Ethernaut: Elevator
My take on CTFs
CTFs constitute a crucial part in the process of becoming a successful security researcher as they require from you an eye for details, a good understanding of solidity and great technical skills to perform the attack and capture the flag. The most talented security researchers are great at CTFs, at solving them of course and sometimes at designing them. CTFs will not turn you into a great web3 security researcher over night, but it will surely arm you with good enough technical skills to be able to write decent coded PoCs to have your finding validated and maybe get selected for report.
What is Ethernaut?
Ethernaut is a CTF(Capture The Flag) developed by the openzeppelin team that you most propbably already heard of. If you haven't, consider taking a look at this roadmap https://www.0xjarix.com/if-i-had-to-start-again/
This CTF gathers 31 challenges for the moment, this number keeps increasing so check their website every now and then: https://ethernaut.openzeppelin.com/
Maybe you'll design your challenge one day and send it to the openzeppelin team.
Also why you here?
Of all the kinds of articles I publish, CTF writeups are those I wish you read the least. I am a big advocate of giving everything the time it needs, if you cannot solve a challenge that you know for a contains an intentional bug in such a small codebase, do not expect to do really well in the contests. There are 2 reasons why someone can fail at solving a challenge, and when I say 'fail' I mean giving up and looking at the writeups, knowing damn well these CTFs are not time-bounded. So if you failed you either:
- aren't ready for this challenge yet and that is most probably due to the fact that you skipped some steps in the roadmap
- are lazy, you read the challenge, read the codebase, maybe not enough times, you had some assumptions maybe, you might have identified some entrypoints or some conditions to bypass or break, but you did not give it enough time, you did not allow yourself to succeed and that's a shame
Elevator
This elevator won't let you reach the top of your building. Right?
Things that might help:
- Sometimes solidity is not good at keeping promises.
- This
Elevator
expects to be used from aBuilding
.
Goal
top = true
Reasoning
- We are using the Building interface, but have you asked yourself what contract is this the interface of? It's our job to craft it
- What's a bit tricky is the fact that for the same argument isLastFloor(floor) should return 2 different values false the first time and true the second, how can we implement that? Well, it doesn't actually have to depend on an argument and we can use a boolean state variable as a flag to know whether isLastFloor(floor) is being called for the first or second time
Always be cautious about interfaces' functions' implementations, make sure the function you're calling from another contract exists in the imported interface