docs/fuzzing.md
libgit2 is currently using libFuzzer to perform automated fuzz testing. libFuzzer only works with clang.
mkdir build && cd buildaddress,
undefined,
and leak/address,leak.CC=/usr/bin/clang-6.0 CFLAGS="-fsanitize=address" cmake -DBUILD_TESTS=OFF -DBUILD_FUZZERS=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo ...
Note that building the fuzzer targets is incompatible with the
tests and examples.cmake --build .cd ..ASAN_SYMBOLIZER_PATH=/usr/bin/llvm-symbolize LSAN_OPTIONS=allocator_may_return_null=1 ASAN_OPTIONS=allocator_may_return_null=1 ./build/fuzzers/packfile_fuzzer fuzzers/corpora/packfile/The LSAN_OPTIONS and ASAN_OPTIONS are there to allow malloc(3) to return
NULL, which is expected if a huge chunk of memory is allocated. The
LLVM_PROFILE_FILE environment string can also be added to override the path
where libFuzzer will write the coverage report.
In order to get coverage information, you need to add the "-fcoverage-mapping"
and "-fprofile-instr-generate CFLAGS, and then run the fuzz target with
-runs=0. That will produce a file called default.profraw (this behavior can
be overridden by setting the LLVM_PROFILE_FILE="yourfile.profraw" environment
variable).
llvm-profdata-6.0 merge -sparse default.profraw -o fuzz_packfile_raw.profdata transforms the data from a sparse representation
into a format that can be used by the other tools.llvm-cov-6.0 report ./build/fuzz/fuzz_packfile_raw -instr-profile=fuzz_packfile_raw.profdata shows a high-level per-file
coverage report.llvm-cov-6.0 show ./build/fuzz/fuzz_packfile_raw -instr-profile=fuzz_packfile_raw.profdata [source file] shows a line-by-line
coverage analysis of all the codebase (or a single source file).In order to ensure that there are no regresions, each fuzzer target can be run
in a standalone mode. This can be done by passing -DUSE_STANDALONE_FUZZERS=ON.
This makes it compatible with gcc. This does not use the fuzzing engine, but
just invokes every file in the chosen corpus.
In order to get full coverage, though, you might want to also enable one of the sanitizers. You might need a recent version of clang to get full support.