Name: ASA-2024-009: State syncing validator from malicious node may lead to a chain split
Component: CometBFT
Criticality: Medium (ACMv1.2: I:Moderate; L: Possible)
Affected versions: >= 0.34.0, <= 0.34.33, >=0.37.0, <= 0.37.10, >= 0.38.0, <= 0.38.11
Summary
The state sync protocol retrieves a snapshot of the application and installs it in a fresh node. In order for this node to be ready to run consensus and block sync from the installed snapshot height, we also need to install a valid State
in the node, which is the starting state from which it is able to validate new blocks and append them to the blockchain.
The State
object used by state sync is computed using the light client protocol, which retrieves information about committed blocks from at least two RPC endpoints. The light client protocol performs several state validations and, in particular, compares the state provided by different RPC endpoints, looking for inconsistencies.
The State
object contains, among other fields, a Validators
field which stores the current validator set. A validator set is a list of validator addresses, public keys and associated voting powers, one per validator. It also stores, for historical reasons, the state of the proposer selection algorithm, in the form of the ProposerPriority
field associated with each Validator
.
While the light client is able to validate the ValidatorSet
retrieved from RPC endpoints, this validation does not include the ProposerPriority
field associated with each Validator
. As a result, when state sync adopts RPC endpoints that, for unknown reasons, provide an invalid state of the proposer selection algorithm, the node will not be able to properly run the consensus protocol, as their local view of which validator is the proposer of a given round and height will disagree with the views of the correct validators. If an increasing number of validators state sync using RPC endpoints with invalid states, the network eventually halts.
Patches
Release versions 0.34.34, 0.37.11, and 0.38.12 include a patch to address this issue.
In the patched versions, the light client protocol compares the ProposerPriority
fields of the ValidatorSet
instances retrieved from the RPC endpoints configured for state sync. If they differ, the computed State
object is considered invalid and state sync will fail with an error.
Workarounds
The issue is observed when validators run state sync using RPC nodes that are malicious or report invalid states for the proposer selection algorithm.
It is worth noting that non-malicious nodes running upstream software should never report an invalid state for the proposer selection algorithm. This situation may result from the adoption of nodes with customized code or which had their state, stored in local databases, manually updated.
When the network public's RPC endpoints have an invalid state for the proposer election algorithm, there, new validators should refrain from using state sync for bootstrapping or be sure that they configure for state sync RPC endpoints with a valid state of the proposer election algorithm.
A validator with an invalid state for the proposer selection algorithm will reject most of the proposed blocks and will have the network rejecting blocks it has proposed. It is also possible to manually compare the state of the proposer election algorithm of nodes by comparing the outputs of the /validators?height=_
RPC endpoints. The outputs must fully match, including the ProposerPriority field associated with each validator.
References
This issue was reported to the Cosmos Bug Bounty Program on HackerOne on 12/08/24. If you believe you have found a bug in the Interchain Stack or would like to contribute to the program by reporting a bug, please see https://hackerone.com/cosmos.
If you have questions about Interchain security efforts, please reach out to our official communication channel at [email protected].
For more information about CometBFT, please see https://docs.cometbft.com/.
For more information about the Interchain Foundation’s engagement with Amulet, please see https://github.com/interchainio/security.
References
Name: ASA-2024-009: State syncing validator from malicious node may lead to a chain split
Component: CometBFT
Criticality: Medium (ACMv1.2: I:Moderate; L: Possible)
Affected versions: >= 0.34.0, <= 0.34.33, >=0.37.0, <= 0.37.10, >= 0.38.0, <= 0.38.11
Summary
The state sync protocol retrieves a snapshot of the application and installs it in a fresh node. In order for this node to be ready to run consensus and block sync from the installed snapshot height, we also need to install a valid
State
in the node, which is the starting state from which it is able to validate new blocks and append them to the blockchain.The
State
object used by state sync is computed using the light client protocol, which retrieves information about committed blocks from at least two RPC endpoints. The light client protocol performs several state validations and, in particular, compares the state provided by different RPC endpoints, looking for inconsistencies.The
State
object contains, among other fields, aValidators
field which stores the current validator set. A validator set is a list of validator addresses, public keys and associated voting powers, one per validator. It also stores, for historical reasons, the state of the proposer selection algorithm, in the form of theProposerPriority
field associated with eachValidator
.While the light client is able to validate the
ValidatorSet
retrieved from RPC endpoints, this validation does not include theProposerPriority
field associated with eachValidator
. As a result, when state sync adopts RPC endpoints that, for unknown reasons, provide an invalid state of the proposer selection algorithm, the node will not be able to properly run the consensus protocol, as their local view of which validator is the proposer of a given round and height will disagree with the views of the correct validators. If an increasing number of validators state sync using RPC endpoints with invalid states, the network eventually halts.Patches
Release versions 0.34.34, 0.37.11, and 0.38.12 include a patch to address this issue.
In the patched versions, the light client protocol compares the
ProposerPriority
fields of theValidatorSet
instances retrieved from the RPC endpoints configured for state sync. If they differ, the computedState
object is considered invalid and state sync will fail with an error.Workarounds
The issue is observed when validators run state sync using RPC nodes that are malicious or report invalid states for the proposer selection algorithm.
It is worth noting that non-malicious nodes running upstream software should never report an invalid state for the proposer selection algorithm. This situation may result from the adoption of nodes with customized code or which had their state, stored in local databases, manually updated.
When the network public's RPC endpoints have an invalid state for the proposer election algorithm, there, new validators should refrain from using state sync for bootstrapping or be sure that they configure for state sync RPC endpoints with a valid state of the proposer election algorithm.
A validator with an invalid state for the proposer selection algorithm will reject most of the proposed blocks and will have the network rejecting blocks it has proposed. It is also possible to manually compare the state of the proposer election algorithm of nodes by comparing the outputs of the
/validators?height=_
RPC endpoints. The outputs must fully match, including the ProposerPriority field associated with each validator.References
This issue was reported to the Cosmos Bug Bounty Program on HackerOne on 12/08/24. If you believe you have found a bug in the Interchain Stack or would like to contribute to the program by reporting a bug, please see https://hackerone.com/cosmos.
If you have questions about Interchain security efforts, please reach out to our official communication channel at [email protected].
For more information about CometBFT, please see https://docs.cometbft.com/.
For more information about the Interchain Foundation’s engagement with Amulet, please see https://github.com/interchainio/security.
References