Note: This is beta content.

This tutorial introduces the basics of fuzzing in Go. With fuzzing, random data is run against your test in an attempt to find vulnerabilities or crash-causing inputs. Some examples of vulnerabilities that can be found by fuzzing are SQL injection, buffer overflow, denial of service and cross-site scripting attacks.

In this tutorial, you'll write a fuzz test for a simple function, run the go command, and debug and fix issues in the code.

For help with terminology throughout this tutorial, see the Go Fuzzing glossary.

You'll progress through the following sections:

  1. Create a folder for your code.
  2. Add code to test.
  3. Add a unit test.
  4. Add a fuzz test.
  5. Fix two bugs.
  6. Explore additional resources.

Note: For other tutorials, see Tutorials.

Note: Go fuzzing currently supports a subset of built-in types, listed in the Go Fuzzing docs, with support for more built-in types to be added in the future.

Prerequisites

  • An installation of Go 1.18 Beta 1 or later. For installation instructions, see Installing and using the beta.
  • A tool to edit your code. Any text editor you have will work fine.
  • A command terminal. Go works well using any terminal on Linux and Mac, and on PowerShell or cmd in Windows.
  • An environment that supports fuzzing. Go fuzzing with coverage instrumentation is only available on AMD64 and ARM64 architectures currently.

Installing and using the beta {#installing_beta}

This tutorial requires the fuzzing feature available in Beta 1. To install the beta, following these steps:

  1. Run the following command to install the beta.

    $ go install golang.org/dl/go1.18beta1@latest
    
  2. Run the following command to download updates.

    $ go1.18beta1 download
    
  3. Run go commands using the beta instead of a released version of Go (if you have one).

    You can run commands with the beta either by using the beta name or by aliasing the beta to another name.

    • Using the beta name, you can run commands by invoking go1.18beta1 instead of go:

      $ go1.18beta1 version
      
    • By aliasing the beta name to another name, you can simplify the command:

      $ alias go=go1.18beta1
      $ go version
      

    Commands in this tutorial will assume you have aliased the beta name.

Create a folder for your code {#create_folder}

To begin, create a folder for the code you’ll write.

  1. Open a command prompt and change to your home directory.

    On Linux or Mac:

    $ cd
    

    On Windows:

    C:\> cd %HOMEPATH%
    

    The rest of the tutorial will show a $ as the prompt. The commands you use will work on Windows too.

  2. From the command prompt, create a directory for your code called fuzz.

    $ mkdir fuzz
    $ cd fuzz
    
  3. Create a module to hold your code.

    Run the go mod init command, giving it your new code’s module path.

    $ go mod init example/fuzz
    go: creating new go.mod: module example/fuzz
    

    Note: For production code, you’d specify a module path that’s more specific to your own needs. For more, be sure to see Managing dependencies.

Next, you'll add some simple code to reverse a string, which we’ll fuzz later.

Add code to test {#code_to_test}

In this step, you’ll add a function to reverse a string.

Write the code

  1. Using your text editor, create a file called main.go in the fuzz directory.

  2. Into main.go, at the top of the file, paste the following package declaration.

    package main
    

    A standalone program (as opposed to a library) is always in package main.

  3. Beneath the package declaration, paste the following function declaration.

    func Reverse(s string) string {
        b := []byte(s)
        for i, j := 0, len(b)-1; i {{raw "<"}} len(b)/2; i, j = i+1, j-1 {
            b[i], b[j] = b[j], b[i]
        }
        return string(b)
    }
    

    This function will accept a string, loop over it a byte at a time, and return the reversed string at the end.

    Note: This code is based on the stringutil.Reverse function within golang.org/x/example.

  4. At the top of main.go, beneath the package declaration, paste the following main function to initialize a string, reverse it, print the output, and repeat.

    func main() {
        input := "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog"
        rev := Reverse(input)
        doubleRev := Reverse(rev)
        fmt.Printf("original: %q\n", input)
        fmt.Printf("reversed: %q\n", rev)
        fmt.Printf("reversed again: %q\n", doubleRev)
    }
    

    This function will run a few Reverse operations, then print the output to the command line. This can be helpful for seeing the code in action, and potentially for debugging.

  5. The main function uses the fmt package, so you will need to import it.

    The first lines of code should look like this:

    package main
    
    import "fmt"
    

Run the code

From the command line in the directory containing main.go, run the code.

$ go run .
original: "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog"
reversed: "god yzal eht revo depmuj xof nworb kciuq ehT"
reversed again: "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog"

You can see the original string, the result of reversing it, then the result of reversing it again, which is equivalent to the original.

Now that the code is running, it’s time to test it.

Add a unit test {#unit_test}

In this step, you will write a basic unit test for the Reverse function.

Write the code

  1. Using your text editor, create a file called reverse_test.go in the fuzz directory.

  2. Paste the following code into reverse_test.go.

    package main
    
    import (
        "testing"
    )
    
    func TestReverse(t *testing.T) {
        testcases := []struct {
            in, want string
        }{
            {"Hello, world", "dlrow ,olleH"},
            {" ", " "},
            {"!12345", "54321!"},
        }
        for _, tc := range testcases {
            rev := Reverse(tc.in)
            if rev != tc.want {
                    t.Errorf("Reverse: %q, want %q", rev, tc.want)
            }
        }
    }
    

    This simple test will assert that the listed input strings will be correctly reversed.

Run the code

Run the unit test using go test

$ go test
PASS
ok      example/fuzz  0.013s

Next, you will change the unit test into a fuzz test.

Add a fuzz test {#fuzz_test}

The unit test has limitations, namely that each input must be added to the test by the developer. One benefit of fuzzing is that it comes up with inputs for your code, and may identify edge cases that the test cases you came up with didn’t reach.

In this section you will convert the unit test to a fuzz test so that you can generate more inputs with less work!

Note that you can keep unit tests, benchmarks, and fuzz tests in the same *_test.go file, but for this example you will convert the unit test to a fuzz test.

Write the code

In your text editor, replace the unit test in reverse_test.go with the following fuzz test.

func FuzzReverse(f *testing.F) {
    testcases := []string{"Hello, world", " ", "!12345"}
    for _, tc := range testcases {
        f.Add(tc)  // Use f.Add to provide a seed corpus
    }
    f.Fuzz(func(t *testing.T, orig string) {
        rev := Reverse(orig)
        doubleRev := Reverse(rev)
        if orig != doubleRev {
            t.Errorf("Before: %q, after: %q", orig, doubleRev)
        }
        if utf8.ValidString(orig) && !utf8.ValidString(rev) {
            t.Errorf("Reverse produced invalid UTF-8 string %q", rev)
        }
    })
}

Fuzzing has a few limitations as well. In your unit test, you could predict the expected output of the Reverse function, and verify that the actual output met those expectations.

For example, in the test case Reverse("Hello, world") the unit test specifies the return as "dlrow ,olleH".

When fuzzing, you can‘t predict the expected output, since you don’t have control over the inputs.

However, there are a few properties of the Reverse function that you can verify in a fuzz test. The two properties being checked in this fuzz test are:

  1. Reversing a string twice preserves the original value
  2. The reversed string preserves its state as valid UTF-8.

Note the syntax differences between the unit test and the fuzz test:

  • The function begins with FuzzXxx instead of TestXxx, and takes *testing.F instead of *testing.T
  • Where you would expect to a see a t.Run execution, you instead see f.Fuzz which takes a fuzz target function whose parameters are *testing.T and the types to be fuzzed. The inputs from your unit test are provided as seed corpus inputs using f.Add.
  1. Ensure the new package, unicode/utf8 has been imported.

    package main
    
    import (
        "testing"
        "unicode/utf8"
    )
    

    With the unit test converted to a fuzz test, it’s time to run the test again.

Run the code

  1. Run the fuzz test without fuzzing it to make sure the seed inputs pass.

    $ go test
    PASS
    ok      example/fuzz  0.013s
    

    You can also run go test -run=FuzzReverse if you have other tests in that file, and you only wish to run the fuzz test.

  2. Run FuzzReverse with fuzzing, to see if any randomly generated string inputs will cause a failure. This is executed using go test with a new flag, -fuzz.

    $ go test -fuzz=Fuzz
    fuzz: elapsed: 0s, gathering baseline coverage: 0/3 completed
    fuzz: elapsed: 0s, gathering baseline coverage: 3/3 completed, now fuzzing with 8 workers
    fuzz: minimizing 38-byte failing input file...
    --- FAIL: FuzzReverse (0.01s)
        --- FAIL: FuzzReverse (0.00s)
            reverse_test.go:20: Reverse produced invalid UTF-8 string "\x9c\xdd"
    
        Failing input written to testdata/fuzz/FuzzReverse/af69258a12129d6cbba438df5d5f25ba0ec050461c116f777e77ea7c9a0d217a
        To re-run:
        go test -run=FuzzReverse/af69258a12129d6cbba438df5d5f25ba0ec050461c116f777e77ea7c9a0d217a
    FAIL
    exit status 1
    FAIL    example/fuzz  0.030s
    

    A failure occurred while fuzzing, and the input that caused the problem is written to a seed corpus file that will be run the next time go test is called, even without the -fuzz flag. To view the input that caused the failure, open the corpus file written to the testdata/fuzz/FuzzReverse directory in a text editor. Your seed corpus file may contain a different string, but the format will be the same.

    go test fuzz v1
    string("泃")
    

    The first line of the corpus file indicates the encoding version. Each following line represents the value of each type making up the corpus entry. Since the fuzz target only takes 1 input, there is only 1 value after the version.

  3. Run go test again without the -fuzz flag; the new failing seed corpus entry will be used:

    $ go test
    --- FAIL: FuzzReverse (0.00s)
        --- FAIL: FuzzReverse/af69258a12129d6cbba438df5d5f25ba0ec050461c116f777e77ea7c9a0d217a (0.00s)
            reverse_test.go:20: Reverse produced invalid string
    FAIL
    exit status 1
    FAIL    example/fuzz  0.016s
    

    Since our test has failed, it’s time to debug.

Fix the invalid string error {#fix_invalid_string_error}

In this section, you will debug the failure, and fix the bug.

Feel free to spend some time thinking about this and trying to fix the issue yourself before moving on.

Diagnose the error

There are a few different ways you could debug this error. If you are using VS Code as your text editor, you can set up your debugger to investigate.

In this tutorial, we will log useful debugging info to your terminal.

First, consider the docs for utf8.ValidString.

ValidString reports whether s consists entirely of valid UTF-8-encoded runes.

The current Reverse function reverses the string byte-by-byte, and therein lies our problem. In order to preserve the UTF-8-encoded runes of the original string, we must instead reverse the string rune-by-rune.

To examine why the input (in this case, the Chinese character ) is causing Reverse to produce an invalid string when reversed, you can inspect the number of runes in the reversed string.

Write the code

In your text editor, replace the fuzz target within FuzzReverse with the following.

f.Fuzz(func(t *testing.T, orig string) {
    rev := Reverse(orig)
    doubleRev := Reverse(rev)
    t.Logf("Number of runes: orig=%d, rev=%d, doubleRev=%d", utf8.RuneCountInString(orig), utf8.RuneCountInString(rev), utf8.RuneCountInString(doubleRev))
    if orig != doubleRev {
        t.Errorf("Before: %q, after: %q", orig, doubleRev)
    }
    if utf8.ValidString(orig) && !utf8.ValidString(rev) {
        t.Errorf("Reverse produced invalid UTF-8 string %q", rev)
    }
})

This t.Logf line will print to the command line if an error occurs, or if executing the test with -v, which can help you debug this particular issue.

Run the code

Run the test using go test

$ go test
--- FAIL: FuzzReverse (0.00s)
    --- FAIL: FuzzReverse/28f36ef487f23e6c7a81ebdaa9feffe2f2b02b4cddaa6252e87f69863046a5e0 (0.00s)
        reverse_test.go:16: Number of runes: orig=1, rev=3, doubleRev=1
        reverse_test.go:21: Reverse produced invalid UTF-8 string "\x83\xb3\xe6"
FAIL
exit status 1
FAIL    example/fuzz    0.598s

The entire seed corpus used strings in which every character was a single byte. However, characters such as 泃 can require several bytes. Thus, reversing the string byte-by-byte will invalidate multi-byte characters.

Note: If you’re curious about how Go deals with strings, read the blog post Strings, bytes, runes and characters in Go for a deeper understanding.

With a better understanding of the bug, correct the error in the Reverse function.

Fix the error

To correct the Reverse function, let’s traverse the string by runes, instead of by bytes.

Write the code

In your text editor, replace the existing Reverse() function with the following.

func Reverse(s string) string {
    r := []rune(s)
    for i, j := 0, len(r)-1; i {{raw "<"}} len(r)/2; i, j = i+1, j-1 {
        r[i], r[j] = r[j], r[i]
    }
    return string(r)
}

The key difference is that Reverse is now iterating over each rune in the string, rather than each byte.

Run the code

  1. Run the test using go test

    $ go test
    PASS
    ok      example/fuzz  0.016s
    

    The test now passes!

  2. Fuzz it again with go test -fuzz, to see if there are any new bugs.

    $ go test -fuzz=Fuzz
    fuzz: elapsed: 0s, gathering baseline coverage: 0/37 completed
    fuzz: minimizing 506-byte failing input file...
    fuzz: elapsed: 0s, gathering baseline coverage: 5/37 completed
    --- FAIL: FuzzReverse (0.02s)
        --- FAIL: FuzzReverse (0.00s)
            reverse_test.go:33: Before: "\x91", after: "�"
    
        Failing input written to testdata/fuzz/FuzzReverse/1ffc28f7538e29d79fce69fef20ce5ea72648529a9ca10bea392bcff28cd015c
        To re-run:
        go test -run=FuzzReverse/1ffc28f7538e29d79fce69fef20ce5ea72648529a9ca10bea392bcff28cd015c
    FAIL
    exit status 1
    FAIL    example/fuzz  0.032s
    

    We can see that the string is different from the original after being reversed twice. This time the input itself is invalid unicode. How is this possible if we’re fuzzing with strings?

    Let’s debug again.

Fix the double reverse error {#fix_double_reverse_error}

In this section, you will debug the double reverse failure and fix the bug.

Feel free to spend some time thinking about this and trying to fix the issue yourself before moving on.

Diagnose the error

Like before, there are several ways you could debug this failure. In this case, using a debugger would be a great approach.

In this tutorial, we will log useful debugging info in the Reverse function.

Look closely at the reversed string to spot the error. In Go, a string is a read only slice of bytes, and can contain bytes that aren’t valid UTF-8. The original string is a byte slice with one byte, '\x91'. When the input string is set to []rune, Go encodes the byte slice to UTF-8, and replaces the byte with the UTF-8 character �. When we compare the replacement UTF-8 character to the input byte slice, they are clearly not equal.

Write the code

  1. In your text editor, replace the Reverse function with the following.

    func Reverse(s string) string {
        fmt.Printf("input: %q\n", s)
        r := []rune(s)
        fmt.Printf("runes: %q\n", r)
        for i, j := 0, len(r)-1; i {{raw "<"}} len(r)/2; i, j = i+1, j-1 {
            r[i], r[j] = r[j], r[i]
        }
        return string(r)
    }
    

    This will help us understand what is going wrong when converting the string to a slice of runes.

Run the code

This time, we only want to run the failing test in order to inspect the logs. To do this, we will use go test -run.

$ go test -run=FuzzReverse/28f36ef487f23e6c7a81ebdaa9feffe2f2b02b4cddaa6252e87f69863046a5e0
input: "\x91"
runes: ['�']
input: "�"
runes: ['�']
--- FAIL: FuzzReverse (0.00s)
    --- FAIL: FuzzReverse/28f36ef487f23e6c7a81ebdaa9feffe2f2b02b4cddaa6252e87f69863046a5e0 (0.00s)
        reverse_test.go:16: Number of runes: orig=1, rev=1, doubleRev=1
        reverse_test.go:18: Before: "\x91", after: "�"
FAIL
exit status 1
FAIL    example/fuzz    0.145s

To run a specific corpus entry within FuzzXxx/testdata, you can provide {FuzzTestName}/{filename} to -run. This can be helpful when debugging.

Knowing that the input is invalid unicode, let’s fix the error in our Reverse function.

Fix the error

To fix this issue, let‘s return an error if the input to Reverse isn’t valid UTF-8.

Write the code

  1. In your text editor, replace the existing Reverse function with the following.

    func Reverse(s string) (string, error) {
        if !utf8.ValidString(s) {
            return s, errors.New("input is not valid UTF-8")
        }
        r := []rune(s)
        for i, j := 0, len(r)-1; i {{raw "<"}} len(r)/2; i, j = i+1, j-1 {
            r[i], r[j] = r[j], r[i]
        }
        return string(r), nil
    }
    

    This change will return an error if the input string contains characters which are not valid UTF-8.

  2. Since the Reverse function now returns an error, modify the main function to discard the extra error value. Replace the existing main function with the following.

    func main() {
        input := "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog"
        rev, revErr := Reverse(input)
        doubleRev, doubleRevErr := Reverse(rev)
        fmt.Printf("original: %q\n", input)
        fmt.Printf("reversed: %q, err: %v\n", rev, revErr)
        fmt.Printf("reversed again: %q, err: %v\n", doubleRev, doubleRevErr)
    }
    

    These calls to Reverse should return a nil error, since the input string is valid UTF-8.

  3. You will need to import the errors and the unicode/utf8 packages. The import statement in main.go should look like the following.

    import (
        "errors"
        "fmt"
        "unicode/utf8"
    )
    
  4. Modify the reverse_test.go file to check for errors and skip the test if errors are generated by returning.

    func FuzzReverse(f *testing.F) {
        testcases := []string {"Hello, world", " ", "!12345"}
        for _, tc := range testcases {
            f.Add(tc)  // Use f.Add to provide a seed corpus
        }
        f.Fuzz(func(t *testing.T, orig string) {
            rev, err1 := Reverse(orig)
            if err1 != nil {
                return
            }
            doubleRev, err2 := Reverse(rev)
            if err2 != nil {
                 return
            }
            if orig != doubleRev {
                t.Errorf("Before: %q, after: %q", orig, doubleRev)
            }
            if utf8.ValidString(orig) && !utf8.ValidString(rev) {
                t.Errorf("Reverse produced invalid UTF-8 string %q", rev)
            }
        })
    }
    

    Rather than returning, you can also call t.Skip() to stop the execution of that fuzz input.

Run the code

  1. Run the test using go test

    $ go test
    PASS
    ok      example/fuzz  0.019s
    
  2. Fuzz it with go test -fuzz=Fuzz, then after a few seconds has passed, stop fuzzing with ctrl-C.

    $ go test -fuzz=Fuzz
    fuzz: elapsed: 0s, gathering baseline coverage: 0/38 completed
    fuzz: elapsed: 0s, gathering baseline coverage: 38/38 completed, now fuzzing with 4 workers
    fuzz: elapsed: 3s, execs: 86342 (28778/sec), new interesting: 2 (total: 35)
    fuzz: elapsed: 6s, execs: 193490 (35714/sec), new interesting: 4 (total: 37)
    fuzz: elapsed: 9s, execs: 304390 (36961/sec), new interesting: 4 (total: 37)
    ...
    fuzz: elapsed: 3m45s, execs: 7246222 (32357/sec), new interesting: 8 (total: 41)
    ^Cfuzz: elapsed: 3m48s, execs: 7335316 (31648/sec), new interesting: 8 (total: 41)
    PASS
    ok      example/fuzz  228.000s
    

    The fuzz test will run until it encounters a failing input unless you pass the -fuzztime flag. The default is to run forever if no failures occur, and the process can be interrupted with ctrl-C.

  3. Fuzz it with go test -fuzz=Fuzz -fuzztime 30s which will fuzz for 30 seconds before exiting if no failure was found.

    $ go test -fuzz=Fuzz -fuzztime 30s
    fuzz: elapsed: 0s, gathering baseline coverage: 0/5 completed
    fuzz: elapsed: 0s, gathering baseline coverage: 5/5 completed, now fuzzing with 4 workers
    fuzz: elapsed: 3s, execs: 80290 (26763/sec), new interesting: 12 (total: 12)
    fuzz: elapsed: 6s, execs: 210803 (43501/sec), new interesting: 14 (total: 14)
    fuzz: elapsed: 9s, execs: 292882 (27360/sec), new interesting: 14 (total: 14)
    fuzz: elapsed: 12s, execs: 371872 (26329/sec), new interesting: 14 (total: 14)
    fuzz: elapsed: 15s, execs: 517169 (48433/sec), new interesting: 15 (total: 15)
    fuzz: elapsed: 18s, execs: 663276 (48699/sec), new interesting: 15 (total: 15)
    fuzz: elapsed: 21s, execs: 771698 (36143/sec), new interesting: 15 (total: 15)
    fuzz: elapsed: 24s, execs: 924768 (50990/sec), new interesting: 16 (total: 16)
    fuzz: elapsed: 27s, execs: 1082025 (52427/sec), new interesting: 17 (total: 17)
    fuzz: elapsed: 30s, execs: 1172817 (30281/sec), new interesting: 17 (total: 17)
    fuzz: elapsed: 31s, execs: 1172817 (0/sec), new interesting: 17 (total: 17)
    PASS
    ok      example/fuzz  31.025s
    

    Fuzzing passed!

    In addition to the -fuzz flag, several new flags have been added to go test and can be viewed in the documentation.

Conclusion

Nicely done! You've just introduced yourself to fuzzing in Go.

The next step is to choose a function in your code that you'd like to fuzz, and try it out! If fuzzing finds a bug in your code, consider adding it to the trophy case.

If you experience any problems or have an idea for a feature, file an issue.

For discussion and general feedback about the feature, you can also participate in the #fuzzing channel in Gophers Slack.

Check out the documentation at go.dev/doc/fuzz for further reading.

Completed code

--- main.go ---

package main

import (
    "errors"
    "fmt"
    "unicode/utf8"
)

func main() {
    input := "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog"
    rev, revErr := Reverse(input)
    doubleRev, doubleRevErr := Reverse(rev)
    fmt.Printf("original: %q\n", input)
    fmt.Printf("reversed: %q, err: %v\n", rev, revErr)
    fmt.Printf("reversed again: %q, err: %v\n", doubleRev, doubleRevErr)
}

func Reverse(s string) (string, error) {
    if !utf8.ValidString(s) {
        return s, errors.New("input is not valid UTF-8")
    }
    r := []rune(s)
    for i, j := 0, len(r)-1; i {{raw "<"}} len(r)/2; i, j = i+1, j-1 {
        r[i], r[j] = r[j], r[i]
    }
    return string(r), nil
}

--- reverse_test.go ---

package main

import (
    "testing"
    "unicode/utf8"
)

func FuzzReverse(f *testing.F) {
    testcases := []string{"Hello, world", " ", "!12345"}
    for _, tc := range testcases {
        f.Add(tc) // Use f.Add to provide a seed corpus
    }
    f.Fuzz(func(t *testing.T, orig string) {
        rev, err1 := Reverse(orig)
        if err1 != nil {
            return
        }
        doubleRev, err2 := Reverse(rev)
        if err2 != nil {
            return
        }
        if orig != doubleRev {
            t.Errorf("Before: %q, after: %q", orig, doubleRev)
        }
        if utf8.ValidString(orig) && !utf8.ValidString(rev) {
            t.Errorf("Reverse produced invalid UTF-8 string %q", rev)
        }
    })
}