.. | ||
corpus.tar.gz | ||
README.md | ||
wirefuzz.go |
How to fuzz the Lightning Network Daemon's wire protocol using go-fuzz
This document will describe how to use the fuzz-testing library go-fuzz
on
the lnd
wire protocol.
Introduction
Lnd uses its own wire protocol to send and receive messages of all types. There
are 22 different message types, each with their own specific format. If a
message is not in the correct format, lnd
should logically reject the message
and throw an error. But what if it doesn't? What if we could sneakily craft a
custom message that could pass all the necessary checks and cause an error to
go undetected? Chaos would ensue. However, crafting such a message would require
an in-depth understanding of the many different cogs that make the wire protocol
tick.
A better solution is fuzz-testing. Fuzz-testing or fuzzing is when a program
known as a fuzzer generates many, many inputs to a function or program in an
attempt to cause it to crash. Fuzzing is surprisingly effective at finding bugs
and a particular fuzzing program AFL
is well-known for the amount of bugs it
has found with its learned approach. The library we will be using, go-fuzz
, is
based on AFL
and has quite a track record of finding bugs in a diverse set of
go programs. go-fuzz
takes a coverage-guided approach in an attempt to cover
as many code paths as possible on an attack surface. We give go-fuzz
real,
valid inputs and it will essentially change bits until it achieves a crash!
After reading this document, you too may be able to find errors in lnd
with
go-fuzz
!
Setup and Installation
This section will cover setup and installation of go-fuzz
.
- First, we must get
go-fuzz
:
$ go get github.com/dvyukov/go-fuzz/go-fuzz
$ go get github.com/dvyukov/go-fuzz/go-fuzz-build
- Next, create a folder in the
lnwire
package. You can name it whatever.
$ mkdir lnwire/<folder name here>
- Unzip
corpus.tar.gz
in thedocs/go-fuzz
folder and move it to the folder you just made.
$ tar -xzf docs/go-fuzz/corpus.tar.gz
$ mv corpus lnwire/<folder name here>
- Now, move
wirefuzz.go
to the same folder you just created.
$ mv docs/go-fuzz/wirefuzz.go lnwire/<folder name here>
- Change the package name in
wirefuzz.go
fromwirefuzz
to<folder name here>
. - Build the test program - this produces a
<folder name here>-fuzz.zip
(archive) file.
$ go-fuzz-build github.com/lightningnetwork/lnd/lnwire/<folder name here>
- Now, run
go-fuzz
!!!
$ go-fuzz -bin=<.zip archive here> -workdir=lnwire/<folder name here>
go-fuzz
will print out log lines every couple of seconds. Example output:
2017/09/19 17:44:23 slaves: 8, corpus: 23 (3s ago), crashers: 1, restarts: 1/748, execs: 400690 (16694/sec), cover: 394, uptime: 24s
Corpus is the number of items in the corpus. go-fuzz
may add valid inputs to
the corpus in an attempt to gain more coverage. Crashers is the number of inputs
resulting in a crash. The inputs, and their outputs are logged in:
<folder name here>/crashers
. go-fuzz
also creates a suppressions
directory
of stacktraces to ignore so that it doesn't create duplicate stacktraces.
Cover is a number representing coverage of the program being fuzzed. When I ran
this earlier, go-fuzz
found two bugs (#310 and #312) within minutes!
Corpus Notes
You may wonder how I made the corpus that you unzipped in the previous step.
It's quite simple really. For every message type that lnwire_test.go
processed in TestLightningWireProtocol
, I logged it (in []byte
format) to
a .txt file. Within minutes, I had a corpus of valid lnwire
messages that
I could use with go-fuzz
! go-fuzz
will alter these valid messages to create
the sneakily crafted message that I described in the introduction that manages
to bypass validation checks and crash the program. I ran go-fuzz
for several
hours on the corpus I generated and found two bugs. I believe I have exhausted
the current corpus, but there are still perhaps possible malicious inputs that
go-fuzz
has not yet reached and could reach with a slightly different generated
corpus.
Test Harness
If you take a look at the test harness that I used, wirefuzz.go
, you will see
that it consists of one function: func Fuzz(data []byte) int
. go-fuzz
requires
that each input in the corpus is in []byte
format. The test harness is also
quite simple. It reads in []byte
messages into lnwire.Message
objects,
serializes them into a buffer, deserializes them back into lnwire.Message
objects
and asserts their equality. If the pre-serialization and post-deserialization
lnwire.Message
objects are not equal, the wire protocol has encountered a bug.
Wherever a 0
is returned, go-fuzz
will ignore that input as it has reached
an unimportant code path caused by the parser catching the error. If a 1
is
returned, the []byte
input was parsed successfully and the two lnwire.Message
objects were indeed equal. This []byte
input is then added to the corpus as
a valid message. If a panic
is reached, serialization or deserialization failed
and go-fuzz
may have found a bug.
Conclusion
Fuzzing is a powerful and quick way to find bugs in programs that works especially
well with protocols where there is a strict format with validation rules. Fuzzing
is important as an automated security tool and can find real bugs in real-world
software. The fuzzing of lnd
is by no means complete and there exist probably
many more bugs in the software that may go
undetected if left unfuzzed. Citizens,
do your part and go-fuzz
lnd
today!