tree: 119d8245e2d5527b4c462eb675fb8cd23d916992 [path history] [tgz]
  1. oss_fuzz/
  2. coverage
  3. Fuzz.cpp
  4. Fuzz.h
  5. FuzzCanvas.cpp
  6. FuzzCommon.cpp
  7. FuzzCommon.h
  8. FuzzCreateDDL.cpp
  9. FuzzCubicRoots.cpp
  10. FuzzDDLThreading.cpp
  11. FuzzDrawFunctions.cpp
  12. FuzzEncoders.cpp
  13. FuzzGradients.cpp
  14. FuzzMain.cpp
  15. FuzzParsePath.cpp
  16. FuzzPath.cpp
  17. FuzzPathMeasure.cpp
  18. FuzzPathop.cpp
  19. FuzzPolyUtils.cpp
  20. FuzzPrecompile.cpp
  21. FuzzQuadRoots.cpp
  22. FuzzRegionOp.cpp
  23. FuzzRRect.cpp
  24. FuzzSkParagraph.cpp
  25. FuzzTriangulation.cpp
  26. README.md
fuzz/README.md

#Fuzzing In this folder, we keep our fuzzers (bits of code that takes a randomized input and executes code randomly, focusing on specific APIs). For example, we have a codec fuzzer which takes a mutated png/jpeg or similar file and attempts to turn it into an SkImage. We also have a canvas fuzzer which takes in a random set of bytes and turns them into calls on SkCanvas.

Executables

These fuzzers are packaged in two different ways (see //BUILD.gn). There is a fuzz executable that contains all fuzzers and is a convenient way to reproduce fuzzer-reported bugs. There are also single fuzzer executables containing exactly one fuzzer, which are convenient to build with libfuzzer.

See [../site/dev/testing/fuzz.md] for more information on building and running fuzzers using the fuzz executable.

Continuous Running

We fuzz Skia using OSS-Fuzz, which in turn uses fuzzing engines such as libfuzzer, afl-fuzz, hong-fuzz, and others to fuzz Skia. OSS-Fuzz will automatically file and close bugs when it finds issues.

There is a Skia folder in the OSS-Fuzz repo that we make changes to when we want to add/remove/change the fuzzers that are automatically run. This describes how to test the OSS-Fuzz build and fuzzers locally using Docker.

When enabling a fuzzer in OSS-Fuzz, we typically need to follow these steps:

  1. *Add a seed corpus to gs://skia-fuzzer/oss-fuzz/ (in the skia-public project). Make sure the corpus file is public-readable. It is easiest to add this permission via the web UI. This is done by granting the allUsers “name” the Reader role to the zip file. See the infra team if you do not have access to this bucket.
  2. *Update the Dockerfile to download the seed corpus to the build image.
  3. Update build.sh to build the desired fuzzer target and move it into $OUT. If there is a seed corpus, move it into $OUT and make sure it is the same name as the fuzzer executable with _seed_corpus.zip as a suffix.

*For fuzzers who depend strongly on the format of the randomized data, e.g. image decoding, SkSL parsing. These are called binary fuzzers, as opposed to API fuzzers.

Example PRs for adding fuzzers: binary, API

There is also an OSS-Fuzz folder set up for the skcms repo. The build process is similar, except instead of compiling using GN targets, the build.sh script compiles the fuzz executables directly.

OSS-Fuzz dashboard

https://oss-fuzz.com/fuzzer-stats is useful to see metrics on how our fuzzers are running. It shows things like executions per second (higher is better), edge coverage percent per fuzzer, what percent of fuzzing runs end in OOM/timeout/crash, the entire corpus of fuzzed inputs (corpus_backup), etc. Contact aarya@ to get permission to view this dashboard if necessary. Here are some example dashboards:

OSS-Fuzz also offers a combined Coverage Report from all Skia fuzzers. Example coverage report from 2021 Aug 22

See Also