Spindle
Spindle is a simple and efficient expression and byte sequence generator to aid fuzz testing parsers and de-serializers. Spindle spins raw, untyped byte buffers into structured data.
Overview
Spindle's syntax lets users define the structure of generated data. This syntax compiles to Grammar, a state machine that can be arbitrarily traversed to produce structure-aware, matching expressions.
Spindle works with fuzzers such as cargo-fuzz or AFL because it is an extension of arbitrary; the traversal of the state machine is deterministically dependent on Unstructured.
Spindle is particularly useful for generating semi-correct and interesting inputs that attack edge cases of parsers and de-serializers, such as mixing familiar tokens in incorrect places or sprinkling in Unicode characters.
Spindle is developed and leveraged by AWS to fuzz test the parsers and de-serializers in their backend systems.
Examples
For more examples, see the examples folder.
use Grammar;
use Unstructured;
let math: Grammar = r#"
expr : u16 | paren | expr symbol expr ;
paren : "(" expr symbol expr ")" ;
symbol : r"-|\+|\*|÷" ;
"#.parse.unwrap;
let mut wool = new;
let yarn: String = math.expression.unwrap;
// (21359*39933))+13082-62216
The state machine traversal always starts at the first rule. In the example,
expris the first rule and evaluates to eitheru16,paren, or the concatenation ofexprandsymbolandexpr.;delimits different rules.u16is a pre-defined rule that directly evaluates tou16::arbitrary(u).parenevaluates to the concatenation of the literal"(",expr,symbol,expr, and")".symbolevaluates to any arbitrary string that matches the regex-|\+|\*|÷.
Semi-Correct Expression
This grammar is similar to the well formed math expression grammar, but sometimes includes an extra closing parenthesis and/or an arbitrary symbol.
use Grammar;
use Unstructured;
let math: Grammar = r#"
expr : u16 | paren | expr symbol expr ;
paren : "(" expr symbol expr ")" ")"? ;
symbol : r"-|\+|\*|÷" | String ;
"#.parse.unwrap;
let mut wool = new;
let yarn: String = math.expression.unwrap;
// (44637*32200)Ѱ'x124928390-27338)
Usage in Fuzzer
use Grammar;
use fuzz_target;
use ;
use LazyLock;
static GRAMMAR: = new;
;
fuzz_target!;
Samples
6705d81051237=
♣69382149-12901+8851÷50*3993043534
(8198942155÷60177552446447)
(586643-96)*036074789
(8÷68){K2628
(5798))
(0868430}ݾ▼73)
0135259
(930-6*9502)
5045620÷91599
Grammar Syntax
For examples see examples.
| Syntax | Description |
|---|---|
rule : X ; |
Defines a rule with name "rule" with some pattern X. "rule" can be referenced in the same grammar, e.g. another_rule : rule+ ; |
X? |
Evaluates to either X or nothing. |
X+ |
Evaluates to X 1 or more times (up to and including [crate::MAX_REPEAT]) |
X* |
Evaluates to X 0 or more times (up to and including [crate::MAX_REPEAT]) |
X{k} |
Evaluates to X exactly k times, where k is a u32. |
X{min,max} |
Evaluates X at least min times and at most (including) max times. min and max are u32. |
X | Y |
Evaluates to either X or Y. |
"X" |
Literal value inside the quotes, e.g. "foo" |
[X] |
Literal Vec<u8>, e.g. [1, 2]. |
r"X" |
Arbitrarily evaluates the regex inside the quotes, e.g. r"[A-Z]+". |
X Y |
Evaluates to X and then Y. |
(X) |
Groups the expression inside the parenthesis, e.g. (X | Y)+. |
u16, String, etc |
A pre-defined type that evaluates to T::arbitrary(u). See more. Supported pre-defined rules are String, char, f32, f64, and signed + unsigned integer types. |
Visitor
A [Visitor] is state that is initialized before traversal and mutated as different rules are visited during the traversal, e.g. visit_or. Visitors that are already implemented are String and Vec<u8> for output buffers, and u64 for classification.
Users can implement their own Visitor to
- use a different output buffer
- use a different classification
- gather data
- build an abstract syntax tree
Example
use ;
let math: Grammar = r#"
expr : u16 | paren | expr symbol expr ;
paren : "(" expr symbol expr ")" ;
symbol : r"-|\+|\*|÷" ;
"#.parse.unwrap;
/// Detects if any prime numbers were generated.
;
let mut wool = new;
let : = math.expression.unwrap;
let yarn: String = math.expression.unwrap;
assert!;
Example
In this example, a math specific abstract syntax tree (AST) is built during the arbitrary traversal.
use ;
let math: Grammar = r#"
expr : u16 | paren | expr symbol expr ;
paren : "(" expr symbol expr ")" ;
symbol : r"-|\+|\*|÷" ;
"#.parse.unwrap;
let mut wool = new;
// MathAst { cur_op: None, stack: [Expr(Num(13108), '*', Num(0))] }
let yarn: MathAst = math.expression.unwrap;