Fuzzy testing has been added to SQLite's standard testing strategy. Wonder if it'd be useful for us too... ? + Justin Begin forwarded message: > From: Simon Slavin <slavins@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Subject: Re: [sqlite] SQLite 3.8.10 enters testing > Date: 4 May 2015 22:03:59 BST > To: General Discussion of SQLite Database <sqlite-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > Reply-To: General Discussion of SQLite Database <sqlite-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > > > On 4 May 2015, at 8:23pm, Richard Hipp <drh@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> A list of changes (still being revised and updated) is at >> (https://www.sqlite.org/draft/releaselog/3_8_10.html). > > "Because of its past success, AFL became a standard part of the testing strategy for SQLite beginning with version 3.8.10. There is at least one instance of AFL running against SQLite continuously, 24/7/365, trying new randomly mutated inputs against SQLite at a rate of a few hundred to a few thousand per second. Billions of inputs have been tried, but AFL's instrumentation has narrowed them down to less than 20,000 test cases that cover all distinct behaviors. Newly discovered test cases are periodically captured and added to the TCL test suite." > > Heh. Mister Zalewski can be proud. > > Simon. > _______________________________________________ > sqlite-users mailing list > sqlite-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://mailinglists.sqlite.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sqlite-users -- GlusterFS - http://www.gluster.org An open source, distributed file system scaling to several petabytes, and handling thousands of clients. My personal twitter: twitter.com/realjustinclift _______________________________________________ Gluster-devel mailing list Gluster-devel@xxxxxxxxxxx http://www.gluster.org/mailman/listinfo/gluster-devel