[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [PATCH v3 09/12] fuzz/x86_emulate: Make input more compact
On 10/10/2017 06:11 PM, Andrew Cooper wrote: > On 10/10/17 18:01, George Dunlap wrote: >> On 10/10/2017 05:59 PM, Andrew Cooper wrote: >>> On 10/10/17 17:20, George Dunlap wrote: >>>> At the moment, AFL reckons that for any given input, 87% of it is >>>> completely irrelevant: that is, it can change it as much as it wants >>>> but have no impact on the result of the test; and yet it can't remove >>>> it. >>>> >>>> This is largely because we interpret the blob handed to us as a large >>>> struct, including CR values, MSR values, segment registers, and a full >>>> cpu_user_regs. >>>> >>>> Instead, modify our interpretation to have a "set state" stanza at the >>>> front. Begin by reading a 16-bit value; if it is lower than a certain >>>> threshold, set some state according to what byte it is, and repeat. >>>> Continue until the byte is above a certain threshold. >>>> >>>> This allows AFL to compact any given test case much smaller; to the >>>> point where now it reckons there is not a single byte of the test file >>>> which becomes irrelevant. Testing have shown that this option both >>>> allows AFL to reach coverage much faster, and to have a total coverage >>>> higher than with the old format. >>>> >>>> Make this an option (rather than a unilateral change) to enable >>>> side-by-side performance comparison of the old and new formats. >>>> >>>> Signed-off-by: George Dunlap <george.dunlap@xxxxxxxxxx> >>> I am still of the opinion that this is a waste of effort, which would be >>> better spent actually removing the irrelevant state in the first place; >>> not building an obfuscation algorithm. >>> >>> I'm not going to nack the patch because that is probably over the top, >>> but I'm not in favour if this change going in. >> Did you look at the evidence I presented, demonstrating that this >> significantly increases the effectiveness of AFL? > > I can easily believe that you've found an obfucation algorithm which > does better than the current state layout. > > I do not believe that any amount of obfuscation will be better than > actually fixing the root cause of the problem; that the current state > really is mostly irrelevant, and can easily be shrunk. Right; well I've already explained why I don't think "obfuscation" is the right term. For the time being, we have something which improves efficiency; let's check it in now, and in the future if you or someone else finds a way to fix it "properly" we can do that. -George _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel
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