The $8m Platypus flash loan attack was made possible because of code that was in the wrong order, according to a post mortem report from Platypus auditor Omniscia. The auditing company claims the problematic code didn’t exist in the version they saw.

According to the report, the Platypus MasterPlatypusV4 contract “contained a fatal misconception in its emergencyWithdraw mechanism” which made it perform “its solvency check before updating the LP tokens associated with the stake position.”

The report emphasized that the code for the emergencyWithdraw function had all of the necessary elements to prevent an attack, but these elements were simply written in the wrong order, as Omniscia explained:

“The issue could have been prevented by re-ordering the MasterPlatypusV4::emergencyWithdraw statements and performing the solvency check after the user’s amount entry has been set to 0 which would have prohibited the attack from taking place.”

Omnisia admitted that they audited a version of the MasterPlatypusV4 contract from Nov. 21 to Dec. 5, 2021. However, this version “contained no integration points with an external platypusTreasure system” and therefore did not contain the misordered lines of code. From Omniscia’s point of view, this implies that the developers must have deployed a new version of the contract at some point after the audit was made.

Related: Raydium announces details of hack, proposes compensation for victims

The auditor claims that the contract implementation at Avalanche (AVAX) C-Chain address 0xc007f27b757a782c833c568f5851ae1dfe0e6ec7 is the one that was exploited. Lines 582-584 of this contract appear to call a function called “isSolvent” on the PlatypusTreasure contract, and lines 599-601 appear to set the user’s amount, factor, and rewardDebt to zero. However, these amounts are set to zero after the “isSolvent” function has already been called.

The Platypus team confirmed on Feb. 16 that the attacker exploited a “flaw in [the] USP solvency check mechanism,” but the team did not initially provide further detail. This new report from the auditor sheds further light on how the attacker may have been able to accomplish the exploit.

The Platypus team announced on Feb. 16 that the attack had occurred. It has attempted to contact the hacker and get the funds returned in exchange for a bug bounty. The attacker used flashed loans to perform the exploit, which is similar to the strategy used in the Defrost Finance exploit of Dec. 25.

Read More: World News | Entertainment News | Celeb News
Cointelegraph

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

FTX authorized to ‘permanently redact’ names of individual customers: Report

Bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX has reportedly been granted permission to permanently remove…

Shell makes record $40bn in profits on back of surging gas prices

Shell’s annual profits have more than doubled to a record of nearly…

Hawaiian Electric says monitors in place for red flag warning

Hawaiian Electric said it is taking proactive steps to safely “keep the…

Bitcoin is a ‘wild card’ set to outperform, says Bloomberg analyst

Bloomberg analyst Mike McGlone has labeled Bitcoin (BTC) a “wild card” which…