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Fuzzing Against the Machine

You're reading from   Fuzzing Against the Machine Automate vulnerability research with emulated IoT devices on QEMU

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804614976
Length 238 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Antonio Nappa Antonio Nappa
Author Profile Icon Antonio Nappa
Antonio Nappa
Eduardo Blázquez Eduardo Blázquez
Author Profile Icon Eduardo Blázquez
Eduardo Blázquez
Eduardo Blazquez Eduardo Blazquez
Author Profile Icon Eduardo Blazquez
Eduardo Blazquez
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Foundations
2. Chapter 1: Who This Book is For FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: History of Emulation 4. Chapter 3: QEMU From the Ground 5. Part 2: Emulation and Fuzzing
6. Chapter 4: QEMU Execution Modes and Fuzzing 7. Chapter 5: A Famous Refrain: AFL + QEMU = CVEs 8. Chapter 6: Modifying QEMU for Basic Instrumentation 9. Part 3: Advanced Concepts
10. Chapter 7: Real-Life Case Study: Samsung Exynos Baseband 11. Chapter 8: Case Study: OpenWrt Full-System Fuzzing 12. Chapter 9: Case Study: OpenWrt System Fuzzing for ARM 13. Chapter 10: Finally Here: iOS Full System Fuzzing 14. Chapter 11: Deus Ex Machina: Fuzzing Android Libraries 15. Chapter 12: Conclusion and Final Remarks
16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Emulating an embedded firmware

As we attempt to emulate real-time firmware, such as a baseband kernel running on an ARM Cortex-R7 processor, we will encounter the challenges of creating an emulator that faithfully replicates the original execution as closely as possible.

If we download an example firmware image from https://github.com/grant-h/ShannonFirmware/raw/master/modem_files/CP_G973FXXU3ASG8_CP13372649_CL16487963_QB24948473_REV01_user_low_ship.tar.md5.lz4 and extract it, we can use xxd -g 4 on modem.bin to understand the basic structure of the firmware of the baseband modem of the G973 Phone (Galaxy S10). The text in bold shows the meaning of the various blocks. The TOC section (starting with the 544f43 ASCII) uses the first 96 bits (12 bytes) for the entry name, and the next 4 bytes are used for the file offset within modem.bin. Following that, we have the 0x800040 value, which is the load address in memory; since we have it in little endian, the load address will eventually...

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