Superion: Grammar-Aware Greybox Fuzzing

In recent years, coverage-based greybox fuzzing has proven itself to be one of the most effective techniques for finding security bugs in practice. Particularly, American Fuzzy Lop (AFL for short) is deemed to be a great success in fuzzing relatively simple test inputs. Unfortunately, when it meets...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inProceedings / International Conference on Software Engineering pp. 724 - 735
Main Authors Wang, Junjie, Chen, Bihuan, Wei, Lei, Liu, Yang
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.05.2019
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:In recent years, coverage-based greybox fuzzing has proven itself to be one of the most effective techniques for finding security bugs in practice. Particularly, American Fuzzy Lop (AFL for short) is deemed to be a great success in fuzzing relatively simple test inputs. Unfortunately, when it meets structured test inputs such as XML and JavaScript, those grammar-blind trimming and mutation strategies in AFL hinder the effectiveness and efficiency. To this end, we propose a grammar-aware coverage-based greybox fuzzing approach to fuzz programs that process structured inputs. Given the grammar (which is often publicly available) of test inputs, we introduce a grammar-aware trimming strategy to trim test inputs at the tree level using the abstract syntax trees (ASTs) of parsed test inputs. Further, we introduce two grammar-aware mutation strategies (i.e., enhanced dictionary-based mutation and tree-based mutation). Specifically, tree-based mutation works via replacing subtrees using the ASTs of parsed test inputs. Equipped with grammar-awareness, our approach can carry the fuzzing exploration into width and depth. We implemented our approach as an extension to AFL, named Superion; and evaluated the effectiveness of Superion using large- scale programs (i.e., an XML engine libplist and three JavaScript engines WebKit, Jerryscript and ChakraCore). Our results have demonstrated that Superion can improve the code coverage (i.e., 16.7% and 8.8% in line and function coverage) and bug-finding capability (i.e., 34 new bugs, among which we discovered 22 new vulnerabilities with 19 CVEs assigned and 3.2K USD bug bounty rewards received) over AFL and jsfunfuzz.
ISSN:1558-1225
DOI:10.1109/ICSE.2019.00081