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Main Authors: Zhong, Zhijie, Nan, Yuhong, Ye, Mingxi, Xue, Qing, Wang, Jiashui, Ying, Xinlei, Liu, Long, Zheng, Zibin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.21593
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author Zhong, Zhijie
Nan, Yuhong
Ye, Mingxi
Xue, Qing
Wang, Jiashui
Ying, Xinlei
Liu, Long
Zheng, Zibin
author_facet Zhong, Zhijie
Nan, Yuhong
Ye, Mingxi
Xue, Qing
Wang, Jiashui
Ying, Xinlei
Liu, Long
Zheng, Zibin
contents Blockchain clients are fundamental software for running blockchain nodes. They provide users with various RPC (Remote Procedure Call) interfaces to interact with the blockchain. These RPC methods are expected to follow the same specification across different blockchain nodes, providing users with seamless interaction. However, there have been continuous reports on various RPC bugs that can cause unexpected responses or even Denial of Service weakness. Existing studies on blockchain RPC bug detection mainly focus on generating the RPC method calls for testing blockchain clients. However, a wide range of the reported RPC bugs are triggered in various blockchain contexts. To the best of our knowledge, little attention is paid to generating proper contexts that can trigger these context-dependent RPC bugs. In this work, we propose EthCRAFT, a Context-aware RPC Analysis and Fuzzing Tool for client RPC bug detection. EthCRAFT first proposes to explore the state transition program space of blockchain clients and generate various transactions to construct the context. EthCRAFT then designs a context-aware RPC method call generation method to send RPC calls to the blockchain clients. The responses of 5 different client implementations are used as cross-referring oracles to detect the RPC bugs. We evaluate EthCRAFT on real-world RPC bugs collected from the GitHub issues of Ethereum client implementations. Experiment results show that EthCRAFT outperforms existing client RPC detectors by detecting more RPC bugs. Moreover, EthCRAFT has found six new bugs in major Ethereum clients and reported them to the developers. One of the bug fixes has been written into breaking changes in the client's updates. Three of our bug reports have been offered a vulnerability bounty by the Ethereum Foundation.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_21593
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Is My RPC Response Reliable? Detecting RPC Bugs in Ethereum Blockchain Client under Context
Zhong, Zhijie
Nan, Yuhong
Ye, Mingxi
Xue, Qing
Wang, Jiashui
Ying, Xinlei
Liu, Long
Zheng, Zibin
Software Engineering
Blockchain clients are fundamental software for running blockchain nodes. They provide users with various RPC (Remote Procedure Call) interfaces to interact with the blockchain. These RPC methods are expected to follow the same specification across different blockchain nodes, providing users with seamless interaction. However, there have been continuous reports on various RPC bugs that can cause unexpected responses or even Denial of Service weakness. Existing studies on blockchain RPC bug detection mainly focus on generating the RPC method calls for testing blockchain clients. However, a wide range of the reported RPC bugs are triggered in various blockchain contexts. To the best of our knowledge, little attention is paid to generating proper contexts that can trigger these context-dependent RPC bugs. In this work, we propose EthCRAFT, a Context-aware RPC Analysis and Fuzzing Tool for client RPC bug detection. EthCRAFT first proposes to explore the state transition program space of blockchain clients and generate various transactions to construct the context. EthCRAFT then designs a context-aware RPC method call generation method to send RPC calls to the blockchain clients. The responses of 5 different client implementations are used as cross-referring oracles to detect the RPC bugs. We evaluate EthCRAFT on real-world RPC bugs collected from the GitHub issues of Ethereum client implementations. Experiment results show that EthCRAFT outperforms existing client RPC detectors by detecting more RPC bugs. Moreover, EthCRAFT has found six new bugs in major Ethereum clients and reported them to the developers. One of the bug fixes has been written into breaking changes in the client's updates. Three of our bug reports have been offered a vulnerability bounty by the Ethereum Foundation.
title Is My RPC Response Reliable? Detecting RPC Bugs in Ethereum Blockchain Client under Context
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.21593