* The protocol uses Chainlink oracles for price feeds and checks that prices are not stale. The timeout is set to 72 hours.
* A 72-hour timeout for stale price detection may be too long for volatile crypto markets, allowing stale prices to be used for extended periods.
```vyper
TIMEOUT: constant(uint256) = 72 * 3600 // @> 72 hours
```
Likelihood:
* Chainlink oracles typically update much more frequently (every few minutes to hours)
* Network issues could cause prices to become stale for several hours but less than 72 hours
* 72 hours is significantly longer than typical Chainlink heartbeat periods
Impact:
* Stale prices could be used for up to 72 hours, allowing users to deposit/mint/redeem at incorrect prices
* Liquidations might not trigger when they should if prices are stale
* Protocol could operate with outdated price information
## Description In this contract, the TIMEOUT is set as a fixed constant (72 hours, or 259200 seconds). This means that if the oracle price data is not updated within 72 hours, the data will be considered outdated, and the contract will trigger a revert. ## Vulnerability Details At this location in the code, <https://github.com/Cyfrin/2024-12-algo-ssstablecoinsss/blob/4cc3197b13f1db728fd6509cc1dcbfd7a2360179/src/oracle_lib.vy#L15> ```Solidity TIMEOUT: constant(uint256) = 72 * 3600 ``` the timeout is directly set to 72 hours. For an oracle, which cannot dynamically adjust the price updates, this is a suboptimal approach. ## Impact - Fixed Timeout: The TIMEOUT is hardcoded to 72 hours. In markets with frequent fluctuations or assets that require more frequent price updates, 72 hours might be too long. Conversely, if the timeout is too short, it could cause frequent errors due to the inability to update data in time, disrupting normal contract operations. - Non-adjustable Timeout: If the contract's requirements change (e.g., market conditions evolve or the protocol requires more flexibility), the fixed TIMEOUT cannot be dynamically adjusted, leading to potential mismatches with current needs. - Lack of Flexibility: The current timeout mechanism is static and cannot be adjusted based on market volatility or the frequency of oracle updates. In volatile markets, a shorter TIMEOUT might be necessary, while in stable markets, a longer timeout would be more appropriate. \##Tools Used Manual review ## Recommendations Introduce a dynamic price expiration mechanism that adjusts based on market conditions. Use volatility data (such as standard deviation or market price fluctuation) to dynamically adjust the timeout period. This can be achieved by monitoring market volatility and adjusting the TIMEOUT accordingly: ```Solidity # Monitor market volatility and dynamically adjust TIMEOUT @external def adjustTimeoutBasedOnVolatility(volatility: uint256): if volatility > HIGH_VOLATILITY_THRESHOLD: self.TIMEOUT = SHORTER_TIMEOUT # In high volatility, decrease TIMEOUT else: self.TIMEOUT = LONGER_TIMEOUT # In stable market, increase TIMEOUT log TimeoutAdjusted(self.TIMEOUT) ```
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