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fuzzcheck-view

fuzzcheck-view is a tool to visualise the code coverage of inputs generated by fuzzcheck. It is currently very basic and does not handle errors well, but it seems to work.

Please note that it is currently published under the Anti-Capitalist Software License. This means that you are free to use, copy, modify, and distribute or sell copies of it if you are an individual, a non-profit organisation, an educational institution, or an organisation that seeks shared profit for all of its members, and allows non-members to set the cost of their labor. If you do not meet any of these requirements but would still like to use fuzzcheck-view, please contact me at loic.lecrenier@me.com . I am also automatically granting the permission to use, copy, and modify the tool to all of my sponsors.

To install it, run:

cargo +nightly install --git https://github.com/loiclec/fuzzcheck-view

After running the fuzz test tests::fuzz on the crate my_crate with fuzzcheck, you can launch fuzzcheck-view as follows:

fuzzcheck-view -d "my_crate" -t "tests::fuzz"

where the argument to -d (directory) is a path to the top folder of a Rust crate (containing a Cargo.toml). The argument to -t is the exact path to the test function run by fuzzcheck. Additionally, if you are using cargo workspace, you need to give the path to the top folder of the workspace with -w. For example, if you have a workspace called compiler that contains a crate called parser. Then, assuming the current directory is the top-level folder of the workspace, you should use something like:

fuzzcheck-view -w "." -d "my_crate" -t "parse_ident::tests::fuzz1"

fuzzcheck-view expects the following folder structure:

- my_crate # (path given to -d )
    - fuzz
        - tests::fuzz
            - stats
                - <timestamp>
                    - ...
                - <timestamp>
                    - simples_cov,json
                    - coverage_sensor.json
                    - world.json
            - ...
        - tests::fuzz2
            - ...

This folder structure is generated by fuzzcheck when fuzzing a function using the default options.

If it launches properly, it serves a webpage on localhost:8000 looking like this:

fuzzcheck-view ui

On the top left is a list of options about what code coverage to visualise. You can choose to visualise the coverage of all test cases combined, or of a particular one. You can also choose to filter the list of functions shown to make it easier to navigate.

On the top right is the list of inputs saved by fuzzcheck’s simplest_cov pool. They are sorted by their “interestingness” score. You can hover the mouse over an input to see a preview of it underneath, or select one to view its associated code coverage (if you have selected that option in the top left panel).

On the second row is a list of files and functions. Only the code coverage of the selected function will be shown. You can quickly switch between files using the a and s keys and switch between functions using the k and l keys.

Finally, on the bottom left, we have the code coverage. The parts highlighted in green were reached by the fuzzer/input. The parts highlighted in red were not. The parts that are not highlighted were not instrumented.

If you hover over a region of green highlighted code, the smallest input that reaches this region of code is shown on the right.

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A code coverage viewer for Rust code that was fuzzed by fuzzcheck-rs

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