (ARM/ARM64), and the divergences align with different architectures,
    113              these are also not included in the count.
    114 
    115 8. Check report.log for the full report, including input file and RNG seed for each
    116    test program. This allows you to recreate a bad program with, e.g.:
    117 
    118 dexfuzz --input=<input file> --seed=<seed value>
    119 
    120 Check dexfuzz --help for the full list of options.
    121 
    122 NOTE: DEX files with unicode strings are not fully supported yet, and DEX files with
    123 JNI elements are not supported at all currently.
    124 
    125 Mutation Likelihoods
    126 ====================
    127 
    128 Each bytecode mutation has a chance out of 100% of firing. Following is the listing
    129 of each mutation's probability. If you wish to easily adjust these values, copy
    130 these values into a file called likelihoods.txt, and run dexfuzz with
    131 --likelihoods=likelihoods.txt.
    132 
    133 ArithOpChanger 75
    134 BranchShifter 30
    135 CmpBiasChanger 30
    136 ConstantValueChanger 70
    137 ConversionRepeater 50
    138 FieldFlagChanger 40
    139 InstructionDeleter 40
    140 InstructionDuplicator 80
    141 InstructionSwapper 80
    142 NewMethodCaller 10
    143 NonsenseStringPrinter 10
    144 PoolIndexChanger 30
    145 RandomInstructionGenerator 30
    146 SwitchBranchShifter 30
    147 TryBlockShifter 40
    148 ValuePrinter 40
    149 VRegChanger 60
    150