CVE-2025-47285
EPSS 0.14%Vyper's `concat()` builtin may elide side-effects for zero-length arguments
Description
### Impact `concat()` may skip evaluation of side effects when the length of an argument is zero. this is due to a fastpath in the implementation which skips evaluation of argument expressions when their length is zero: https://github.com/vyperlang/vyper/blob/68b68c4b30c5ef2f312b4674676170b8a6eaa316/vyper/builtins/functions.py#L560-L562 in practice, it would be very unusual in user code to construct zero-length bytestrings using an expression with side-effects, since zero-length bytestrings are typically constructed with the empty literal `b""`; the only way to construct an empty bytestring which has side effects would be with the ternary operator introduced in v0.3.8, e.g. `b"" if self.do_some_side_effect() else b""`. the following example demonstrates how the issue would look in user code ```vyper counter: public(uint256) @external def test() -> Bytes[256]: a: Bytes[256] = concat(b"" if self.sideeffect() else b"", b"aaaa") return a def sideeffect() -> bool: self.counter += 1 return True ``` the severity assigned is low, since, as mentioned, this would be a very unusual pattern in user-code. ### Patches fix is tracked in https://github.com/vyperlang/vyper/pull/4644 ### Workarounds don't have side effects in expressions which construct zero-length bytestrings. ### References _Are there any links users can visit to find out more?_
Affected packages (1)
- PyPI/vyperfrom 0, <= 0.4.2rc1
CVSS scores
| Source | Version | Severity | Vector |
|---|---|---|---|
| osv | CVSS 4.0 | — | CVSS:4.0/AV:N/AC:L/AT:P/PR:N/UI:N/VC:N/VI:L/VA:N/SC:N/SI:N/SA:N/E:P |
References (5)
- ADVISORYhttps://nvd.nist.gov/vuln/detail/CVE-2025-47285
- PATCHhttps://github.com/vyperlang/vyper
- WEBhttps://github.com/vyperlang/vyper/blob/68b68c4b30c5ef2f312b4674676170b8a6eaa316/vyper/builtins/functions.py#L560-L562
- WEBhttps://github.com/vyperlang/vyper/pull/4644
- WEBhttps://github.com/vyperlang/vyper/security/advisories/GHSA-qhr6-mgqr-mchm