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+# Frequently asked questions about afl++
+
+## Contents
+
+  1. [How to improve the fuzzing speed?](#how-to-improve-the-fuzzing-speed)
+  2. [What is an edge?](#what-is-an-edge)
+  3. [Why is my stability below 100%?](#why-is-my-stability-below-100)
+  4. [How can I improve the stability value](#how-can-i-improve-the-stability-value)
+
+If you find an interesting or important question missing, submit it via
+[https://github.com/AFLplusplus/AFLplusplus/issues](https://github.com/AFLplusplus/AFLplusplus/issues)
+
+## How to improve the fuzzing speed
+
+  1. use [llvm_mode](docs/llvm_mode/README.md): afl-clang-lto (llvm >= 11) or afl-clang-fast (llvm >= 9 recommended)
+  2. Use [persistent mode](llvm_mode/README.persistent_mode.md) (x2-x20 speed increase)
+  3. Use the [afl++ snapshot module](https://github.com/AFLplusplus/AFL-Snapshot-LKM) (x2 speed increase)
+  4. If you do not use shmem persistent mode, use `AFL_TMPDIR` to point the input file on a tempfs location, see [docs/env_variables.md](docs/env_variables.md)
+  5. Improve kernel performance: modify `/etc/default/grub`, set `GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="ibpb=off ibrs=off kpti=off l1tf=off mds=off mitigations=off no_stf_barrier noibpb noibrs nopcid nopti nospec_store_bypass_disable nospectre_v1 nospectre_v2 pcid=off pti=off spec_store_bypass_disable=off spectre_v2=off stf_barrier=off"`; then `update-grub` and `reboot` (warning: makes the system more insecure)
+  6. Running on an `ext2` filesystem with `noatime` mount option will be a bit faster than on any other journaling filesystem
+  7. Use your cores! [README.md:3.b) Using multiple cores/threads](../README.md#b-using-multiple-coresthreads)
+
+## What is an "edge"
+
+A program contains `functions`, `functions` contain the compiled machine code.
+The compiled machine code in a `function` can be in a single or many `basic blocks`.
+A `basic block` is the largest possible number of subsequent machine code
+instructions that runs independent, meaning it does not split up to different
+locations nor is it jumped into it from a different location:
+```
+function() {
+  A:
+    some
+    code
+  B:
+    if (x) goto C; else goto D;
+  C:
+    some code
+    goto D
+  D:
+    some code
+    goto B
+  E:
+    return
+}
+```
+Every code block between two jump locations is a `basic block`.
+
+An `edge` is then the unique relationship between two `basic blocks` (from the
+code example above):
+```
+              Block A
+                |
+                v
+              Block B  <------+
+             /        \       |
+            v          v      |
+         Block C    Block D --+
+             \
+              v
+              Block E
+```
+Every line between two blocks is an `edge`.
+
+## Why is my stability below 100
+
+Stability is measured by how many percent of the edges in the target are
+"stable". Sending the same input again and again should take the exact same
+path through the target every time. If that is the case, the stability is 100%.
+
+If however randomness happens, e.g. a thread reading from shared memory,
+reaction to timing, etc. then in some of the re-executions with the same data
+will result in the edge information being different accross runs.
+Those edges that change are then flagged "unstable".
+
+The more "unstable" edges, the more difficult for afl++ to identify valid new
+paths.
+
+A value above 90% is usually fine and a value above 80% is also still ok, and
+even above 20% can still result in successful finds of bugs.
+However, it is recommended that below 90% or 80% you should take measures to
+improve the stability.
+
+## How can I improve the stability value
+
+Four steps are required to do this and requires quite some knowledge of
+coding and/or disassembly and it is only effectively possible with
+afl-clang-fast PCGUARD and afl-clang-lto LTO instrumentation!
+
+  1. First step: Identify which edge ID numbers are unstable
+
+     run the target with `export AFL_DEBUG=1` for a few minutes then terminate.
+     The out/fuzzer_stats file will then show the edge IDs that were identified
+     as unstable.
+
+  2. Second step: Find the responsible function.
+
+     a) For LTO instrumented binaries this can be documented during compile
+        time, just set `export AFL_LLVM_DOCUMENT_IDS=/path/to/afile`.
+        This file will have one assigned edge ID and the corresponding function
+        per line.
+
+     b) For PCGUARD instrumented binaries it is much more difficult. Here you
+        can either modify the __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard function in
+        llvm_mode/afl-llvm-rt.o.c to write a backtrace to a file if the ID in
+        __afl_area_ptr[*guard] is one of the unstable edge IDs.
+        (Example code is already there).
+        Then recompile and reinstall llvm_mode and rebuild your target.
+        Run the recompiled target with afl-fuzz for a while and then check the
+        file that you wrote with the backtrace information.
+        Alternatively you can use `gdb` to hook __sanitizer_cov_trace_pc_guard_init
+        on start, check to which memory address the edge ID value is written
+        and set a write breakpoint to that address (`watch 0x.....`).
+
+  3. Third step: create a text file with the filenames
+
+     Identify which source code files contain the functions that you need to
+     remove from instrumentation.
+
+     Simply follow this document on how to do this: [llvm_mode/README.instrument_file.md](llvm_mode/README.instrument_file.md)
+     If PCGUARD is used, then you need to follow this guide (needs llvm 12+!):
+     [http://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerCoverage.html#partially-disabling-instrumentation](http://clang.llvm.org/docs/SanitizerCoverage.html#partially-disabling-instrumentation)
+
+  4. Fourth step: recompile the target
+
+     Recompile, fuzz it, be happy :)