Thelibp2p-rendezvous server has no limit on how many namespaces a single peer can register. A malicious peer can repeatedly register unique namespaces in a loop, and the server accepts the requests, allocating memory for each registration without pushback. If an attacker continues submitting malicous requests for long enough, (or with multiple sybil peers) the server process crashes due to OOM.
No auth is required; therefore, any peer on the network can do this.
the bug is in Registrations::add() inside protocols/rendezvous/src/server.rs.
the store uses a BiMap keyed on (PeerId, Namespace) so yes, a peer can't register the same namespace twice. but there's nothing stopping it from registering 10,000 different namespaces. each unique one gets its own entry in:
registrations_for_peer (BiMap)registrations (HashMap)next_expiry (FuturesUnordered a new heap-allocated BoxFuture per registration)namespace strings are only validated for length (MAX_NAMESPACE = 255), not count. there's no max_registrations_per_peer anywhere in Config or the rest of the codebase.
making it worse MAX_TTL = 72 hours. so every registration just sits there for up to 3 days. disconnecting doesn't clean anything up either, entries only go away when the TTL fires.
protocols/rendezvous/src/server.rs
└── Registrations::add() ← no per-peer count check anywhere
protocols/rendezvous/src/lib.rs
├── MAX_NAMESPACE = 255 ← length capped, count is not
└── MAX_TTL = 72h ← entries persist a long time
fix would be adding something like max_registrations_per_peer to Config and checking it at the top of add() before inserting anything.
tested on libp2p v0.56.1, built from source.
step 1 - start the rendezvous server (uses the example from the repo):
cargo run --manifest-path examples/rendezvous/Cargo.toml --bin rendezvous-example
step 2 - run the flood client (attached as rzv-flood.rs):
cargo run --manifest-path examples/rendezvous/Cargo.toml --bin rzv-flood
it connects as a single peer and registers 10,000 unique namespaces (flood-00000000 through flood-00009999), chaining each registration on the confirmed Registered event from the previous one.
server accepted every single one. not one rejection.
memory on the server side (via ps aux RSS column):
baseline: ~18 MB
mid flood: ~26 MB
after 10k regs: ~28 MB
that's from one peer. scale to 100 sybil peers doing the same thing and you're looking at ~1GB. 1000 peers and the server is dead.
<img width="1032" height="124" alt="image" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f778f179-2aa1-4485-940c-25e218733fa8" />
server RSS climbing during the flood
<img width="553" height="760" alt="image" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/691b0f52-dda0-443f-a3c2-98c8c6336f2f" />
10,000 registrations confirmed, zero rejected
any node running libp2p-rendezvous server-side is affected. rendezvous servers are typically well-known, publicly reachable nodes taking one down disrupts peer discovery for all clients depending on it. any rust-libp2p based project that deploys a rendezvous point is at risk.
no special position on the network needed. no crypto work. just open a connection and send REGISTER in a loop.
{
"github_reviewed": true,
"github_reviewed_at": "2026-04-04T06:33:46Z",
"severity": "HIGH",
"nvd_published_at": null,
"cwe_ids": [
"CWE-770"
]
}