Securify is a security scanner for Ethereum smart contracts supported by the Ethereum Foundation and ChainSecurity. The core research behind Securify was conducted at the ICE Center at ETH Zurich.
It features an extensive list of security patterns commonly found in smart contracts:
- some forms of the DAO bug (also known as reentrancy)
- locked ether
- missing input validation
- transaction ordering-dependent amount, receiver and transfer
- unhandled exceptions
- unrestricted ether flow
The project is meant to be an open platform welcoming contributions from all of the Ethereum Security Community. To suggest new patterns, to volunteer for testing or to contribute developing new patterns please get in touch through our Discord group.
- Soufflé: https://github.com/souffle-lang/souffle/releases (Securify should work with
the latest package, please raise an issue if it does not). If you cannot
install Soufflé, look at the Docker container for an alternative. Securify
will crash without the
souffle
binary. As of writing, Soufflé is not available on Windows, so Securify should not be expected to run on Windows either. - Java 8
- A
solc
binary is required to be able to use Solidity file as input. Securify assumes that the right version is installed for the given file.solc
is available here. - Linux users must have the timeout command, OS X users must have the
gtimeout
command, which can be install withbrew install coreutils
.
To build:
./gradlew jar
To run Securify on a Solidity file:
java -jar build/libs/securify-0.1.jar -fs src/test/resources/solidity/transaction-reordering.sol
To run Securify on the decompilation output provided by the pysolc.py script (which requires py-solc):
java -jar build/libs/securify-0.1.jar -co out.json
To run Securify on some EVM binary (produced e.g. by solc
):
java -jar build/libs/securify-0.1.jar -fh src/test/resources/solidity/transaction-reordering.bin.hex
To run the tests (which use JUnit4):
./gradlew test
The installation should be simple enough on Debian derivatives, or any other platform supported by Soufflé.
For a quick demonstration which does not require Soufflé, you can use Docker.
Build the Docker image:
docker build . -t securify
Run Securify on a small example:
docker run securify
You can change the files analyzed by specifying a volume to mount, and every
*.sol
file contained will then be processed by Securify:
docker run -v $(pwd)/folder_with_solidity_files:/project securify
This should allow Securify to run over Truffle project in which dependencies
have already been installed (so run npm install
before if need be).
The output is a in JSON and gives the vulnerabilities found over the files analyzed and the corresponding line numbers.
See CONTRIBUTING.md.
Join our Discord to discuss with other users.
Although Securify is regularly used to help audits at ChainSecurity, there are still bugs, including:
- the code in the fallback function is currently not analyzed. A workaround is to name this function instead.
- in some cases, a StackOverflowError exception is thrown, due to
computeBranches
being non tail-recursive (but recursive). In most cases, it is enough to increase the stack size using the-Xss
option ofjava
, e.g.java -Xss1G -jar ...
. - libraries are not properly supported
- abstract contracts (whose binary cannot be obtained via
solc
) are not supported
- Securify research paper to be presented at ACM CCS'18 in Toronto, Canada
- TechCrunch: This smart contract scanner will ensure your token is tip-top
- Talk at EPFL in Lausanne
- Talk at Devcon3 in Cancún
- Talk at d10e in Davos
- Researchers from ETH Zürich release a free state-of-the-art security scanner for Ethereum smart contracts
- Automated security analysis of Ethereum smart contracts
- Automatically detecting the bug that froze Parity's wallets
Securify statically analyzes the EVM code of the smart contract to infer important semantic information (including control-flow and data-flow facts) about the contract. This step is fully automated using Soufflé, a scalable Datalog solver. Then, Securify checks the inferred facts to discover security violations or prove the compliance of security-relevant instructions.
The full technical details behind the Securify scanner are available in the research paper.