O

ossfuzz

by @trailofbitsv
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An open-source project developed by Google, providing free distributed infrastructure for continuous fuzz testing.

FuzzingOSS-FuzzVulnerability DiscoverySoftware SecurityGoogle SecurityGitHub
Installation
npx skills add trailofbits/skills --skill ossfuzz
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Before / After Comparison

1
Before

Many open-source projects struggle to conduct professional security fuzz testing due to resource constraints. Project maintainers typically need to set up complex testing environments themselves, investing significant time and effort, yet often achieve limited test coverage. This leads to potential vulnerabilities persisting in projects for extended periods, posing security risks to users and impacting project reputation.

After

With OSS-Fuzz, open-source projects can freely access Google's distributed fuzz testing infrastructure. It automatically and continuously performs deep fuzz testing on projects, discovering and reporting various security vulnerabilities. This significantly lowers the barrier to security testing for open-source projects, substantially enhancing their security and stability, allowing developers to focus more on feature development.

description SKILL.md

ossfuzz

OSS-Fuzz

OSS-Fuzz is an open-source project developed by Google that provides free distributed infrastructure for continuous fuzz testing. It streamlines the fuzzing process and facilitates simpler modifications. While only select projects are accepted into OSS-Fuzz, the project's core is open-source, allowing anyone to host their own instance for private projects.

Overview

OSS-Fuzz provides a simple CLI framework for building and starting harnesses or calculating their coverage. Additionally, OSS-Fuzz can be used as a service that hosts static web pages generated from fuzzing outputs such as coverage information.

Key Concepts

Concept Description

helper.py CLI script for building images, building fuzzers, and running harnesses locally

Base Images Hierarchical Docker images providing build dependencies and compilers

project.yaml Configuration file defining project metadata for OSS-Fuzz enrollment

Dockerfile Project-specific image with build dependencies

build.sh Script that builds fuzzing harnesses for your project

Criticality Score Metric used by OSS-Fuzz team to evaluate project acceptance

When to Apply

Apply this technique when:

  • Setting up continuous fuzzing for an open-source project

  • Need distributed fuzzing infrastructure without managing servers

  • Want coverage reports and bug tracking integrated with fuzzing

  • Testing existing OSS-Fuzz harnesses locally

  • Reproducing crashes from OSS-Fuzz bug reports

Skip this technique when:

  • Project is closed-source (unless hosting your own OSS-Fuzz instance)

  • Project doesn't meet OSS-Fuzz's criticality score threshold

  • Need proprietary or specialized fuzzing infrastructure

  • Fuzzing simple scripts that don't warrant infrastructure

Quick Reference

Task Command

Clone OSS-Fuzz git clone https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz

Build project image python3 infra/helper.py build_image --pull <project>

Build fuzzers with ASan python3 infra/helper.py build_fuzzers --sanitizer=address <project>

Run specific harness python3 infra/helper.py run_fuzzer <project> <harness>

Generate coverage report python3 infra/helper.py coverage <project>

Check helper.py options python3 infra/helper.py --help

OSS-Fuzz Project Components

OSS-Fuzz provides several publicly available tools and web interfaces:

Bug Tracker

The bug tracker allows you to:

  • Check bugs from specific projects (initially visible only to maintainers, later made public)

  • Create new issues and comment on existing ones

  • Search for similar bugs across all projects to understand issues

Build Status System

The build status system helps track:

  • Build statuses of all included projects

  • Date of last successful build

  • Build failures and their duration

Fuzz Introspector

Fuzz Introspector displays:

  • Coverage data for projects enrolled in OSS-Fuzz

  • Hit frequency for covered code

  • Performance analysis and blocker identification

Read this case study for examples and explanations.

Step-by-Step: Running a Single Harness

You don't need to host the whole OSS-Fuzz platform to use it. The helper script makes it easy to run individual harnesses locally.

Step 1: Clone OSS-Fuzz

git clone https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz
cd oss-fuzz
python3 infra/helper.py --help

Step 2: Build Project Image

python3 infra/helper.py build_image --pull <project-name>

This downloads and builds the base Docker image for the project.

Step 3: Build Fuzzers with Sanitizers

python3 infra/helper.py build_fuzzers --sanitizer=address <project-name>

Sanitizer options:

Note: Fuzzers are built to /build/out/<project-name>/ containing the harness executables, dictionaries, corpus, and crash files.

Step 4: Run the Fuzzer

python3 infra/helper.py run_fuzzer <project-name> <harness-name> [<fuzzer-args>]

The helper script automatically runs any missed steps if you skip them.

Step 5: Coverage Analysis (Optional)

First, install gsutil (skip gcloud initialization).

python3 infra/helper.py build_fuzzers --sanitizer=coverage <project-name>
python3 infra/helper.py coverage <project-name>

Use --no-corpus-download to use only local corpus. The command generates and hosts a coverage report locally.

See official OSS-Fuzz documentation for details.

Common Patterns

Pattern: Running irssi Example

Use Case: Testing OSS-Fuzz setup with a simple enrolled project

# Clone and navigate to OSS-Fuzz
git clone https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz
cd oss-fuzz

# Build and run irssi fuzzer
python3 infra/helper.py build_image --pull irssi
python3 infra/helper.py build_fuzzers --sanitizer=address irssi
python3 infra/helper.py run_fuzzer irssi irssi-fuzz

Expected Output:

INFO:__main__:Running: docker run --rm --privileged --shm-size=2g --platform linux/amd64 -i -e FUZZING_ENGINE=libfuzzer -e SANITIZER=address -e RUN_FUZZER_MODE=interactive -e HELPER=True -v /private/tmp/oss-fuzz/build/out/irssi:/out -t gcr.io/oss-fuzz-base/base-runner run_fuzzer irssi-fuzz.
Using seed corpus: irssi-fuzz_seed_corpus.zip
/out/irssi-fuzz -rss_limit_mb=2560 -timeout=25 /tmp/irssi-fuzz_corpus -max_len=2048 < /dev/null
INFO: Running with entropic power schedule (0xFF, 100).
INFO: Seed: 1531341664
INFO: Loaded 1 modules   (95687 inline 8-bit counters): 95687 [0x1096c80, 0x10ae247),
INFO: Loaded 1 PC tables (95687 PCs): 95687 [0x10ae248,0x1223eb8),
INFO:      719 files found in /tmp/irssi-fuzz_corpus
INFO: seed corpus: files: 719 min: 1b max: 170106b total: 367969b rss: 48Mb
#720        INITED cov: 409 ft: 1738 corp: 640/163Kb exec/s: 0 rss: 62Mb
#762        REDUCE cov: 409 ft: 1738 corp: 640/163Kb lim: 2048 exec/s: 0 rss: 63Mb L: 236/2048 MS: 2 ShuffleBytes-EraseBytes-

Pattern: Enrolling a New Project

Use Case: Adding your project to OSS-Fuzz (or private instance)

Create three files in projects/<your-project>/:

1. project.yaml - Project metadata:

homepage: "https://github.com/yourorg/yourproject"
language: c++
primary_contact: "your-email@example.com"
main_repo: "https://github.com/yourorg/yourproject"
fuzzing_engines:
  - libfuzzer
sanitizers:
  - address
  - undefined

2. Dockerfile - Build dependencies:

FROM gcr.io/oss-fuzz-base/base-builder
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y \
    autoconf \
    automake \
    libtool \
    pkg-config
RUN git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/yourorg/yourproject
WORKDIR yourproject
COPY build.sh $SRC/

3. build.sh - Build harnesses:

#!/bin/bash -eu
./autogen.sh
./configure --disable-shared
make -j$(nproc)

# Build harnesses
$CXX $CXXFLAGS -std=c++11 -I. \
    $SRC/yourproject/fuzz/harness.cc -o $OUT/harness \
    $LIB_FUZZING_ENGINE ./libyourproject.a

# Copy corpus and dictionary if available
cp $SRC/yourproject/fuzz/corpus.zip $OUT/harness_seed_corpus.zip
cp $SRC/yourproject/fuzz/dictionary.dict $OUT/harness.dict

Docker Images in OSS-Fuzz

Harnesses are built and executed in Docker containers. All projects share a runner image, but each project has its own build image.

Image Hierarchy

Images build on each other in this sequence:

Language-specific variants: base_builder_go, etc.

  • See /oss-fuzz/infra/base-images/ for full list

  • Your project Docker image - Project-specific dependencies; based on base_builder or language variant

Runner Images (Used Separately)

Advanced Usage

Tips and Tricks

Tip Why It Helps

Don't manually copy source code Project Dockerfile likely already pulls latest version

Check existing projects Browse oss-fuzz/projects for examples

Keep harnesses in separate repo Like curl-fuzzer - cleaner organization

Use specific compiler versions Base images provide consistent build environment

Install dependencies in Dockerfile May require approval for OSS-Fuzz enrollment

Criticality Score

OSS-Fuzz uses a criticality score to evaluate project acceptance. See this example for how scoring works.

Projects with lower scores may still be added to private OSS-Fuzz instances.

Hosting Your Own Instance

Since OSS-Fuzz is open-source, you can host your own instance for:

  • Private projects not eligible for public OSS-Fuzz

  • Projects with lower criticality scores

  • Custom fuzzing infrastructure needs

Anti-Patterns

Anti-Pattern Problem Correct Approach

Manually pulling source in build.sh Doesn't use latest version Let Dockerfile handle git clone

Copying code to OSS-Fuzz repo Hard to maintain, violates separation Reference external harness repo

Ignoring base image versions Build inconsistencies Use provided base images and compilers

Skipping local testing Wastes CI resources Use helper.py locally before PR

Not checking build status Unnoticed build failures Monitor build status page regularly

Tool-Specific Guidance

libFuzzer

OSS-Fuzz primarily uses libFuzzer as the fuzzing engine for C/C++ projects.

Harness signature:

extern "C" int LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput(const uint8_t *data, size_t size) {
    // Your fuzzing logic
    return 0;
}

Build in build.sh:

$CXX $CXXFLAGS -std=c++11 -I. \
    harness.cc -o $OUT/harness \
    $LIB_FUZZING_ENGINE ./libproject.a

Integration tips:

  • Use $LIB_FUZZING_ENGINE variable provided by OSS-Fuzz

  • Include -fsanitize=fuzzer is handled automatically

  • Link against static libraries when possible

AFL++

OSS-Fuzz supports AFL++ as an alternative fuzzing engine.

Enable in project.yaml:

fuzzing_engines:
  - afl
  - libfuzzer

Integration tips:

  • AFL++ harnesses work alongside libFuzzer harnesses

  • Use persistent mode for better performance

  • OSS-Fuzz handles engine-specific compilation flags

Atheris (Python)

For Python projects with C extensions.

Example from cbor2 integration:

Harness:

import atheris
import sys
import cbor2

@atheris.instrument_func
def TestOneInput(data):
    fdp = atheris.FuzzedDataProvider(data)
    try:
        cbor2.loads(data)
    except (cbor2.CBORDecodeError, ValueError):
        pass

def main():
    atheris.Setup(sys.argv, TestOneInput)
    atheris.Fuzz()

if __name__ == "__main__":
    main()

Build in build.sh:

pip3 install .
for fuzzer in $(find $SRC -name 'fuzz_*.py'); do
  compile_python_fuzzer $fuzzer
done

Integration tips:

Rust Projects

Enable in project.yaml:

language: rust
fuzzing_engines:
  - libfuzzer
sanitizers:
  - address  # Only AddressSanitizer supported for Rust

Build in build.sh:

cargo fuzz build -O --debug-assertions
cp fuzz/target/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/release/fuzz_target_1 $OUT/

Integration tips:

Troubleshooting

Issue Cause Solution

Build fails with missing dependencies Dependencies not in Dockerfile Add apt-get install or equivalent in Dockerfile

Harness crashes immediately Missing input validation Add size checks in harness

Coverage is 0% Harness not reaching target code Verify harness actually calls target functions

Build timeout Complex build process Optimize build.sh, consider parallel builds

Sanitizer errors in build Incompatible flags Use flags provided by OSS-Fuzz environment variables

Cannot find source code Wrong working directory in Dockerfile Set WORKDIR or use absolute paths

Related Skills

Tools That Use This Technique

Skill How It Applies

libfuzzer Primary fuzzing engine used by OSS-Fuzz

aflpp Alternative fuzzing engine supported by OSS-Fuzz

atheris Used for fuzzing Python projects in OSS-Fuzz

cargo-fuzz Used for Rust projects in OSS-Fuzz

Related Techniques

Skill Relationship

coverage-analysis OSS-Fuzz generates coverage reports via helper.py

address-sanitizer Default sanitizer for OSS-Fuzz projects

fuzz-harness-writing Essential for enrolling projects in OSS-Fuzz

corpus-management OSS-Fuzz maintains corpus for enrolled projects

Resources

Key External Resources

OSS-Fuzz Official Documentation Comprehensive documentation covering enrollment, harness writing, and troubleshooting for the OSS-Fuzz platform.

Getting Started Guide Step-by-step process for enrolling new projects into OSS-Fuzz, including requirements and approval process.

cbor2 OSS-Fuzz Integration PR Real-world example of enrolling a Python project with C extensions into OSS-Fuzz. Shows:

  • Initial proposal and project introduction

  • Criticality score evaluation

  • Complete implementation (project.yaml, Dockerfile, build.sh, harnesses)

Fuzz Introspector Case Studies Examples and explanations of using Fuzz Introspector to analyze coverage and identify fuzzing blockers.

Video Resources

Check OSS-Fuzz documentation for workshop recordings and tutorials on enrollment and harness development. Weekly Installs855Repositorytrailofbits/skillsGitHub Stars3.7KFirst SeenJan 19, 2026Security AuditsGen Agent Trust HubPassSocketPassSnykPassInstalled onclaude-code772opencode722gemini-cli707codex699cursor677github-copilot648

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Updated2026年3月17日
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Timeline

Created2026年3月17日
Last Updated2026年3月17日