# Overview This application is intended to fuzz test the NVMe-oF target or a physical NVMe drive by submitting randomized NVMe commands through the SPDK NVMe initiator. Both local and remote drives are configured through a .ini style config file (See the -C option on the application). Multiple controllers and namespaces can be exposed to the fuzzer at a time. In order to handle multiple namespaces, the fuzzer will round robin assign a thread to each namespace and submit commands to that thread at a set queue depth. (currently 128 for I/O, 16 for Admin). The application will terminate under three conditions: 1. The user specified run time expires (see the -t flag). 2. One of the target controllers stops completing I/O operations back to the fuzzer i.e. controller timeout. 3. The user specified a json file containing operations to run and the fuzzer has received valid completions for all of them. # Output By default, the fuzzer will print commands that: 1. Complete successfully back from the target, or 2. Are outstanding at the time of a controller timeout. Commands are dumped as named objects in json format which can then be supplied back to the script for targeted debugging on a subsequent run. See `Debugging` below. By default no output is generated when a specific command is returned with a failed status. This can be overridden with the -V flag. if -V is specified, each command will be dumped as it is completed in the JSON format specified above. At the end of each test run, a summary is printed for each namespace in the following format: ~~~ NS: 0x200079262300 admin qp, Total commands completed: 462459, total successful commands: 1960, random_seed: 4276918833 ~~~ # Debugging If a controller hangs when processing I/O generated by the fuzzer, the fuzzer will stop submitting I/O and dump out all outstanding I/O on the qpair that timed out. The I/O are dumped as valid json. You can combine the dumped commands from the fuzzer into a json array in a file and then pass them to the fuzzer using the -j option. Please see the example.json file in this directory for an example of a properly formed array of command structures. Please note that you can also craft your own custom command values by using the output from the fuzzer as a template. # JSON Format Most of the variables in the spdk_nvme_cmd structure are represented as numbers in JSON. The only exception to this rule is the dptr union. This is a 16 byte union structure that is represented as a base64 string. If writing custom commands for input, please note this distinction or the application will be unable to load your custom input. Happy Fuzzing!