gecko-dev/third_party/rust/wasm-smith
Ryan Hunt 0f492c8b89 Bug 1873776 - wasm: Import latest spec tests for exception-handling. r=bvisness,supply-chain-reviewers
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D198095
2024-01-25 13:08:37 +00:00
..
benches
src Bug 1873776 - wasm: Import latest spec tests for exception-handling. r=bvisness,supply-chain-reviewers 2024-01-25 13:08:37 +00:00
tests Bug 1873776 - wasm: Import latest spec tests for exception-handling. r=bvisness,supply-chain-reviewers 2024-01-25 13:08:37 +00:00
.cargo-checksum.json Bug 1873776 - wasm: Import latest spec tests for exception-handling. r=bvisness,supply-chain-reviewers 2024-01-25 13:08:37 +00:00
Cargo.toml Bug 1873776 - wasm: Import latest spec tests for exception-handling. r=bvisness,supply-chain-reviewers 2024-01-25 13:08:37 +00:00
LICENSE
README.md Bug 1863746 - wasm: Update crates for wasm-tools. r=rhunt,supply-chain-reviewers 2023-11-22 16:49:39 +00:00

README.md

wasm-smith

A WebAssembly test case generator.

Features

  • Always valid: All generated Wasm modules pass validation. wasm-smith gets past your wasm parser and validator, exercising the guts of your Wasm compiler, runtime, or tool.

  • Supports the full WebAssembly language: Doesn't have blind spots or unimplemented instructions.

  • Implements the Arbitrary trait: Easy to use with cargo fuzz and libfuzzer-sys!

  • Deterministic: Given the same input seed, always generates the same output Wasm module, so you can always reproduce test failures.

  • Plays nice with mutation-based fuzzers: Small changes to the input tend to produce small changes to the output Wasm module. Larger inputs tend to generate larger Wasm modules.

Usage

With cargo fuzz and libfuzzer-sys

First, use cargo fuzz to define a new fuzz target:

$ cargo fuzz add my_wasm_smith_fuzz_target

Next, add wasm-smith to your dependencies:

$ cargo add wasm-smith

Then, define your fuzz target so that it takes arbitrary wasm_smith::Modules as an argument, convert the module into serialized Wasm bytes via the to_bytes method, and then feed it into your system:

// fuzz/fuzz_targets/my_wasm_smith_fuzz_target.rs

#![no_main]

use libfuzzer_sys::fuzz_target;
use wasm_smith::Module;

fuzz_target!(|module: Module| {
    let wasm_bytes = module.to_bytes();

    // Your code here...
});

Finally, start fuzzing:

$ cargo fuzz run my_wasm_smith_fuzz_target

Note: Also check out the validate fuzz target defined in this repository. Using the wasmparser crate, it checks that every module generated by wasm-smith validates successfully.

As a Command Line Tool

Install the CLI tool via cargo:

$ cargo install wasm-tools

Convert some arbitrary input into a valid Wasm module:

$ head -c 100 /dev/urandom | wasm-tools smith -o test.wasm

Finally, run your tool on the generated Wasm module:

$ my-wasm-tool test.wasm