Loading HuntDB...

CVE-2024-24560

LOW
Published 2024-02-02T16:19:45.822Z
Actions:

Expert Analysis

Professional remediation guidance

Get tailored security recommendations from our analyst team for CVE-2024-24560. We'll provide specific mitigation strategies based on your environment and risk profile.

CVSS Score

V3.1
3.7
/10
CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:H/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:L/I:N/A:N
Base Score Metrics
Exploitability: N/A Impact: N/A

EPSS Score

v2023.03.01
0.001
probability
of exploitation in the wild

There is a 0.1% chance that this vulnerability will be exploited in the wild within the next 30 days.

Updated: 2025-01-25
Exploit Probability
Percentile: 0.239
Higher than 23.9% of all CVEs

Attack Vector Metrics

Attack Vector
NETWORK
Attack Complexity
HIGH
Privileges Required
NONE
User Interaction
NONE
Scope
UNCHANGED

Impact Metrics

Confidentiality
LOW
Integrity
NONE
Availability
NONE

Description

Vyper is a Pythonic Smart Contract Language for the Ethereum Virtual Machine. When calls to external contracts are made, we write the input buffer starting at byte 28, and allocate the return buffer to start at byte 0 (overlapping with the input buffer). When checking RETURNDATASIZE for dynamic types, the size is compared only to the minimum allowed size for that type, and not to the returned value's length. As a result, malformed return data can cause the contract to mistake data from the input buffer for returndata. When the called contract returns invalid ABIv2 encoded data, the calling contract can read different invalid data (from the dirty buffer) than the called contract returned.

Available Exploits

No exploits available for this CVE.

Related News

No news articles found for this CVE.

Affected Products

GitHub Security Advisories

Community-driven vulnerability intelligence from GitHub

✓ GitHub Reviewed LOW

Vyper's external calls can overflow return data to return input buffer

GHSA-gp3w-2v2m-p686

Advisory Details

## Summary When calls to external contracts are made, we write the input buffer starting at byte 28, and allocate the return buffer to start at byte 0 (overlapping with the input buffer). When checking `RETURNDATASIZE` for dynamic types, the size is compared only to the minimum allowed size for that type, and not to the returned value's `length`. As a result, malformed return data can cause the contract to mistake data from the input buffer for returndata. This advisory is given a severity of "Low" because when the called contract returns invalid ABIv2 encoded data, the calling contract can read different invalid data (from the dirty buffer) than the called contract returned. ## Details When arguments are packed for an external call, we create a buffer of size `max(args, return_data) + 32`. The input buffer is placed in this buffer (starting at byte 28), and the return buffer is allocated to start at byte 0. The assumption is that we can reuse the memory becase we will not be able to read past `RETURNDATASIZE`. ```python if fn_type.return_type is not None: return_abi_t = calculate_type_for_external_return(fn_type.return_type).abi_type # we use the same buffer for args and returndata, # so allocate enough space here for the returndata too. buflen = max(args_abi_t.size_bound(), return_abi_t.size_bound()) else: buflen = args_abi_t.size_bound() buflen += 32 # padding for the method id ``` When data is returned, we unpack the return data by starting at byte 0. We check that `RETURNDATASIZE` is greater than the minimum allowed for the returned type: ```python if not call_kwargs.skip_contract_check: assertion = IRnode.from_list( ["assert", ["ge", "returndatasize", min_return_size]], error_msg="returndatasize too small", ) unpacker.append(assertion) ``` This check ensures that any dynamic types returned will have a size of at least 64. However, it does not verify that `RETURNDATASIZE` is as large as the `length` word of the dynamic type. As a result, if a contract expects a dynamic type to be returned, and the part of the return data that is read as `length` includes a size that is larger than the actual `RETURNDATASIZE`, the return data read from the buffer will overrun the actual return data size and read from the input buffer. ## Proof of Concept This contract calls an external contract with two arguments. As the call is made, the buffer includes: - byte 28: method_id - byte 32: first argument (0) - byte 64: second argument (hash) The return data buffer begins at byte 0, and will return the returned bytestring, up to a maximum length of 96 bytes. ```python interface Zero: def sneaky(a: uint256, b: bytes32) -> Bytes[96]: view @external def test_sneaky(z: address) -> Bytes[96]: return Zero(z).sneaky(0, keccak256("oops")) ``` On the other side, imagine a simple contract that does not, in fact, return a bytestring, but instead returns two uint256s. I've implemented it in Solidity for ease of use with Foundry: ```solidity function sneaky(uint a, bytes32 b) external pure returns (uint, uint) { return (32, 32); } ``` The return data will be parsed as a bytestring. The first 32 will point us to byte 32 to read the length. The second 32 will be perceived as the length. It will then read the next 32 bytes from the return data buffer, even though those weren't a part of the return data. Since these bytes will come from byte 64, we can see above that the hash was placed there in the input buffer. If we run the following Foundry test, we can see that this does in fact happen: ```solidity function test__sneakyZeroReturn() public { ZeroReturn z = new ZeroReturn(); c = SuperContract(deployer.deploy("src/loose/", "ret_overflow", "")); console.logBytes(c.test_sneaky(address(z))); } ``` ```md Logs: 0xd54c03ccbc84dd6002c98c6df5a828e42272fc54b512ca20694392ca89c4d2c6 ``` ### Patches Patched in https://github.com/vyperlang/vyper/pull/3925, https://github.com/vyperlang/vyper/pull/4091, https://github.com/vyperlang/vyper/pull/4144, https://github.com/vyperlang/vyper/pull/4060. ## Impact Malicious or mistaken contracts returning the malformed data can result in overrunning the returned data and reading return data from the input buffer.

Affected Packages

PyPI vyper
ECOSYSTEM: ≥0 <0.4.0

CVSS Scoring

CVSS Score

2.5

CVSS Vector

CVSS:3.1/AV:N/AC:H/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:L/I:N/A:N

Advisory provided by GitHub Security Advisory Database. Published: February 2, 2024, Modified: November 22, 2024

References

Published: 2024-02-02T16:19:45.822Z
Last Modified: 2024-08-01T23:19:52.915Z
Copied to clipboard!