Zheyu Ma (Institute for Network Sciences and Cyberspace (INSC), Tsinghua University; EPFL; JCSS, Tsinghua University (INSC) - Science City (Guangzhou) Digital Technology Group Co., Ltd.), Qiang Liu (EPFL), Zheming Li (Institute for Network Sciences and Cyberspace (INSC), Tsinghua University; JCSS, Tsinghua University (INSC) - Science City (Guangzhou) Digital Technology Group Co., Ltd.), Tingting Yin (Zhongguancun Laboratory), Wende Tan (Department of Computer Science and Technology, Tsinghua University), Chao Zhang (Institute for Network Sciences and Cyberspace (INSC), Tsinghua University; Zhongguancun Laboratory; JCSS, Tsinghua University (INSC) - Science City (Guangzhou) Digital Technology Group Co., Ltd.), Mathias Payer (EPFL)

Virtual devices are a large attack surface of hypervisors. Vulnerabilities in virtual devices may enable attackers to jailbreak hypervisors or even endanger co-located virtual machines. While fuzzing has discovered vulnerabilities in virtual devices across both open-source and closed-source hypervisors, the efficiency of these virtual device fuzzers remains limited because they are unaware of the complex behaviors of virtual devices in general. We present Truman, a novel universal fuzzing engine that automatically infers dependencies from open-source OS drivers to construct device behavior models (DBMs) for virtual device fuzzing, regardless of whether target virtual devices are open-source or binaries. The DBM includes inter- and intra-message dependencies and fine-grained state dependency of virtual device messages. Based on the DBM, Truman generates and mutates quality seeds that satisfy the dependencies encoded in the DBM. We evaluate the prototype of Truman on the latest version of hypervisors. In terms of coverage, Truman outperformed start-of-the-art fuzzers for 19/29 QEMU devices and obtained a relative coverage boost of 34% compared to Morphuzz for virtio devices. Additionally, Truman discovered 54 new bugs in QEMU, VirtualBox, VMware Workstation Pro, and Parallels, with 6 CVEs assigned.

View More Papers

Statically Discover Cross-Entry Use-After-Free Vulnerabilities in the Linux Kernel

Hang Zhang (Indiana University Bloomington), Jangha Kim (The Affiliated Institute of ETRI, ROK), Chuhong Yuan (Georgia Institute of Technology), Zhiyun Qian (University of California, Riverside), Taesoo Kim (Georgia Institute of Technology)

Read More

Incorporating Gradients to Rules: Towards Lightweight, Adaptive Provenance-based Intrusion...

Lingzhi Wang (Northwestern University), Xiangmin Shen (Northwestern University), Weijian Li (Northwestern University), Zhenyuan LI (Zhejiang University), R. Sekar (Stony Brook University), Han Liu (Northwestern University), Yan Chen (Northwestern University)

Read More

Victim-Centred Abuse Investigations and Defenses for Social Media Platforms

Zaid Hakami (Florida International University and Jazan University), Ashfaq Ali Shafin (Florida International University), Peter J. Clarke (Florida International University), Niki Pissinou (Florida International University), and Bogdan Carbunar (Florida International University)

Read More

Vision: Towards True User-Centric Design for Digital Identity Wallets

Yorick Last (Paderborn University), Patricia Arias Cabarcos (Paderborn University)

Read More