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Hidden Prysm Glitch Costs Ethereum Validators 382 ETH

Key Takeaways

  • A Prysm software flaw caused Ethereum’s network slowdown on December 4, which reduced validator participation and performance;
  • The bug, added in Prysm PR 15965, existed in testnets a month earlier but never activated during testing;
  • The malfunction led to missed slots and validator losses totaling about 382 ETH during a 42-epoch disruption.

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Hidden Prysm Glitch Costs Ethereum Validators 382 ETH

A technical fault in Prysm, one of Ethereum’s key consensus clients, led to an unexpected network slowdown on December 4.

Ethereum developer Terence Tsao shared a detailed report on December 14 explaining what went wrong during the Fusaka mainnet event.

According to his post, Prysm nodes began overusing system resources when they encountered attestations from nodes that were not properly synchronized. This led to repeated calculations of previous state data, which slowed down performance.

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Instead of referencing the latest state, the affected client instances rebuilt earlier states from scratch. This process placed pressure on computing power and memory, which resulted in delays and missed validations.

The bug first appeared in a test version of the software a month before the mainnet upgrade. However, it did not trigger during testing.

The report confirmed that "the bug was introduced in Prysm PR 15965 and deployed to testnets a month before the incident without the trigger happening". While test networks exist to catch such flaws, they do not always expose every potential failure before live deployment.

As a result of the malfunction, Ethereum experienced a 42-epoch period where almost one-fifth of slots were missed. Participation levels dropped to roughly three-quarters of normal, and validators lost about 382 Ethereum in missed attestation rewards.

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Aaron S. Editor-In-Chief
Having completed a Master’s degree in Economics, Politics, and Cultures of the East Asia region, Aaron has written scientific papers analyzing the differences between Western and Collective forms of capitalism in the post-World War II era.
With close to a decade of experience in the FinTech industry, Aaron understands all of the biggest issues and struggles that crypto enthusiasts face. He’s a passionate analyst who is concerned with data-driven and fact-based content, as well as that which speaks to both Web3 natives and industry newcomers.
Aaron is the go-to person for everything and anything related to digital currencies. With a huge passion for blockchain & Web3 education, Aaron strives to transform the space as we know it, and make it more approachable to complete beginners.
Aaron has been quoted by multiple established outlets, and is a published author himself. Even during his free time, he enjoys researching the market trends, and looking for the next supernova.

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