llvm-mirror/tools/llvm-mc-fuzzer/llvm-mc-fuzzer.cpp
Mehdi Amini a6cfd067ac Turn cl::values() (for enum) from a vararg function to using C++ variadic template
The core of the change is supposed to be NFC, however it also fixes
what I believe was an undefined behavior when calling:

 va_start(ValueArgs, Desc);

with Desc being a StringRef.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25342

llvm-svn: 283671
2016-10-08 19:41:06 +00:00

160 lines
5.5 KiB
C++

//===--- llvm-mc-fuzzer.cpp - Fuzzer for the MC layer ---------------------===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#include "FuzzerInterface.h"
#include "llvm-c/Disassembler.h"
#include "llvm-c/Target.h"
#include "llvm/MC/SubtargetFeature.h"
#include "llvm/Support/CommandLine.h"
#include "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h"
using namespace llvm;
const unsigned AssemblyTextBufSize = 80;
enum ActionType {
AC_Assemble,
AC_Disassemble
};
static cl::opt<ActionType>
Action(cl::desc("Action to perform:"),
cl::init(AC_Assemble),
cl::values(clEnumValN(AC_Assemble, "assemble",
"Assemble a .s file (default)"),
clEnumValN(AC_Disassemble, "disassemble",
"Disassemble strings of hex bytes")));
static cl::opt<std::string>
TripleName("triple", cl::desc("Target triple to assemble for, "
"see -version for available targets"));
static cl::opt<std::string>
MCPU("mcpu",
cl::desc("Target a specific cpu type (-mcpu=help for details)"),
cl::value_desc("cpu-name"), cl::init(""));
// This is useful for variable-length instruction sets.
static cl::opt<unsigned> InsnLimit(
"insn-limit",
cl::desc("Limit the number of instructions to process (0 for no limit)"),
cl::value_desc("count"), cl::init(0));
static cl::list<std::string>
MAttrs("mattr", cl::CommaSeparated,
cl::desc("Target specific attributes (-mattr=help for details)"),
cl::value_desc("a1,+a2,-a3,..."));
// The feature string derived from -mattr's values.
std::string FeaturesStr;
static cl::list<std::string>
FuzzerArgs("fuzzer-args", cl::Positional,
cl::desc("Options to pass to the fuzzer"), cl::ZeroOrMore,
cl::PositionalEatsArgs);
static std::vector<char *> ModifiedArgv;
int DisassembleOneInput(const uint8_t *Data, size_t Size) {
char AssemblyText[AssemblyTextBufSize];
std::vector<uint8_t> DataCopy(Data, Data + Size);
LLVMDisasmContextRef Ctx = LLVMCreateDisasmCPUFeatures(
TripleName.c_str(), MCPU.c_str(), FeaturesStr.c_str(), nullptr, 0,
nullptr, nullptr);
assert(Ctx);
uint8_t *p = DataCopy.data();
unsigned Consumed;
unsigned InstructionsProcessed = 0;
do {
Consumed = LLVMDisasmInstruction(Ctx, p, Size, 0, AssemblyText,
AssemblyTextBufSize);
Size -= Consumed;
p += Consumed;
InstructionsProcessed ++;
if (InsnLimit != 0 && InstructionsProcessed < InsnLimit)
break;
} while (Consumed != 0);
LLVMDisasmDispose(Ctx);
return 0;
}
int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *Data, size_t Size) {
if (Action == AC_Assemble)
errs() << "error: -assemble is not implemented\n";
else if (Action == AC_Disassemble)
return DisassembleOneInput(Data, Size);
llvm_unreachable("Unknown action");
return 0;
}
int LLVMFuzzerInitialize(int *argc, char ***argv) {
// The command line is unusual compared to other fuzzers due to the need to
// specify the target. Options like -triple, -mcpu, and -mattr work like
// their counterparts in llvm-mc, while -fuzzer-args collects options for the
// fuzzer itself.
//
// Examples:
//
// Fuzz the big-endian MIPS32R6 disassembler using 100,000 inputs of up to
// 4-bytes each and use the contents of ./corpus as the test corpus:
// llvm-mc-fuzzer -triple mips-linux-gnu -mcpu=mips32r6 -disassemble \
// -fuzzer-args -max_len=4 -runs=100000 ./corpus
//
// Infinitely fuzz the little-endian MIPS64R2 disassembler with the MSA
// feature enabled using up to 64-byte inputs:
// llvm-mc-fuzzer -triple mipsel-linux-gnu -mcpu=mips64r2 -mattr=msa \
// -disassemble -fuzzer-args ./corpus
//
// If your aim is to find instructions that are not tested, then it is
// advisable to constrain the maximum input size to a single instruction
// using -max_len as in the first example. This results in a test corpus of
// individual instructions that test unique paths. Without this constraint,
// there will be considerable redundancy in the corpus.
char **OriginalArgv = *argv;
LLVMInitializeAllTargetInfos();
LLVMInitializeAllTargetMCs();
LLVMInitializeAllDisassemblers();
cl::ParseCommandLineOptions(*argc, OriginalArgv);
// Rebuild the argv without the arguments llvm-mc-fuzzer consumed so that
// the driver can parse its arguments.
//
// FuzzerArgs cannot provide the non-const pointer that OriginalArgv needs.
// Re-use the strings from OriginalArgv instead of copying FuzzerArg to a
// non-const buffer to avoid the need to clean up when the fuzzer terminates.
ModifiedArgv.push_back(OriginalArgv[0]);
for (const auto &FuzzerArg : FuzzerArgs) {
for (int i = 1; i < *argc; ++i) {
if (FuzzerArg == OriginalArgv[i])
ModifiedArgv.push_back(OriginalArgv[i]);
}
}
*argc = ModifiedArgv.size();
*argv = ModifiedArgv.data();
// Package up features to be passed to target/subtarget
// We have to pass it via a global since the callback doesn't
// permit any user data.
if (MAttrs.size()) {
SubtargetFeatures Features;
for (unsigned i = 0; i != MAttrs.size(); ++i)
Features.AddFeature(MAttrs[i]);
FeaturesStr = Features.getString();
}
return 0;
}