Compare the Top Fuzz Testing Tools in Brazil as of April 2025

What are Fuzz Testing Tools in Brazil?

Fuzz testing tools are automated software tools used to detect bugs and vulnerabilities in computer systems. They generate large amounts of random input data to test the robustness of a system. These tools are commonly used in software development to enhance the quality and security of a product. Fuzz testing tools can be applied to various types of systems, including web applications, mobile apps, and operating systems. They have become an essential part of the testing process in modern software development due to their ability to uncover hidden flaws that traditional testing methods may miss. Compare and read user reviews of the best Fuzz Testing tools in Brazil currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    Honggfuzz
    Honggfuzz is a security-oriented software fuzzer. Supports evolutionary, feedback-driven fuzzing based on code coverage (SW and HW-based). It’s multi-process and multi-threaded, there’s no need to run multiple copies of your fuzzer, as Honggfuzz can unlock the potential of all your available CPU cores with a single running instance. The file corpus is automatically shared and improved between all fuzzed processes. It’s blazingly fast when the persistent fuzzing mode is used. A simple/empty LLVMFuzzerTestOneInput function can be tested with up to 1mo iteration per second on a relatively modern CPU. Has a solid track record of uncovered security bugs, the only (to date) vulnerability in OpenSSL with the critical score mark was discovered by Honggfuzz. As opposed to other fuzzers, it will discover and report hijacked/ignored signals from crashes (intercepted and potentially hidden by a fuzzed program).
    Starting Price: Free
  • 2
    afl-unicorn

    afl-unicorn

    Battelle

    afl-unicorn lets you fuzz any piece of binary that can be emulated by Unicorn Engine. If you can emulate the code you’re interested in using the Unicorn Engine, you can fuzz it with afl-unicorn. Unicorn Mode works by implementing the block-edge instrumentation that AFL’s QEMU mode normally does into Unicorn Engine. Basically, AFL will use block coverage information from any emulated code snippet to drive its input generation. The whole idea revolves around the proper construction of a Unicorn-based test harness. The Unicorn-based test harness loads the target code, sets up the initial state, and loads in data mutated by AFL from disk. The test harness then emulates the target binary code, and if it detects that a crash or error occurred it throws a signal. AFL will do all its normal stuff, but it’s actually fuzzing the emulated target binary code. Only tested on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, but it should work smoothly with any OS capable of running both AFL and Unicorn.
    Starting Price: Free
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