fuzz: Disable QEMU's SIG{INT,HUP,TERM} handlers

Prior to this patch, the only way I found to terminate the fuzzer was
either to:
 1. Explicitly specify the number of fuzzer runs with the -runs= flag
 2. SIGKILL the process with "pkill -9 qemu-fuzz-*" or similar

In addition to being annoying to deal with, SIGKILLing the process skips
over any exit handlers(e.g. registered with atexit()). This is bad,
since some fuzzers might create temporary files that should ideally be
removed on exit using an exit handler. The only way to achieve a clean
exit now is to specify -runs=N , but the desired "N" is tricky to
identify prior to fuzzing.

Why doesn't the process exit with standard SIGINT,SIGHUP,SIGTERM
signals? QEMU installs its own handlers for these signals in
os-posix.c:os_setup_signal_handling, which notify the main loop that an
exit was requested. The fuzzer, however, does not run qemu_main_loop,
which performs the main_loop_should_exit() check.  This means that the
fuzzer effectively ignores these signals. As we don't really care about
cleanly stopping the disposable fuzzer "VM", this patch uninstalls
QEMU's signal handlers. Thus, we can stop the fuzzer with
SIG{INT,HUP,TERM} and the fuzzing code can optionally use atexit() to
clean up temporary files/resources.

Reviewed-by: Darren Kenny <darren.kenny@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Bulekov <alxndr@bu.edu>
Message-Id: <20201014142157.46028-1-alxndr@bu.edu>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Alexander Bulekov 2020-10-14 10:21:57 -04:00 committed by Paolo Bonzini
parent 5bfb4f52fe
commit fc69fa216c

View File

@ -217,5 +217,13 @@ int LLVMFuzzerInitialize(int *argc, char ***argv, char ***envp)
/* re-enable the rcu atfork, which was previously disabled in qemu_init */
rcu_enable_atfork();
/*
* Disable QEMU's signal handlers, since we manually control the main_loop,
* and don't check for main_loop_should_exit
*/
signal(SIGINT, SIG_DFL);
signal(SIGHUP, SIG_DFL);
signal(SIGTERM, SIG_DFL);
return 0;
}