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Slither, the Solidity source analyzer

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Slither is a Solidity static analysis framework written in Python 3. It runs a suite of vulnerability detectors, prints visual information about contract details, and provides an API to easily write custom analyses. Slither enables developers to find vulnerabilities, enhance their code comphrehension, and quickly prototype custom analyses.

Features

  • Detects vulnerable Solidity code with low false positives
  • Identifies where the error condition occurs in the source code
  • Easy integration into continuous integration and Truffle builds
  • Built-in 'printers' quickly report crucial contract information
  • Detector API to write custom analyses in Python
  • Ability to analyze contracts written with Solidity >= 0.4
  • Intermediate representation (SlithIR) enables simple, high-precision analyses

Usage

Run Slither on a Truffle application:

slither .

Run Slither on a single file:

$ slither tests/uninitialized.sol 
[..]
INFO:Detectors:
Uninitialized.destination (tests/uninitialized.sol#5) is never initialized. It is used in:
	- transfer (tests/uninitialized.sol#7-9)
Reference: https://github.com/trailofbits/slither/wiki/Vulnerabilities-Description#uninitialized-state-variables
[..]

Slither can be run on:

  • A .sol file
  • A Truffle directory
  • A directory containing *.sol files (all the *.sol files will be analyzed)
  • A glob (be sure to quote the argument when using a glob)

Configuration

  • --solc SOLC: Path to solc (default 'solc')
  • --solc-args SOLC_ARGS: Add custom solc arguments. SOLC_ARGS can contain multiple arguments
  • --disable-solc-warnings: Do not print solc warnings
  • --solc-ast: Use the solc AST file as input (solc file.sol --ast-json > file.ast.json)
  • --json FILE: Export results as JSON

Detectors

By default, all the detectors are run.

Num Detector What it Detects Impact Confidence
1 shadowing-state State variables shadowing High High
2 suicidal Functions allowing anyone to destruct the contract High High
3 uninitialized-state Uninitialized state variables High High
4 uninitialized-storage Uninitialized storage variables High High
5 arbitrary-send Functions that send ether to arbitrary destinations High Medium
6 controlled-delegatecall Controlled delegatecall destination High Medium
7 reentrancy Reentrancy vulnerabilities High Medium
8 locked-ether Contracts that lock ether Medium High
9 shadowing-abstract State variables shadowing from abstract contracts Medium High
10 constant-function Constant functions changing the state Medium Medium
11 tx-origin Dangerous usage of tx.origin Medium Medium
12 uninitialized-local Uninitialized local variables Medium Medium
13 unused-return Unused return values Medium Medium
14 timestamp Dangerous usage of block.timestamp Low Medium
15 assembly Assembly usage Informational High
16 constable-states State variables that could be declared constant Informational High
17 external-function Public function that could be declared as external Informational High
18 low-level-calls Low level calls Informational High
19 naming-convention Conformance to Solidity naming conventions Informational High
20 pragma If different pragma directives are used Informational High
21 solc-version Old versions of Solidity (< 0.4.23) Informational High
22 unused-state Unused state variables Informational High

Contact us to get access to additional detectors.

Printers

To run a printer, use --print and a comma-separated list of printers.

Num Printer Description
1 call-graph Export the call-graph of the contracts to a dot file
2 contract-summary Print a summary of the contracts
3 function-summary Print a summary of the functions
4 human-summary Print a human readable summary of the contracts
5 inheritance Print the inheritance relations between contracts
6 inheritance-graph Export the inheritance graph of each contract to a dot file
7 slithir Print the slithIR representation of the functions
8 vars-and-auth Print the state variables written and the authorization of the functions

How to install

Slither requires Python 3.6+ and solc, the Solidity compiler.

Using Pip

$ pip install slither-analyzer

Using Git

$ git clone https://github.com/trailofbits/slither.git && cd slither
$ python setup.py install 

We recommend to use a Python virtual environment to install slither from git (see the Developer Installation Instructions)

Getting Help

Feel free to stop by our Slack channel (#ethereum) for help using or extending Slither.

License

Slither is licensed and distributed under the AGPLv3 license. Contact us if you're looking for an exception to the terms.

Packages

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Languages

  • Python 93.7%
  • Solidity 4.0%
  • Shell 2.2%
  • Dockerfile 0.1%