Algorithmic complexity vulnerabilities occur when the worst-case time/space
complexity of an application is significantly higher than the respective
average case for particular user-controlled inputs. When such conditions are
met, an attacker can launch Denial-of-Service attacks against a vulnerable
application by providing inputs that trigger the worst-case behavior. Such
attacks have been known to have serious effects on production systems, take
down entire websites, or lead to bypasses of Web Application Firewalls.
Unfortunately, existing detection mechanisms for algorithmic complexity
vulnerabilities are domain-specific and often require significant manual
effort. In this paper, we design, implement, and evaluate SlowFuzz, a
domain-independent framework for automatically finding algorithmic complexity
vulnerabilities. SlowFuzz automatically finds inputs that trigger worst-case
algorithmic behavior in the tested binary. SlowFuzz uses resource-usage-guided
evolutionary search techniques to automatically find inputs that maximize
computational resource utilization for a given application.Comment: ACM CCS '17, October 30-November 3, 2017, Dallas, TX, US