libafl_libfuzzer 0.14.1

libFuzzer shim which uses LibAFL with common defaults
# LibAFL, the fuzzer library.

 <img align="right" src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/AFLplusplus/Website/main/static/libafl_logo.svg" alt="LibAFL logo" width="250" heigh="250">

Advanced Fuzzing Library - Slot your own fuzzers together and extend their features using Rust.

LibAFL is a collection of reusable pieces of fuzzers, written in Rust, it gives you many of the benefits of an off-the-shelf fuzzer, while being completely customizable.
Some highlight features currently include:
- `fast`: We do everything we can at compile time, keeping runtime overhead minimal. Users reach 120k execs/sec in frida-mode on a phone (using all cores).
- `scalable`: `Low Level Message Passing`, `LLMP` for short, allows LibAFL to scale almost linearly over cores, and via TCP to multiple machines.
- `adaptable`: You can replace each part of LibAFL. For example, `BytesInput` is just one potential form input:
feel free to add an AST-based input for structured fuzzing, and more.
- `multi platform`: LibAFL was confirmed to work on *Windows*, *MacOS*, *Linux*, and *Android* on *x86_64* and *aarch64*. `LibAFL` can be built in `no_std` mode to inject LibAFL into obscure targets like embedded devices and hypervisors.
- `bring your own target`: We support binary-only modes, like Frida-Mode, as well as multiple compilation passes for sourced-based instrumentation. Of course it's easy to add custom instrumentation backends.

## Core concepts

LibAFL is fast, multi-platform, no_std compatible, and scales over cores and machines. It offers a main crate that provide building blocks for custom fuzzers, [libafl](./libafl), a library containing common code that can be used for targets instrumentation, [libafl_targets](./libafl_targets), and a library providing facilities to wrap compilers, [libafl_cc](./libafl_cc). It offers integrations with popular instrumentation frameworks. At the moment, the supported backends are:
+ `SanitizerCoverage`, in [libafl_targets]./libafl_targets
+ `Frida`, in [libafl_frida]./libafl_frida
+ `QEMU` user-mode and system mode, including hooks for emulation, in [libafl_qemu]./libafl_qemu
+ `TinyInst`, in [libafl_tinyinst]./libafl_tinyinst by [elbiazo]https://github.com/elbiazo

## Building and installing

#### Install the Dependencies
- **The Rust development language**
    - We highly recommend *not* to use e.g. your Linux distribution package as this is likely outdated. So rather install Rust directly, instructions can be found [here]https://www.rust-lang.org/tools/install.
- **LLVM tools**
    - The LLVM tools (including clang, clang++) are needed (newer than LLVM 15.0.0 up to LLVM 18.1.3) If you are using Debian/Ubuntu, again, we highly recommmend that you install the package from [here]https://apt.llvm.org/
    - (In `libafl_concolic`, we only support LLVM version newer than 18)
- Cargo-make:
    - We use cargo-make to build the fuzzers in `fuzzers/` directory. You can install it with `cargo install cargo-make`
 
#### Clone the LibAFL repository with
```sh
git clone https://github.com/AFLplusplus/LibAFL
```
#### Build the library using
```sh
cargo build --release
```
#### Build the API documentation with
```sh
cargo doc
```
#### Browse the LibAFL book (WIP!) with (requires [mdbook]https://rust-lang.github.io/mdBook/index.html)
```sh
cd docs && mdbook serve
```
## Getting started 
We collect all example fuzzers in [`./fuzzers`](./fuzzers/).
Be sure to read their documentation (and source), this is *the natural way to get started!*
```sh
cargo make run
```
You can run each example fuzzer with this following command, as long as the fuzzer directory has `Makefile.toml` file. The best-tested fuzzer is [`./fuzzers/inprocess/libfuzzer_libpng`](./fuzzers/inprocess/libfuzzer_libpng), a multicore libfuzzer-like fuzzer using LibAFL for a libpng harness.

### Resources 
- [Installation guide]./docs/src/getting_started/setup.md
- [Online API documentation]https://docs.rs/libafl/
- The LibAFL book (WIP) [online]https://aflplus.plus/libafl-book or in the [repo]./docs/src/
- Our research [paper]https://www.s3.eurecom.fr/docs/ccs22_fioraldi.pdf
- Our RC3 [talk]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3RWkT1Q5IV0 "Fuzzers Like LEGO" explaining the core concepts
- Our Fuzzcon Europe [talk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PWB8GIhFAaI "LibAFL: The Advanced Fuzzing Library" with a (a bit but not so much outdated) step-by-step discussion on how to build some example fuzzers
- The Fuzzing101 [solutions]https://github.com/epi052/fuzzing-101-solutions & series of [blog posts]https://epi052.gitlab.io/notes-to-self/blog/2021-11-01-fuzzing-101-with-libafl/ by [epi]https://github.com/epi052
- Blogpost on binary-only fuzzing lib libaf_qemu, [Hacking TMNF - Fuzzing the game server]https://blog.bricked.tech/posts/tmnf/part1/, by [RickdeJager]https://github.com/RickdeJager.
- [A LibAFL Introductory Workshop]https://www.atredis.com/blog/2023/12/4/a-libafl-introductory-workshop, by [Jordan Whitehead]https://github.com/jordan9001

## Contributors

LibAFL is written and maintained by

 * [Andrea Fioraldi]https://twitter.com/andreafioraldi <andrea@aflplus.plus>
 * [Dominik Maier]https://twitter.com/domenuk <dominik@aflplus.plus>
 * [s1341]https://twitter.com/srubenst1341 <github@shmarya.net>
 * [Dongjia Zhang]https://github.com/tokatoka <toka@aflplus.plus>
 * [Addison Crump]https://github.com/addisoncrump <me@addisoncrump.info>
 * [Romain Malmain]https://github.com/rmalmain <rmalmain@pm.me>

Please check out [CONTRIBUTING.md](CONTRIBUTING.md) for the contributing guideline.

## Cite
If you use LibAFL for your academic work, please cite the following paper:

```bibtex
@inproceedings{libafl,
 author       = {Andrea Fioraldi and Dominik Maier and Dongjia Zhang and Davide Balzarotti},
 title        = {{LibAFL: A Framework to Build Modular and Reusable Fuzzers}},
 booktitle    = {Proceedings of the 29th ACM conference on Computer and communications security (CCS)},
 series       = {CCS '22},
 year         = {2022},
 month        = {November},
 location     = {Los Angeles, U.S.A.},
 publisher    = {ACM},
}
```

#### License

<sup>
Licensed under either of <a href="LICENSE-APACHE">Apache License, Version
2.0</a> or <a href="LICENSE-MIT">MIT license</a> at your option.
</sup>

<br>

<sub>
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted
for inclusion in this crate by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall
be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
</sub>