2.7 KiB
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do you use a different issue tracker for reporting bugs in OSS projects?
Security access control is important for the kind of issues that OSS-Fuzz detects. We will reconsider github issue tracker once the access control feature is available.
Why we require an e-mail associated with a Google account?
The issue tracker uses Google accounts for authentication. Note that any e-mail address can be associated with a Google account.
Why do you use Docker?
Building fuzzers requires building your project with a fresh Clang compiler and special compiler flags. An easy-to-use Docker image is provided to simplify toolchain distribution. This also limits our exposure to a multitude of Linux varieties and provides a reproducible and secure environment for fuzzer building and execution.
What kind of projects are you accepting?
We are currently in a beta status, and still working out issues in our service. At this point, we can only commit to supporting established projects that have a critical impact on infrastructure and user security. We will consider each request on a case-by-case basis, but some things we keep in mind are:
- Exposure to remote attacks (e.g. libraries that are used to process untrusted input)
- Number of users/other projects depending on this project.
We hope to relax this requirement in the future though, so keep an eye out even if we are not able to accept your project at this time!
How timeouts and OOMs are handled?
If a single input to a fuzz target requires more than ~25 seconds or more than 2GB RAM to process, we report this as a timeout or an OOM (out-of-memory) bug (examples: timeouts, OOMs). This may or may not be considered as a real bug by the project owners, but nevertheless we treat all timeouts and OOMs as bugs since they significantly reduce the efficiency of fuzzing.
Remember that fuzzing is executed with AddressSanitizer or other sanitizers which introduce a certain overhead in RAM and CPU.
We currently do not have a good way to deduplicate timeout or OOM bugs. So, at every point we report only one timeout and only one OOM bug per one fuzz target. Once that bug is fixed we may file another one, and so on.
Currently we do not offer ways to change the memory and time limits.