|  | |
| Other names | Project OneFuzz | 
|---|---|
| Developer(s) | Microsoft | 
| Initial release | September 18, 2020 | 
| Final release | 8.9.0
   /    October 9, 2023 | 
| Repository | github | 
| Written in | Rust, Python | 
| Operating system | Windows, Linux | 
| Platform | Cross-platform | 
| Type | Fuzzer | 
| License | MIT License | 
| Website | www | 
OneFuzz is a cross-platform free and open source fuzz testing framework by Microsoft.[1] The software enables continuous developer-driven fuzz testing to identify weaknesses in computer software prior to release.[2]
Overview
OneFuzz is a self-hosted fuzzing-as-a-service platform that automates the detection of software bugs that could be security issues.[1] It supports Windows and Linux.[2]
Notable features include composable fuzzing workflows, built-in ensemble fuzzing, programmatic triage and result de-duplication, crash reporting notification callbacks, and on-demand live-debugging of found crashes.[3][2] The command-line interface client is written in Python 3, and targets Python 3.7 and up.[4]
Microsoft uses the OneFuzz testing framework to probe Edge, Windows and other products at the company.[1] It replaced the previous Microsoft Security Risk Detection software testing mechanism.[2]
The source code was released on September 18, 2020.[1] It is licensed under MIT License and hosted on GitHub.[5]
On August 31, 2023, it was announced that development would be coming to an end. On November 1, 2023, the GitHub project was archived.[5]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 "Microsoft: Windows 10 is hardened with these fuzzing security tools – now they're open source". ZDNet. September 15, 2020.
- 1 2 3 4 "Microsoft open-sources fuzzing test framework". InfoWorld. September 17, 2020.
- ↑ "Microsoft's Security Group Open Sources Fuzzing Framework for Azure". ADTmag.com. September 22, 2020.
- ↑ "OneFuzz- Microsoft Open Source Fuzzing Platform". hackersonlineclub.com. September 19, 2020.
- 1 2 "GitHub - microsoft/onefuzz: A self-hosted Fuzzing-As-A-Service platform". November 1, 2023 – via GitHub.
