diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'qemu_mode')
-rw-r--r-- | qemu_mode/README.md | 8 | ||||
-rwxr-xr-x | qemu_mode/build_qemu_support.sh | 35 |
2 files changed, 37 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/qemu_mode/README.md b/qemu_mode/README.md index 81e91854..81904cf1 100644 --- a/qemu_mode/README.md +++ b/qemu_mode/README.md @@ -38,7 +38,13 @@ to 200 MB when specifying -Q to afl-fuzz; be careful when overriding this. In principle, if you set CPU_TARGET before calling ./build_qemu_support.sh, you should get a build capable of running non-native binaries (say, you can try CPU_TARGET=arm). This is also necessary for running 32-bit binaries -on a 64-bit system (CPU_TARGET=i386). +on a 64-bit system (CPU_TARGET=i386). If you're trying to run QEMU on a +different architecture you can also set HOST to the cross-compiler prefix +to use (for example HOST=arm-linux-gnueabi to use arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc). + +You can also compile statically-linked binaries by setting STATIC=1. This +can be useful when compiling QEMU on a different system than the one you're +planning to run the fuzzer on and is most often used with the HOST variable. Note: if you want the QEMU helper to be installed on your system for all users, you need to build it before issuing 'make install' in the parent diff --git a/qemu_mode/build_qemu_support.sh b/qemu_mode/build_qemu_support.sh index 02379eb2..b05b3abb 100755 --- a/qemu_mode/build_qemu_support.sh +++ b/qemu_mode/build_qemu_support.sh @@ -125,6 +125,13 @@ tar xf "$ARCHIVE" || exit 1 echo "[+] Unpacking successful." +if [ -n "$HOST" ]; then + echo "[+] Configuring host architecture to $HOST..." + CROSS_PREFIX=$HOST- +else + CROSS_PREFIX= +fi + echo "[*] Configuring QEMU for $CPU_TARGET..." ORIG_CPU_TARGET="$CPU_TARGET" @@ -145,12 +152,30 @@ patch -p1 <../patches/i386-translate.diff || exit 1 echo "[+] Patching done." -# --enable-pie seems to give a couple of exec's a second performance -# improvement, much to my surprise. Not sure how universal this is.. +if [ "$STATIC" -eq "1" ]; then + + CFLAGS="-O3 -ggdb" ./configure --disable-bsd-user --disable-guest-agent --disable-strip --disable-werror \ + --disable-gcrypt --disable-debug-info --disable-debug-tcg --enable-docs --disable-tcg-interpreter \ + --enable-attr --disable-brlapi --disable-linux-aio --disable-bzip2 --disable-bluez --disable-cap-ng \ + --disable-curl --disable-fdt --disable-glusterfs --disable-gnutls --disable-nettle --disable-gtk \ + --disable-rdma --disable-libiscsi --disable-vnc-jpeg --enable-kvm --disable-lzo --disable-curses \ + --disable-libnfs --disable-numa --disable-opengl --disable-vnc-png --disable-rbd --disable-vnc-sasl \ + --disable-sdl --disable-seccomp --disable-smartcard --disable-snappy --disable-spice --disable-libssh2 \ + --disable-libusb --disable-usb-redir --disable-vde --disable-vhost-net --disable-virglrenderer \ + --disable-virtfs --disable-vnc --disable-vte --disable-xen --disable-xen-pci-passthrough --disable-xfsctl \ + --enable-linux-user --disable-system --disable-blobs --disable-tools \ + --target-list="${CPU_TARGET}-linux-user" --static --disable-pie --cross-prefix=$CROSS_PREFIX || exit 1 -CFLAGS="-O3 -ggdb" ./configure --disable-system \ - --enable-linux-user --disable-gtk --disable-sdl --disable-vnc \ - --target-list="${CPU_TARGET}-linux-user" --enable-pie --enable-kvm || exit 1 +else + + # --enable-pie seems to give a couple of exec's a second performance + # improvement, much to my surprise. Not sure how universal this is.. + + CFLAGS="-O3 -ggdb" ./configure --disable-system \ + --enable-linux-user --disable-gtk --disable-sdl --disable-vnc \ + --target-list="${CPU_TARGET}-linux-user" --enable-pie --enable-kvm $CROSS_PREFIX || exit 1 + +fi echo "[+] Configuration complete." |