1========================================================
2LibFuzzer -- a library for coverage-guided fuzz testing.
3========================================================
4.. contents::
5   :local:
6   :depth: 4
7
8Introduction
9============
10
11This library is intended primarily for in-process coverage-guided fuzz testing
12(fuzzing) of other libraries. The typical workflow looks like this:
13
14* Build the Fuzzer library as a static archive (or just a set of .o files).
15  Note that the Fuzzer contains the main() function.
16  Preferably do *not* use sanitizers while building the Fuzzer.
17* Build the library you are going to test with
18  `-fsanitize-coverage={bb,edge}[,indirect-calls,8bit-counters]`
19  and one of the sanitizers. We recommend to build the library in several
20  different modes (e.g. asan, msan, lsan, ubsan, etc) and even using different
21  optimizations options (e.g. -O0, -O1, -O2) to diversify testing.
22* Build a test driver using the same options as the library.
23  The test driver is a C/C++ file containing interesting calls to the library
24  inside a single function  ``extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *Data, size_t Size);``.
25  Currently, the only expected return value is 0, others are reserved for future.
26* Link the Fuzzer, the library and the driver together into an executable
27  using the same sanitizer options as for the library.
28* Collect the initial corpus of inputs for the
29  fuzzer (a directory with test inputs, one file per input).
30  The better your inputs are the faster you will find something interesting.
31  Also try to keep your inputs small, otherwise the Fuzzer will run too slow.
32  By default, the Fuzzer limits the size of every input to 64 bytes
33  (use ``-max_len=N`` to override).
34* Run the fuzzer with the test corpus. As new interesting test cases are
35  discovered they will be added to the corpus. If a bug is discovered by
36  the sanitizer (asan, etc) it will be reported as usual and the reproducer
37  will be written to disk.
38  Each Fuzzer process is single-threaded (unless the library starts its own
39  threads). You can run the Fuzzer on the same corpus in multiple processes
40  in parallel.
41
42
43The Fuzzer is similar in concept to AFL_,
44but uses in-process Fuzzing, which is more fragile, more restrictive, but
45potentially much faster as it has no overhead for process start-up.
46It uses LLVM's SanitizerCoverage_ instrumentation to get in-process
47coverage-feedback
48
49The code resides in the LLVM repository, requires the fresh Clang compiler to build
50and is used to fuzz various parts of LLVM,
51but the Fuzzer itself does not (and should not) depend on any
52part of LLVM and can be used for other projects w/o requiring the rest of LLVM.
53
54Flags
55=====
56The most important flags are::
57
58  seed                               	0	Random seed. If 0, seed is generated.
59  runs                               	-1	Number of individual test runs (-1 for infinite runs).
60  max_len                            	64	Maximum length of the test input.
61  cross_over                         	1	If 1, cross over inputs.
62  mutate_depth                       	5	Apply this number of consecutive mutations to each input.
63  timeout                            	1200	Timeout in seconds (if positive). If one unit runs more than this number of seconds the process will abort.
64  max_total_time                        0       If positive, indicates the maximal total time in seconds to run the fuzzer.
65  help                               	0	Print help.
66  merge                                 0       If 1, the 2-nd, 3-rd, etc corpora will be merged into the 1-st corpus. Only interesting units will be taken.
67  jobs                               	0	Number of jobs to run. If jobs >= 1 we spawn this number of jobs in separate worker processes with stdout/stderr redirected to fuzz-JOB.log.
68  workers                            	0	Number of simultaneous worker processes to run the jobs. If zero, "min(jobs,NumberOfCpuCores()/2)" is used.
69  sync_command                       	0	Execute an external command "<sync_command> <test_corpus>" to synchronize the test corpus.
70  sync_timeout                       	600	Minimum timeout between syncs.
71  use_traces                            0       Experimental: use instruction traces
72  only_ascii                            0       If 1, generate only ASCII (isprint+isspace) inputs.
73  test_single_input                     ""      Use specified file content as test input. Test will be run only once. Useful for debugging a particular case.
74  artifact_prefix                       ""      Write fuzzing artifacts (crash, timeout, or slow inputs) as $(artifact_prefix)file
75  exact_artifact_path                   ""      Write the single artifact on failure (crash, timeout) as $(exact_artifact_path). This overrides -artifact_prefix and will not use checksum in the file name. Do not use the same path for several parallel processes.
76
77For the full list of flags run the fuzzer binary with ``-help=1``.
78
79Usage examples
80==============
81
82Toy example
83-----------
84
85A simple function that does something interesting if it receives the input "HI!"::
86
87  cat << EOF >> test_fuzzer.cc
88  #include <stdint.h>
89  #include <stddef.h>
90  extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *data, size_t size) {
91    if (size > 0 && data[0] == 'H')
92      if (size > 1 && data[1] == 'I')
93         if (size > 2 && data[2] == '!')
94         __builtin_trap();
95    return 0;
96  }
97  EOF
98  # Get lib/Fuzzer. Assuming that you already have fresh clang in PATH.
99  svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk/lib/Fuzzer
100  # Build lib/Fuzzer files.
101  clang -c -g -O2 -std=c++11 Fuzzer/*.cpp -IFuzzer
102  # Build test_fuzzer.cc with asan and link against lib/Fuzzer.
103  clang++ -fsanitize=address -fsanitize-coverage=edge test_fuzzer.cc Fuzzer*.o
104  # Run the fuzzer with no corpus.
105  ./a.out
106
107You should get ``Illegal instruction (core dumped)`` pretty quickly.
108
109PCRE2
110-----
111
112Here we show how to use lib/Fuzzer on something real, yet simple: pcre2_::
113
114  COV_FLAGS=" -fsanitize-coverage=edge,indirect-calls,8bit-counters"
115  # Get PCRE2
116  svn co svn://vcs.exim.org/pcre2/code/trunk pcre
117  # Get lib/Fuzzer. Assuming that you already have fresh clang in PATH.
118  svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk/lib/Fuzzer
119  # Build PCRE2 with AddressSanitizer and coverage.
120  (cd pcre; ./autogen.sh; CC="clang -fsanitize=address $COV_FLAGS" ./configure --prefix=`pwd`/../inst && make -j && make install)
121  # Build lib/Fuzzer files.
122  clang -c -g -O2 -std=c++11 Fuzzer/*.cpp -IFuzzer
123  # Build the actual function that does something interesting with PCRE2.
124  cat << EOF > pcre_fuzzer.cc
125  #include <string.h>
126  #include <stdint.h>
127  #include "pcre2posix.h"
128  extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *data, size_t size) {
129    if (size < 1) return 0;
130    char *str = new char[size+1];
131    memcpy(str, data, size);
132    str[size] = 0;
133    regex_t preg;
134    if (0 == regcomp(&preg, str, 0)) {
135      regexec(&preg, str, 0, 0, 0);
136      regfree(&preg);
137    }
138    delete [] str;
139    return 0;
140  }
141  EOF
142  clang++ -g -fsanitize=address $COV_FLAGS -c -std=c++11  -I inst/include/ pcre_fuzzer.cc
143  # Link.
144  clang++ -g -fsanitize=address -Wl,--whole-archive inst/lib/*.a -Wl,-no-whole-archive Fuzzer*.o pcre_fuzzer.o -o pcre_fuzzer
145
146This will give you a binary of the fuzzer, called ``pcre_fuzzer``.
147Now, create a directory that will hold the test corpus::
148
149  mkdir -p CORPUS
150
151For simple input languages like regular expressions this is all you need.
152For more complicated inputs populate the directory with some input samples.
153Now run the fuzzer with the corpus dir as the only parameter::
154
155  ./pcre_fuzzer ./CORPUS
156
157You will see output like this::
158
159  Seed: 1876794929
160  #0      READ   cov 0 bits 0 units 1 exec/s 0
161  #1      pulse  cov 3 bits 0 units 1 exec/s 0
162  #1      INITED cov 3 bits 0 units 1 exec/s 0
163  #2      pulse  cov 208 bits 0 units 1 exec/s 0
164  #2      NEW    cov 208 bits 0 units 2 exec/s 0 L: 64
165  #3      NEW    cov 217 bits 0 units 3 exec/s 0 L: 63
166  #4      pulse  cov 217 bits 0 units 3 exec/s 0
167
168* The ``Seed:`` line shows you the current random seed (you can change it with ``-seed=N`` flag).
169* The ``READ``  line shows you how many input files were read (since you passed an empty dir there were inputs, but one dummy input was synthesised).
170* The ``INITED`` line shows you that how many inputs will be fuzzed.
171* The ``NEW`` lines appear with the fuzzer finds a new interesting input, which is saved to the CORPUS dir. If multiple corpus dirs are given, the first one is used.
172* The ``pulse`` lines appear periodically to show the current status.
173
174Now, interrupt the fuzzer and run it again the same way. You will see::
175
176  Seed: 1879995378
177  #0      READ   cov 0 bits 0 units 564 exec/s 0
178  #1      pulse  cov 502 bits 0 units 564 exec/s 0
179  ...
180  #512    pulse  cov 2933 bits 0 units 564 exec/s 512
181  #564    INITED cov 2991 bits 0 units 344 exec/s 564
182  #1024   pulse  cov 2991 bits 0 units 344 exec/s 1024
183  #1455   NEW    cov 2995 bits 0 units 345 exec/s 1455 L: 49
184
185This time you were running the fuzzer with a non-empty input corpus (564 items).
186As the first step, the fuzzer minimized the set to produce 344 interesting items (the ``INITED`` line)
187
188It is quite convenient to store test corpuses in git.
189As an example, here is a git repository with test inputs for the above PCRE2 fuzzer::
190
191  git clone https://github.com/kcc/fuzzing-with-sanitizers.git
192  ./pcre_fuzzer ./fuzzing-with-sanitizers/pcre2/C1/
193
194You may run ``N`` independent fuzzer jobs in parallel on ``M`` CPUs::
195
196  N=100; M=4; ./pcre_fuzzer ./CORPUS -jobs=$N -workers=$M
197
198By default (``-reload=1``) the fuzzer processes will periodically scan the CORPUS directory
199and reload any new tests. This way the test inputs found by one process will be picked up
200by all others.
201
202If ``-workers=$M`` is not supplied, ``min($N,NumberOfCpuCore/2)`` will be used.
203
204Heartbleed
205----------
206Remember Heartbleed_?
207As it was recently `shown <https://blog.hboeck.de/archives/868-How-Heartbleed-couldve-been-found.html>`_,
208fuzzing with AddressSanitizer can find Heartbleed. Indeed, here are the step-by-step instructions
209to find Heartbleed with LibFuzzer::
210
211  wget https://www.openssl.org/source/openssl-1.0.1f.tar.gz
212  tar xf openssl-1.0.1f.tar.gz
213  COV_FLAGS="-fsanitize-coverage=edge,indirect-calls" # -fsanitize-coverage=8bit-counters
214  (cd openssl-1.0.1f/ && ./config &&
215    make -j 32 CC="clang -g -fsanitize=address $COV_FLAGS")
216  # Get and build LibFuzzer
217  svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk/lib/Fuzzer
218  clang -c -g -O2 -std=c++11 Fuzzer/*.cpp -IFuzzer
219  # Get examples of key/pem files.
220  git clone   https://github.com/hannob/selftls
221  cp selftls/server* . -v
222  cat << EOF > handshake-fuzz.cc
223  #include <openssl/ssl.h>
224  #include <openssl/err.h>
225  #include <assert.h>
226  #include <stdint.h>
227  #include <stddef.h>
228
229  SSL_CTX *sctx;
230  int Init() {
231    SSL_library_init();
232    SSL_load_error_strings();
233    ERR_load_BIO_strings();
234    OpenSSL_add_all_algorithms();
235    assert (sctx = SSL_CTX_new(TLSv1_method()));
236    assert (SSL_CTX_use_certificate_file(sctx, "server.pem", SSL_FILETYPE_PEM));
237    assert (SSL_CTX_use_PrivateKey_file(sctx, "server.key", SSL_FILETYPE_PEM));
238    return 0;
239  }
240  extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *Data, size_t Size) {
241    static int unused = Init();
242    SSL *server = SSL_new(sctx);
243    BIO *sinbio = BIO_new(BIO_s_mem());
244    BIO *soutbio = BIO_new(BIO_s_mem());
245    SSL_set_bio(server, sinbio, soutbio);
246    SSL_set_accept_state(server);
247    BIO_write(sinbio, Data, Size);
248    SSL_do_handshake(server);
249    SSL_free(server);
250    return 0;
251  }
252  EOF
253  # Build the fuzzer.
254  clang++ -g handshake-fuzz.cc  -fsanitize=address \
255    openssl-1.0.1f/libssl.a openssl-1.0.1f/libcrypto.a Fuzzer*.o
256  # Run 20 independent fuzzer jobs.
257  ./a.out  -jobs=20 -workers=20
258
259Voila::
260
261  #1048576        pulse  cov 3424 bits 0 units 9 exec/s 24385
262  =================================================================
263  ==17488==ERROR: AddressSanitizer: heap-buffer-overflow on address 0x629000004748 at pc 0x00000048c979 bp 0x7fffe3e864f0 sp 0x7fffe3e85ca8
264  READ of size 60731 at 0x629000004748 thread T0
265      #0 0x48c978 in __asan_memcpy
266      #1 0x4db504 in tls1_process_heartbeat openssl-1.0.1f/ssl/t1_lib.c:2586:3
267      #2 0x580be3 in ssl3_read_bytes openssl-1.0.1f/ssl/s3_pkt.c:1092:4
268
269Note: a `similar fuzzer <https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/+/HEAD/FUZZING.md>`_
270is now a part of the boringssl source tree.
271
272Advanced features
273=================
274
275Dictionaries
276------------
277*EXPERIMENTAL*.
278LibFuzzer supports user-supplied dictionaries with input language keywords
279or other interesting byte sequences (e.g. multi-byte magic values).
280Use ``-dict=DICTIONARY_FILE``. For some input languages using a dictionary
281may significantly improve the search speed.
282The dictionary syntax is similar to that used by AFL_ for its ``-x`` option::
283
284  # Lines starting with '#' and empty lines are ignored.
285
286  # Adds "blah" (w/o quotes) to the dictionary.
287  kw1="blah"
288  # Use \\ for backslash and \" for quotes.
289  kw2="\"ac\\dc\""
290  # Use \xAB for hex values
291  kw3="\xF7\xF8"
292  # the name of the keyword followed by '=' may be omitted:
293  "foo\x0Abar"
294
295Data-flow-guided fuzzing
296------------------------
297
298*EXPERIMENTAL*.
299With an additional compiler flag ``-fsanitize-coverage=trace-cmp`` (see SanitizerCoverageTraceDataFlow_)
300and extra run-time flag ``-use_traces=1`` the fuzzer will try to apply *data-flow-guided fuzzing*.
301That is, the fuzzer will record the inputs to comparison instructions, switch statements,
302and several libc functions (``memcmp``, ``strcmp``, ``strncmp``, etc).
303It will later use those recorded inputs during mutations.
304
305This mode can be combined with DataFlowSanitizer_ to achieve better sensitivity.
306
307AFL compatibility
308-----------------
309LibFuzzer can be used in parallel with AFL_ on the same test corpus.
310Both fuzzers expect the test corpus to reside in a directory, one file per input.
311You can run both fuzzers on the same corpus in parallel::
312
313  ./afl-fuzz -i testcase_dir -o findings_dir /path/to/program -r @@
314  ./llvm-fuzz testcase_dir findings_dir  # Will write new tests to testcase_dir
315
316Periodically restart both fuzzers so that they can use each other's findings.
317
318How good is my fuzzer?
319----------------------
320
321Once you implement your target function ``LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput`` and fuzz it to death,
322you will want to know whether the function or the corpus can be improved further.
323One easy to use metric is, of course, code coverage.
324You can get the coverage for your corpus like this::
325
326  ASAN_OPTIONS=coverage_pcs=1 ./fuzzer CORPUS_DIR -runs=0
327
328This will run all the tests in the CORPUS_DIR but will not generate any new tests
329and dump covered PCs to disk before exiting.
330Then you can subtract the set of covered PCs from the set of all instrumented PCs in the binary,
331see SanitizerCoverage_ for details.
332
333User-supplied mutators
334----------------------
335
336LibFuzzer allows to use custom (user-supplied) mutators,
337see FuzzerInterface.h_
338
339Fuzzing components of LLVM
340==========================
341
342clang-format-fuzzer
343-------------------
344The inputs are random pieces of C++-like text.
345
346Build (make sure to use fresh clang as the host compiler)::
347
348    cmake -GNinja  -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++ -DLLVM_USE_SANITIZER=Address -DLLVM_USE_SANITIZE_COVERAGE=YES -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release /path/to/llvm
349    ninja clang-format-fuzzer
350    mkdir CORPUS_DIR
351    ./bin/clang-format-fuzzer CORPUS_DIR
352
353Optionally build other kinds of binaries (asan+Debug, msan, ubsan, etc).
354
355Tracking bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23052
356
357clang-fuzzer
358------------
359
360The behavior is very similar to ``clang-format-fuzzer``.
361
362Tracking bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23057
363
364llvm-as-fuzzer
365--------------
366
367Tracking bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24639
368
369llvm-mc-fuzzer
370--------------
371
372This tool fuzzes the MC layer. Currently it is only able to fuzz the
373disassembler but it is hoped that assembly, and round-trip verification will be
374added in future.
375
376When run in dissassembly mode, the inputs are opcodes to be disassembled. The
377fuzzer will consume as many instructions as possible and will stop when it
378finds an invalid instruction or runs out of data.
379
380Please note that the command line interface differs slightly from that of other
381fuzzers. The fuzzer arguments should follow ``--fuzzer-args`` and should have
382a single dash, while other arguments control the operation mode and target in a
383similar manner to ``llvm-mc`` and should have two dashes. For example::
384
385  llvm-mc-fuzzer --triple=aarch64-linux-gnu --disassemble --fuzzer-args -max_len=4 -jobs=10
386
387Buildbot
388--------
389
390We have a buildbot that runs the above fuzzers for LLVM components
39124/7/365 at http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/sanitizer-x86_64-linux-fuzzer .
392
393Pre-fuzzed test inputs in git
394-----------------------------
395
396The buildbot occumulates large test corpuses over time.
397The corpuses are stored in git on github and can be used like this::
398
399  git clone https://github.com/kcc/fuzzing-with-sanitizers.git
400  bin/clang-format-fuzzer fuzzing-with-sanitizers/llvm/clang-format/C1
401  bin/clang-fuzzer        fuzzing-with-sanitizers/llvm/clang/C1/
402  bin/llvm-as-fuzzer      fuzzing-with-sanitizers/llvm/llvm-as/C1  -only_ascii=1
403
404
405FAQ
406=========================
407
408Q. Why Fuzzer does not use any of the LLVM support?
409---------------------------------------------------
410
411There are two reasons.
412
413First, we want this library to be used outside of the LLVM w/o users having to
414build the rest of LLVM. This may sound unconvincing for many LLVM folks,
415but in practice the need for building the whole LLVM frightens many potential
416users -- and we want more users to use this code.
417
418Second, there is a subtle technical reason not to rely on the rest of LLVM, or
419any other large body of code (maybe not even STL). When coverage instrumentation
420is enabled, it will also instrument the LLVM support code which will blow up the
421coverage set of the process (since the fuzzer is in-process). In other words, by
422using more external dependencies we will slow down the fuzzer while the main
423reason for it to exist is extreme speed.
424
425Q. What about Windows then? The Fuzzer contains code that does not build on Windows.
426------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
427
428The sanitizer coverage support does not work on Windows either as of 01/2015.
429Once it's there, we'll need to re-implement OS-specific parts (I/O, signals).
430
431Q. When this Fuzzer is not a good solution for a problem?
432---------------------------------------------------------
433
434* If the test inputs are validated by the target library and the validator
435  asserts/crashes on invalid inputs, the in-process fuzzer is not applicable
436  (we could use fork() w/o exec, but it comes with extra overhead).
437* Bugs in the target library may accumulate w/o being detected. E.g. a memory
438  corruption that goes undetected at first and then leads to a crash while
439  testing another input. This is why it is highly recommended to run this
440  in-process fuzzer with all sanitizers to detect most bugs on the spot.
441* It is harder to protect the in-process fuzzer from excessive memory
442  consumption and infinite loops in the target library (still possible).
443* The target library should not have significant global state that is not
444  reset between the runs.
445* Many interesting target libs are not designed in a way that supports
446  the in-process fuzzer interface (e.g. require a file path instead of a
447  byte array).
448* If a single test run takes a considerable fraction of a second (or
449  more) the speed benefit from the in-process fuzzer is negligible.
450* If the target library runs persistent threads (that outlive
451  execution of one test) the fuzzing results will be unreliable.
452
453Q. So, what exactly this Fuzzer is good for?
454--------------------------------------------
455
456This Fuzzer might be a good choice for testing libraries that have relatively
457small inputs, each input takes < 1ms to run, and the library code is not expected
458to crash on invalid inputs.
459Examples: regular expression matchers, text or binary format parsers.
460
461Trophies
462========
463* GLIBC: https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/FuzzingLibc
464
465* MUSL LIBC:
466
467  * http://git.musl-libc.org/cgit/musl/commit/?id=39dfd58417ef642307d90306e1c7e50aaec5a35c
468  * http://www.openwall.com/lists/oss-security/2015/03/30/3
469
470* `pugixml <https://github.com/zeux/pugixml/issues/39>`_
471
472* PCRE: Search for "LLVM fuzzer" in http://vcs.pcre.org/pcre2/code/trunk/ChangeLog?view=markup;
473  also in `bugzilla <https://bugs.exim.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=__all__&content=libfuzzer&no_redirect=1&order=Importance&product=PCRE&query_format=specific>`_
474
475* `ICU <http://bugs.icu-project.org/trac/ticket/11838>`_
476
477* `Freetype <https://savannah.nongnu.org/search/?words=LibFuzzer&type_of_search=bugs&Search=Search&exact=1#options>`_
478
479* `Harfbuzz <https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/139>`_
480
481* `SQLite <http://www3.sqlite.org/cgi/src/info/088009efdd56160b>`_
482
483* `Python <http://bugs.python.org/issue25388>`_
484
485* OpenSSL/BoringSSL: `[1] <https://boringssl.googlesource.com/boringssl/+/cb852981cd61733a7a1ae4fd8755b7ff950e857d>`_
486
487* `Libxml2
488  <https://bugzilla.gnome.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=__all__&content=libFuzzer&list_id=68957&order=Importance&product=libxml2&query_format=specific>`_
489
490* `Linux Kernel's BPF verifier <https://github.com/iovisor/bpf-fuzzer>`_
491
492* LLVM: `Clang <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23057>`_, `Clang-format <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23052>`_, `libc++ <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24411>`_, `llvm-as <https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24639>`_, Disassembler: http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247405, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247414, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247416, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247417, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247420, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL247422.
493
494.. _pcre2: http://www.pcre.org/
495
496.. _AFL: http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/afl/
497
498.. _SanitizerCoverage: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerCoverage.html
499.. _SanitizerCoverageTraceDataFlow: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerCoverage.html#tracing-data-flow
500.. _DataFlowSanitizer: http://clang.llvm.org/docs/DataFlowSanitizer.html
501
502.. _Heartbleed: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heartbleed
503
504.. _FuzzerInterface.h: https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm/blob/master/lib/Fuzzer/FuzzerInterface.h
505