This plugin makes it dead-easy to run some fuzz testing (or monkey testing) on your HTTP API with Artillery.
The plugin lets you use Artillery to send a lot of junk (unexpected and weird payloads) to your API endpoints. You can then monitor your backend for exceptions, errors or crashes, and improve the security and reliability of your system by fixing any issues uncovered.
The payloads generated by this plugin are based on the awesome Big List Of Naughty Strings, which contains a large number of inputs that are more likely to trigger unexpected behavior in your software.
Important: this plugin requires Artillery v1.6.0-0
or later.
Install the plugin with:
npm install artillery-plugin-fuzzer
Enable the plugin in your test script with:
config:
plugins:
fuzzer: {}
Then just use the {{ naughtyString }}
variable as you would any other variable in your scenario:
- post:
url: "/session"
json:
username: "{{ naughtyString }}"
password: "secret"
A new value for the naughtyString
variable will be generated for each new request in a scenario.
See the complete example in example.yaml
Runnning a quick test with this plugin against your app's backend can help uncover bugs, security issues and QA problems.
Here's a sample payload sent by this plugin:
πΎ π π π π π π π
Something innocent like this could crash your application if it persists data in a MySQL database using the default settings. How? MySQL InnoDB engine uses the latin1
encoding by default.
Did you set the utf8
encoding on your database? You're still in trouble because those characters are outside the BMP and you need to have specified utf8mb4
and potentially made changes to your schema to be able to store them properly.
Modern software systems are incredibly complex. If you haven't tried it, assume it's broken.
Happy fuzzing!
Sending bnls payloads is a good start for a fuzzer, but it's only the first small step. We want to make Artillery a great tool for API fuzz testing. Got an idea for this plugin? Share your feedback in Issues.
MPL 2.0