Fuzz testing tools generate malformed packets of protocols. Do they use their own TCP/IP stack to generate these malformed packets? Does the operating system's TCP/IP stack play any role in Fuzz testing? I am working on a MPLS Fuzz testing tool running on Windows 7 OS. The tool is testing a MPLS stack on a Linux machine. Does my test tool use the windows stack? I was told that windows does not support MPLS but the test tool works just fine.
Does a Fuzz Testing Tool use the TCP/IP Stack of the Operating System?
1.2k views Asked by Jay At
1
There are 1 answers
Related Questions in TESTING
- Volatile properties in Kotlin?
- Using multiple JVM languages in the same project
- Kotlin - IntelliJ Project Setup
- Kotlin let analogue which returns the receiver
- Kotlin 'when' statement vs Java 'switch'
- Use Kotlin extension in android java class
- Kotlin stub/placeholder function for unimplemented code
- Partial class delegation in Kotlin
- SugarORM + Kotlin: Unresovled reference "listAll"
- Kotlin JS - string to number conversion?
Related Questions in FUZZING
- Volatile properties in Kotlin?
- Using multiple JVM languages in the same project
- Kotlin - IntelliJ Project Setup
- Kotlin let analogue which returns the receiver
- Kotlin 'when' statement vs Java 'switch'
- Use Kotlin extension in android java class
- Kotlin stub/placeholder function for unimplemented code
- Partial class delegation in Kotlin
- SugarORM + Kotlin: Unresovled reference "listAll"
- Kotlin JS - string to number conversion?
Related Questions in FUZZ-TESTING
- Volatile properties in Kotlin?
- Using multiple JVM languages in the same project
- Kotlin - IntelliJ Project Setup
- Kotlin let analogue which returns the receiver
- Kotlin 'when' statement vs Java 'switch'
- Use Kotlin extension in android java class
- Kotlin stub/placeholder function for unimplemented code
- Partial class delegation in Kotlin
- SugarORM + Kotlin: Unresovled reference "listAll"
- Kotlin JS - string to number conversion?
Popular Questions
- How do I undo the most recent local commits in Git?
- How can I remove a specific item from an array in JavaScript?
- How do I delete a Git branch locally and remotely?
- Find all files containing a specific text (string) on Linux?
- How do I revert a Git repository to a previous commit?
- How do I create an HTML button that acts like a link?
- How do I check out a remote Git branch?
- How do I force "git pull" to overwrite local files?
- How do I list all files of a directory?
- How to check whether a string contains a substring in JavaScript?
- How do I redirect to another webpage?
- How can I iterate over rows in a Pandas DataFrame?
- How do I convert a String to an int in Java?
- Does Python have a string 'contains' substring method?
- How do I check if a string contains a specific word?
Popular Tags
Trending Questions
- UIImageView Frame Doesn't Reflect Constraints
- Is it possible to use adb commands to click on a view by finding its ID?
- How to create a new web character symbol recognizable by html/javascript?
- Why isn't my CSS3 animation smooth in Google Chrome (but very smooth on other browsers)?
- Heap Gives Page Fault
- Connect ffmpeg to Visual Studio 2008
- Both Object- and ValueAnimator jumps when Duration is set above API LvL 24
- How to avoid default initialization of objects in std::vector?
- second argument of the command line arguments in a format other than char** argv or char* argv[]
- How to improve efficiency of algorithm which generates next lexicographic permutation?
- Navigating to the another actvity app getting crash in android
- How to read the particular message format in android and store in sqlite database?
- Resetting inventory status after order is cancelled
- Efficiently compute powers of X in SSE/AVX
- Insert into an external database using ajax and php : POST 500 (Internal Server Error)
Any tool that doesn't rely on kernel modifications will have to go through the OS's networking stack. This doesn't mean that they necessarily have to use the networking stack's TCP/IP support: many OSes support APIs like
SOCK_RAW
+IP_HDRINCL
(Windows, BSD, OS X)/PF_PACKET
(Linux) which lets you build your own packets (which do not have to be TCP, or even IP).This means that userspace tools are free to bypass the TCP/IP handling in the OS and roll their own packets so long as the OS provides the necessary support (and most major ones do).