- Table of contents
- Properties
- Helper functions
- HEVM cheat codes support
- Trophies
- How to contribute to this repo?
This repository contains 168 code properties for:
- ERC20 token: mintable, burnable, pausable and transferable invariants (25 properties).
- ERC721 token: mintable, burnable, and transferable invariants (19 properties).
- ERC4626 vaults: strict specification and additional security invariants (37 properties).
- ABDKMath64x64 fixed-point library invariants (106 properties).
The goals of these properties are to:
- Detect vulnerabilities
- Ensure adherence to relevant standards
- Provide educational guidance for writing invariants
The properties can be used through unit tests or through fuzzing with Echidna or Medusa.
-
Import the properties into to your project:
- In case of using Hardhat, use:
npm install https://github.com/crytic/properties.git
oryarn add https://github.com/crytic/properties.git
- In case of using Foundry, use:
forge install crytic/properties
- In case of using Hardhat, use:
-
According to tests required, go the the specific sections:
To test an ERC20 token, follow these steps:
You can see the output for a compliant token, and non compliant token.
Decide if you want to do internal or external testing. Both approaches have advantages and disadvantages, you can check more information about them here.
For internal testing, create a new Solidity file containing the CryticERC20InternalHarness
contract. USER1
, USER2
and USER3
constants are initialized by default in PropertiesConstants
contract to be the addresses from where echidna sends transactions, and INITIAL_BALANCE
is by default 1000e18
:
pragma solidity ^0.8.0;
import "@crytic/properties/contracts/ERC20/internal/properties/ERC20BasicProperties.sol";
import "./MyToken.sol";
contract CryticERC20InternalHarness is MyToken, CryticERC20BasicProperties {
constructor() {
// Setup balances for USER1, USER2 and USER3:
_mint(USER1, INITIAL_BALANCE);
_mint(USER2, INITIAL_BALANCE);
_mint(USER3, INITIAL_BALANCE);
// Setup total supply:
initialSupply = totalSupply();
}
}
For external testing, create two contracts: the CryticERC20ExternalHarness
and the TokenMock
as shown below.
In the CryticERC20ExternalHarness
contract you can specify which properties to test, via inheritance. In the TokenMock
contract, you will need to modify the isMintableOrBurnable
variable if your contract is able to mint or burn tokens.
pragma solidity ^0.8.0;
import "./MyToken.sol";
import {ITokenMock} from "@crytic/properties/contracts/ERC20/external/util/ITokenMock.sol";
import {CryticERC20ExternalBasicProperties} from "@crytic/properties/contracts/ERC20/external/properties/ERC20ExternalBasicProperties.sol";
import {PropertiesConstants} from "@crytic/properties/contracts/util/PropertiesConstants.sol";
contract CryticERC20ExternalHarness is CryticERC20ExternalBasicProperties {
constructor() {
// Deploy ERC20
token = ITokenMock(address(new CryticTokenMock()));
}
}
contract CryticTokenMock is MyToken, PropertiesConstants {
bool public isMintableOrBurnable;
uint256 public initialSupply;
constructor () {
_mint(USER1, INITIAL_BALANCE);
_mint(USER2, INITIAL_BALANCE);
_mint(USER3, INITIAL_BALANCE);
_mint(msg.sender, INITIAL_BALANCE);
initialSupply = totalSupply();
isMintableOrBurnable = true;
}
}
Echidna
Create the following Echidna config file
corpusDir: "tests/crytic/erc20/echidna-corpus-internal"
testMode: assertion
testLimit: 100000
deployer: "0x10000"
sender: ["0x10000", "0x20000", "0x30000"]
# Uncomment the following line for external testing
#allContracts: true
Medusa
Create the following Medusa config file:
{
"fuzzing": {
"testLimit": 100000,
"corpusDirectory": "tests/medusa-corpus",
"deployerAddress": "0x10000",
"senderAddresses": [
"0x10000",
"0x20000",
"0x30000"
],
"assertionTesting": {
"enabled": true
},
"propertyTesting": {
"enabled": false
},
"optimizationTesting": {
"enabled": false,
},
},
// Uncomment the following lines for external testing
// "testing": {
// "testAllContracts": true
// },
"compilation": {
"platform": "crytic-compile",
"platformConfig": {
"target": ".",
"solcVersion": "",
"exportDirectory": "",
"args": ["--foundry-compile-all"]
}
}
}
To perform more than one test, save the files with a descriptive path, to identify what test each file or corpus belongs to. For instace, for these examples, we use tests/crytic/erc20/echidna-internal.yaml
and tests/crytic/erc20/echidna-external.yaml
for the Echidna tests for ERC20. We recommended to modify the corpus directory config opction for external tests accordingly.
The above configuration will start Echidna or Medusa in assertion mode. The target contract(s) will be deployed from address 0x10000
, and transactions will be sent from the owner as well as two different users (0x20000
and 0x30000
). There is an initial limit of 100000
tests, but depending on the token code complexity, this can be increased. Finally, once our fuzzing tools finish the fuzzing campaign, corpus and coverage results will be available in the specified corpus directory.
Echidna
- For internal testing:
echidna . --contract CryticERC20InternalHarness --config tests/crytic/erc20/echidna-internal.yaml
- For external testing:
echidna . --contract CryticERC20ExternalHarness --config tests/crytic/erc20/echidna-external.yaml
Medusa
- Go to the directory
cd tests/crytic/erc20
- For internal testing:
medusa fuzz --target-contracts CryticERC20InternalHarness --config medusa-internal.yaml
- For external testing:
medusa fuzz --target-contracts CryticERC20ExternalHarness --config medusa-external.yaml
If the token under test is compliant and no properties will fail during fuzzing, the Echidna output should be similar to the screen below:
$ echidna . --contract CryticERC20InternalHarness --config tests/echidna.config.yaml
Loaded total of 23 transactions from corpus/coverage
Analyzing contract: contracts/ERC20/CryticERC20InternalHarness.sol:CryticERC20InternalHarness
name(): passed! π
test_ERC20_transferFromAndBurn(): passed! π
approve(address,uint256): passed! π
test_ERC20_userBalanceNotHigherThanSupply(): passed! π
totalSupply(): passed! π
...
For this example, the ExampleToken's approval function was modified to perform no action:
function approve(address spender, uint256 amount) public virtual override(ERC20) returns (bool) {
// do nothing
return true;
}
In this case, the Echidna output should be similar to the screen below, notice that all functions that rely on approve()
to work correctly will have their assertions broken, and will report the situation.
$ echidna . --contract CryticERC20ExternalHarness --config tests/echidna.config.yaml
Loaded total of 25 transactions from corpus/coverage
Analyzing contract: contracts/ERC20/CryticERC20ExternalHarness.sol:CryticERC20ExternalHarness
name(): passed! π
test_ERC20_transferFromAndBurn(): passed! π
approve(address,uint256): passed! π
...
test_ERC20_setAllowance(): failed!π₯
Call sequence:
test_ERC20_setAllowance()
Event sequence: Panic(1), AssertEqFail("Equal assertion failed. Message: Failed to set allowance") from: ERC20PropertyTests@0x00a329c0648769A73afAc7F9381E08FB43dBEA72
...
To test an ERC721 token, follow these steps:
You can see the output for a compliant token, and non compliant token.
Decide if you want to do internal or external testing. Both approaches have advantages and disadvantages, you can check more information about them here.
For internal testing, create a new Solidity file containing the CryticERC721InternalHarness
contract. USER1
, USER2
and USER3
constants are initialized by default in PropertiesConstants
contract to be the addresses from where echidna sends transactions.
pragma solidity ^0.8.0;
import "@crytic/properties/contracts/ERC721/internal/properties/ERC721BasicProperties.sol";
import "./MyToken.sol";
contract CryticERC721InternalHarness is MyToken, CryticERC721BasicProperties {
constructor() {
}
}
For external testing, create two contracts: the CryticERC721ExternalHarness
and the TokenMock
as shown below.
In the CryticERC721ExternalHarness
contract you can specify which properties to test, via inheritance. In the TokenMock
contract, you will need to modify the isMintableOrBurnable
variable if your contract is able to mint or burn tokens.
pragma solidity ^0.8.0;
import "./MyToken.sol";
import {ITokenMock} from "@crytic/properties/contracts/ERC721/external/util/ITokenMock.sol";
import {CryticERC721ExternalBasicProperties} from "@crytic/properties/contracts/ERC721/external/properties/ERC721ExternalBasicProperties.sol";
import {PropertiesConstants} from "@crytic/properties/contracts/util/PropertiesConstants.sol";
contract CryticERC721ExternalHarness is CryticERC721ExternalBasicProperties {
constructor() {
// Deploy ERC721
token = ITokenMock(address(new CryticTokenMock()));
}
}
contract CryticTokenMock is MyToken, PropertiesConstants {
bool public isMintableOrBurnable;
constructor () {
isMintableOrBurnable = true;
}
}
Create the following Echidna config file
corpusDir: "tests/crytic/erc721/echidna-corpus-internal"
testMode: assertion
testLimit: 100000
deployer: "0x10000"
sender: ["0x10000", "0x20000", "0x30000"]
If you're using external testing, you will also need to specify:
allContracts: true
To perform more than one test, save the files with a descriptive path, to identify what test each file or corpus belongs to. For these examples, we use tests/crytic/erc721/echidna-internal.yaml
and tests/crytic/erc721/echidna-external.yaml
for the Echidna tests for ERC721. We recommended to modify the corpusDir
for external tests accordingly.
The above configuration will start Echidna in assertion mode. Contract will be deployed from address 0x10000
, and transactions will be sent from the owner and two different users (0x20000
and 0x30000
). There is an initial limit of 100000
tests, but depending on the token code complexity, this can be increased. Finally, once Echidna finishes the fuzzing campaign, corpus and coverage results will be available in the tests/crytic/erc721/echidna-corpus-internal
directory.
Run Echidna:
- For internal testing:
echidna . --contract CryticERC721InternalHarness --config tests/crytic/erc721/echidna-internal.yaml
- For external testing:
echidna . --contract CryticERC721ExternalHarness --config tests/crytic/erc721/echidna-external.yaml
Finally, inspect the coverage report in tests/crytic/erc721/echidna-corpus-internal
or tests/crytic/erc721/echidna-corpus-external
when it finishes.
If the token under test is compliant and no properties will fail during fuzzing, the Echidna output should be similar to the screen below:
$ echidna . --contract CryticERC721InternalHarness --config tests/echidna.config.yaml
Loaded total of 23 transactions from corpus/coverage
Analyzing contract: contracts/ERC721/CryticERC721InternalHarness.sol:CryticERC721InternalHarness
name(): passed! π
test_ERC721_external_transferFromNotApproved(): passed! π
approve(address,uint256): passed! π
test_ERC721_external_transferFromUpdatesOwner(): passed! π
totalSupply(): passed! π
...
For this example, the ExampleToken's balanceOf function was modified so it does not check that owner
is the zero address:
function balanceOf(address owner) public view virtual override returns (uint256) {
return _balances[owner];
}
In this case, the Echidna output should be similar to the screen below, notice that all functions that rely on balanceOf()
to work correctly will have their assertions broken, and will report the situation.
$ echidna . --contract CryticERC721ExternalHarness --config tests/echidna.config.yaml
Loaded total of 25 transactions from corpus/coverage
Analyzing contract: contracts/ERC721/CryticERC721ExternalHarness.sol:CryticERC721ExternalHarness
name(): passed! π
test_ERC721_external_transferFromUpdatesOwner(): passed! π
approve(address,uint256): passed! π
...
test_ERC721_external_balanceOfZeroAddressMustRevert(): failed!π₯
Call sequence:
test_ERC721_external_balanceOfZeroAddressMustRevert()
Event sequence: Panic(1), AssertFail("address(0) balance query should have reverted") from: ERC721PropertyTests@0x00a329c0648769A73afAc7F9381E08FB43dBEA72
...
To test an ERC4626 token, follow these steps:
Create a new Solidity file containing the CryticERC4626Harness
contract. Make sure it properly initializes your ERC4626 vault with a test token (TestERC20Token
):
If you are using Hardhat:
import {CryticERC4626PropertyTests} from "@crytic/properties/contracts/ERC4626/ERC4626PropertyTests.sol";
// this token _must_ be the vault's underlying asset
import {TestERC20Token} from "@crytic/properties/contracts/ERC4626/util/TestERC20Token.sol";
// change to your vault implementation
import "./Basic4626Impl.sol";
contract CryticERC4626Harness is CryticERC4626PropertyTests {
constructor () {
TestERC20Token _asset = new TestERC20Token("Test Token", "TT", 18);
Basic4626Impl _vault = new Basic4626Impl(_asset);
initialize(address(_vault), address(_asset), false);
}
}
If you are using Foundry:
import {CryticERC4626PropertyTests} from "properties/ERC4626/ERC4626PropertyTests.sol";
// this token _must_ be the vault's underlying asset
import {TestERC20Token} from "properties/ERC4626/util/TestERC20Token.sol";
// change to your vault implementation
import "../src/Basic4626Impl.sol";
contract CryticERC4626Harness is CryticERC4626PropertyTests {
constructor () {
TestERC20Token _asset = new TestERC20Token("Test Token", "TT", 18);
Basic4626Impl _vault = new Basic4626Impl(_asset);
initialize(address(_vault), address(_asset), false);
}
}
Create a minimal Echidna config file (e.g. tests/echidna.config.yaml
)
corpusDir: "tests/echidna-corpus"
testMode: assertion
testLimit: 100000
deployer: "0x10000"
sender: ["0x10000"]
Run the test suite using echidna . --contract CryticERC4626Harness --config tests/echidna.config.yaml
and inspect the coverage report in tests/echidna-corpus
when it finishes.
Example repositories are available for Hardhat and Foundry.
Once things are up and running, consider adding internal testing methods to your Vault ABI to allow testing special edge case properties like rounding. For more info, see the ERC4626 readme.
The Solidity smart contract programming language does not have any inbuilt feature for working with decimal numbers, so for contracts dealing with non-integer values, a third party solution is needed. ABDKMath64x64 is a fixed-point arithmetic Solidity library that operates on 64.64-bit numbers.
A 64.64-bit fixed-point number is a data type that consists of a sign bit, a 63-bit integer part, and a 64bit decimal part. Since there is no direct support for fractional numbers in the EVM, the underlying data type that stores the values is a 128-bit signed integer.
ABDKMath64x64 library implements 19 arithmetic operations using fixed-point numbers and 6 conversion functions between integer types and fixed-point types.
We provide a number of tests related with fundamental mathematical properties of the floating point numbers. To include these tests into your repository, follow these steps:
Create a new Solidity file containing the ABDKMath64x64Harness
contract:
pragma solidity ^0.8.0;
import "@crytic/properties/contracts/Math/ABDKMath64x64/ABDKMath64x64PropertyTests.sol;
contract CryticABDKMath64x64Harness is CryticABDKMath64x64PropertyTests {
/* Any additional test can be added here */
}
Run the test suite using echidna . --contract CryticABDKMath64x64Harness --seq-len 1 --test-mode assertion --corpus-dir tests/echidna-corpus
and inspect the coverage report in tests/echidna-corpus
when it finishes.
- Building secure contracts
- Our EmpireSlacking slack server, channel #ethereum
- Watch our fuzzing workshop
The repository provides a collection of functions and events meant to simplify the debugging and testing of assertions in Echidna. Commonly used functions, such as integer clamping or logging for different types are available in contracts/util/PropertiesHelper.sol.
Available helpers:
LogXxx
: Events that can be used to log values in fuzzing tests.string
,uint256
andaddress
loggers are provided. In Echidna's assertion mode, when an assertion violation is detected, all events emitted in the call sequence are printed.assertXxx
: Asserts that a condition is met, logging violations. Assertions for equality, non-equality, greater-than, greater-than-or-equal, less-than and less-than-or-equal comparisons are provided, and user-provided messages are supported for logging.clampXxx
: Limits anint256
oruint256
to a certain range. Clamps for less-than, less-than-or-equal, greater-than, greater-than-or-equal, and range are provided.
Log a value for debugging. When the assertion is violated, the value of someValue
will be printed:
pragma solidity ^0.8.0;
import "@crytic/properties/contracts/util/PropertiesHelper.sol";
contract TestProperties is PropertiesAsserts {
// ...
function test_some_invariant(uint256 someValue) public {
// ...
LogUint256("someValue is: ", someValue);
// ...
assert(fail);
// ...
}
// ...
}
Assert equality, and log violations:
pragma solidity ^0.8.0;
import "@crytic/properties/contracts/util/PropertiesHelper.sol";
contract TestProperties is PropertiesAsserts {
// ...
function test_some_invariant(uint256 someValue) public {
// ...
assertEq(someValue, 25, "someValue doesn't have the correct value");
// ...
}
// ...
}
In case this assertion fails, for example if someValue
is 30, the following will be printed in Echidna:
Invalid: 30!=25, reason: someValue doesn't have the correct value
Assure that a function's fuzzed parameter is in a certain range:
pragma solidity ^0.8.0;
import "@crytic/properties/contracts/util/PropertiesHelper.sol";
contract TestProperties is PropertiesAsserts {
int256 constant MAX_VALUE = 2 ** 160;
int256 constant MIN_VALUE = -2 ** 24;
// ...
function test_some_invariant(int256 someValue) public {
someValue = clampBetween(someValue, MIN_VALUE, MAX_VALUE);
// ...
}
// ...
}
Since version 2.0.5, Echidna supports HEVM cheat codes. This repository contains a Hevm.sol
contract that exposes cheat codes for easy integration into contracts under test.
Cheat codes should be used with care, since they can alter the execution environment in ways that are not expected, and may introduce false positives or false negatives.
Use prank
to simulate a call from a different msg.sender
:
pragma solidity ^0.8.0;
import "@crytic/properties/contracts/util/Hevm.sol";
contract TestProperties {
// ...
function test_some_invariant(uint256 someValue) public {
// ...
hevm.prank(newSender);
otherContract.someFunction(someValue); // This call's msg.sender will be newSender
otherContract.someFunction(someValue); // This call's msg.sender will be address(this)
// ...
}
// ...
}
A list of security vulnerabilities that were found using the properties can be found on the trophies page.
Contributions are welcome! You can read more about the contribution guidelines and directory structure in the CONTRIBUTING.md file.