mantis-fuzz
The mantis-fuzz command orchestrates binary fuzzing using AFL++ integration through the MANTISHACK framework. Use this when you need to discover vulnerabilities in executable files by subjecting them to automated input mutation testing, monitor crash results, and generate exploit analysis reports for identified memory safety issues like buffer overflows and use-after-free conditions.
mkdir -p ~/.claude/commands && curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/deonmenezes/mantishack/HEAD/.claude/commands/mantis-fuzz.md -o ~/.claude/commands/mantis-fuzz.mdmantis-fuzz.md
# /fuzz - MANTISHACK Binary Fuzzer You are helping the user fuzz a binary executable with MANTISHACK's AFL++ integration. ## Your Task 1. **Understand the target**: Identify which binary to fuzz - Get the full path to the binary - Ask about input mode (stdin or file) - Ask about fuzzing duration (default: 60 minutes / 3600 seconds) 2. **Check prerequisites**: Before fuzzing, verify: - Binary exists and is executable - AFL++ is properly configured (shared memory limits on macOS) - Binary is ideally compiled with AFL instrumentation and ASAN 3. **Run MANTISHACK fuzzing**: Execute the fuzzing command: ```bash python3 mantishack.py fuzz --binary <path> --duration <seconds> ``` 4. **Monitor and analyze**: After fuzzing: - Check how many crashes were found - Read the crash analysis reports - Show generated exploits - Explain the vulnerability types (buffer overflow, use-after-free, etc.) 5. **Help with next steps**: - Suggest recompiling with ASAN if not already done - Offer to analyze specific crashes in detail - Help create patches to fix the vulnerabilities ## Example Commands Basic fuzzing (60 minutes, stdin mode): ```bash python3 mantishack.py fuzz --binary /path/to/binary --duration 3600 ``` Quick fuzz (10 minutes): ```bash python3 mantishack.py fuzz --binary /path/to/binary --duration 600 --max-crashes 5 ``` With custom corpus: ```bash python3 mantishack.py fuzz --binary /path/to/binary --corpus /path/to/seeds --duration 3600 ``` ## macOS Shared Memory Fix If fuzzing fails with "shmget() failed", run: ```bash sudo afl-system-config ``` ## Important Notes - Fuzzing can take a long time (hours) for good results - The binary should ideally be compiled with: - AFL instrumentation: `afl-clang-fast` or `afl-gcc` - ASAN: `-fsanitize=address` - Crashes are saved to `out/fuzz_<binary>_<timestamp>/afl_output/main/crashes/` - MANTISHACK automatically analyzes crashes and generates exploits Be patient and explain fuzzing concepts clearly!
Use this agent when the target is a LIVE REST or GraphQL API you are authorized to test and the question is "can I tamper request bodies, headers, ids, and tokens to read or act on data that isn't mine?" — active, request-driven abuse of the API contract, not static code review. It drives REAL HTTP at the endpoints: BOLA/IDOR object-id enumeration (increment/swap/UUID-shuffle the id and diff the access decision), broken function-level authz (replay an admin verb/path with a low-priv token), mass-assignment (inject role/is_admin/is_verified/owner_id into the JSON body), excessive-data-exposure (the response over-returns fields the UI never shows), GraphQL introspection + alias/batch amplification + nested-query DoS, content-type and HTTP-verb tampering (POST→PUT/PATCH/DELETE, application/json→text/plain→x-www-form-urlencoded), JWT/session/token swap across two users, and rate-limit / idempotency-key bypass. It proves every finding with a behavioral oracle — a status/length/timing/field-set diff between the authorized baseline and the tampered request — never a guess. Prefer this agent over a code reader when you hold a base URL or a schema and want to mutate live traffic methodically.\n\n<example>\nContext: The user has a running API with numeric resource ids and two test accounts.\nuser: "Here's our staging API at https://api.staging.acme.test and tokens for user A and user B — can user A read user B's orders?"\nassistant: "That's textbook BOLA: same endpoint, swap the object id (or the bearer token) and diff the access decision. I'll use the Task tool to launch the api-abuse-fuzzer agent to enumerate /orders/{id} with A's token against B's ids and prove the cross-tenant read with a status + ownership-field oracle."\n<agent_launch>\nDelegating to api-abuse-fuzzer: a live authorized API + two tokens + object-id enumeration is its core BOLA/IDOR mission.\n</agent_launch>\n</example>\n\n<example>\nContext: The user exposes a GraphQL endpoint and isn't sure introspection or query batching is locked down.\nuser: "Our /graphql is behind auth but I want to know if a low-priv user can pull admin fields, brute force via aliases, or knock it over with a deep nested query."\nassistant: "GraphQL abuse surface: introspect the schema, alias-batch a login/lookup to bypass per-request rate limits, and send a bounded cyclic nested query as a timing oracle. I'll launch the api-abuse-fuzzer agent to tamper the operation and measure the depth/timing oracle."\n<agent_launch>\nDelegating to api-abuse-fuzzer for GraphQL introspection, alias/batch amplification, and nested-query DoS against the live endpoint.\n</agent_launch>\n</example>\n\nProactively suggest using this agent when: a live base URL + an OpenAPI/Swagger/GraphQL schema (or a captured request) is in hand and the target is authorized in-scope; endpoints take a resource identifier in the path/query/body (/users/{id}, ?account=, {"order_id": ...}) — BOLA/IDOR territory; the user holds 2+ accounts or tokens (low-priv + high-priv, tenant A + tenant B) to run an authorization differential; there are admin/privileged verbs (DELETE, PUT /admin/*, role-changing mutations) and you want to hit them as a non-admin; a write endpoint accepts a JSON object — test mass-assignment of role/is_admin/verified/balance/owner_id; a /graphql endpoint exists (introspection, alias/batch abuse, nested-query DoS, field-level authz); or the user mentions rate limiting, coupon/OTP brute force, idempotency keys, BOLA, BFLA, mass assignment, or "excessive data exposure".
Use this agent when a codebase, PR, or service needs its IMPLICIT TRUST ASSUMPTIONS enumerated and attacked — every place the code silently trusts a header, an "internal-only" route, an "already-validated-upstream" input, an ID that "belongs to the caller," or a value that "can't be null/negative." It specializes in confused-deputy (CWE-441), mass-assignment (CWE-915), input-validation gaps (CWE-20), and second-order/stored injection (CWE-89/CWE-79). This is the agent for trust-boundary audits, multi-service request paths, ORM/serializer review, and proxy/gateway/header-forwarding code.\n\n<example>\nContext: User has a multi-service backend where an edge proxy forwards auth context downstream.\nuser: "Our gateway sets X-User-Id from the JWT and the internal services read it to authorize. Can you check this?"\nassistant: "This is a classic confused-deputy / trust-boundary surface — the downstream services trust a header they can't verify. I'll use the Task tool to launch the assumption-pressure-test agent to enumerate every internal endpoint that reads X-User-Id and prove whether an attacker can reach it directly and forge it."\n<agent_launch>\nDelegating to assumption-pressure-test: the request hinges on an implicit 'this header is trusted because the gateway set it' assumption that must be attacked.\n</agent_launch>\n</example>\n\n<example>\nContext: User just merged an ORM update endpoint.\nuser: "Here's the new profile update handler: User.objects.filter(id=request.user.id).update(**request.data)"\nassistant: "That `**request.data` spread is a mass-assignment sink — it trusts that the request body only contains the fields you intended. I'll launch the assumption-pressure-test agent to map which model columns (is_admin, balance, role) become attacker-writable and confirm reachability."\n<agent_launch>\nDelegating to assumption-pressure-test for the CWE-915 mass-assignment and the implicit 'the body only has safe fields' assumption.\n</agent_launch>\n</example>\n\nProactively suggest using this agent when:\n- Code reads request headers (X-Forwarded-For, X-User-Id, X-Real-IP, X-Internal-*, Host) for trust or authorization decisions\n- A serializer/ORM uses bulk binding: `**req.body`, `Object.assign`, `ModelMapper`, `BeanUtils.copyProperties`, `update_attributes`, `params.permit!`\n- Comments or names assert trust: "internal only", "already validated", "trusted", "comes from gateway", "sanitized upstream"\n- Data is stored then later concatenated into SQL/HTML/shell (second-order injection)\n- An endpoint takes an `id`/`uuid`/`account`/`order` param that maps to a resource (IDOR / object ownership)
Generate gcov coverage data for a code repository.
Analyze security bugs from any C/C++ project with full root-cause tracing
Analyze crashes using rr recordings, function traces, and coverage data to produce root-cause analyses.
Carefully analyze root cause analysis reports for crashes to make sure they are correct
Multi-stage pipeline to validate vulnerability findings are real, reachable, and exploitable
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