vulnerability-scanner

Advanced vulnerability analysis principles. OWASP 2025, Supply Chain Security, attack surface mapping, risk prioritization.

38 stars

Best use case

vulnerability-scanner is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.

Advanced vulnerability analysis principles. OWASP 2025, Supply Chain Security, attack surface mapping, risk prioritization.

Teams using vulnerability-scanner should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.

When to use this skill

  • You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.

When not to use this skill

  • You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
  • You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.

Installation

Claude Code / Cursor / Codex

$curl -o ~/.claude/skills/vulnerability-scanner/SKILL.md --create-dirs "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lingxling/awesome-skills-cn/main/antigravity-awesome-skills/plugins/antigravity-awesome-skills-claude/skills/vulnerability-scanner/SKILL.md"

Manual Installation

  1. Download SKILL.md from GitHub
  2. Place it in .claude/skills/vulnerability-scanner/SKILL.md inside your project
  3. Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill

How vulnerability-scanner Compares

Feature / Agentvulnerability-scannerStandard Approach
Platform SupportNot specifiedLimited / Varies
Context Awareness High Baseline
Installation ComplexityUnknownN/A

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this skill do?

Advanced vulnerability analysis principles. OWASP 2025, Supply Chain Security, attack surface mapping, risk prioritization.

Where can I find the source code?

You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.

SKILL.md Source

# Vulnerability Scanner

> Think like an attacker, defend like an expert. 2025 threat landscape awareness.

## 🔧 Runtime Scripts

**Execute for automated validation:**

| Script | Purpose | Usage |
|--------|---------|-------|
| `scripts/security_scan.py` | Validate security principles applied | `python scripts/security_scan.py <project_path>` |

## 📋 Reference Files

| File | Purpose |
|------|---------|
| [checklists.md](checklists.md) | OWASP Top 10, Auth, API, Data protection checklists |

---

## 1. Security Expert Mindset

### Core Principles

| Principle | Application |
|-----------|-------------|
| **Assume Breach** | Design as if attacker already inside |
| **Zero Trust** | Never trust, always verify |
| **Defense in Depth** | Multiple layers, no single point |
| **Least Privilege** | Minimum required access only |
| **Fail Secure** | On error, deny access |

### Threat Modeling Questions

Before scanning, ask:
1. What are we protecting? (Assets)
2. Who would attack? (Threat actors)
3. How would they attack? (Attack vectors)
4. What's the impact? (Business risk)

---

## 2. OWASP Top 10:2025

### Risk Categories

| Rank | Category | Think About |
|------|----------|-------------|
| **A01** | Broken Access Control | Who can access what? IDOR, SSRF |
| **A02** | Security Misconfiguration | Defaults, headers, exposed services |
| **A03** | Software Supply Chain 🆕 | Dependencies, CI/CD, build integrity |
| **A04** | Cryptographic Failures | Weak crypto, exposed secrets |
| **A05** | Injection | User input → system commands |
| **A06** | Insecure Design | Flawed architecture |
| **A07** | Authentication Failures | Session, credential management |
| **A08** | Integrity Failures | Unsigned updates, tampered data |
| **A09** | Logging & Alerting | Blind spots, no monitoring |
| **A10** | Exceptional Conditions 🆕 | Error handling, fail-open states |

### 2025 Key Changes

```
2021 → 2025 Shifts:
├── SSRF merged into A01 (Access Control)
├── A02 elevated (Cloud/Container configs)
├── A03 NEW: Supply Chain (major focus)
├── A10 NEW: Exceptional Conditions
└── Focus shift: Root causes > Symptoms
```

---

## 3. Supply Chain Security (A03)

### Attack Surface

| Vector | Risk | Question to Ask |
|--------|------|-----------------|
| **Dependencies** | Malicious packages | Do we audit new deps? |
| **Lock files** | Integrity attacks | Are they committed? |
| **Build pipeline** | CI/CD compromise | Who can modify? |
| **Registry** | Typosquatting | Verified sources? |

### Defense Principles

- Verify package integrity (checksums)
- Pin versions, audit updates
- Use private registries for critical deps
- Sign and verify artifacts

---

## 4. Attack Surface Mapping

### What to Map

| Category | Elements |
|----------|----------|
| **Entry Points** | APIs, forms, file uploads |
| **Data Flows** | Input → Process → Output |
| **Trust Boundaries** | Where auth/authz checked |
| **Assets** | Secrets, PII, business data |

### Prioritization Matrix

```
Risk = Likelihood × Impact

High Impact + High Likelihood → CRITICAL
High Impact + Low Likelihood  → HIGH
Low Impact + High Likelihood  → MEDIUM
Low Impact + Low Likelihood   → LOW
```

---

## 5. Risk Prioritization

### CVSS + Context

| Factor | Weight | Question |
|--------|--------|----------|
| **CVSS Score** | Base severity | How severe is the vuln? |
| **EPSS Score** | Exploit likelihood | Is it being exploited? |
| **Asset Value** | Business context | What's at risk? |
| **Exposure** | Attack surface | Internet-facing? |

### Prioritization Decision Tree

```
Is it actively exploited (EPSS >0.5)?
├── YES → CRITICAL: Immediate action
└── NO → Check CVSS
         ├── CVSS ≥9.0 → HIGH
         ├── CVSS 7.0-8.9 → Consider asset value
         └── CVSS <7.0 → Schedule for later
```

---

## 6. Exceptional Conditions (A10 - New)

### Fail-Open vs Fail-Closed

| Scenario | Fail-Open (BAD) | Fail-Closed (GOOD) |
|----------|-----------------|---------------------|
| Auth error | Allow access | Deny access |
| Parsing fails | Accept input | Reject input |
| Timeout | Retry forever | Limit + abort |

### What to Check

- Exception handlers that catch-all and ignore
- Missing error handling on security operations
- Race conditions in auth/authz
- Resource exhaustion scenarios

---

## 7. Scanning Methodology

### Phase-Based Approach

```
1. RECONNAISSANCE
   └── Understand the target
       ├── Technology stack
       ├── Entry points
       └── Data flows

2. DISCOVERY
   └── Identify potential issues
       ├── Configuration review
       ├── Dependency analysis
       └── Code pattern search

3. ANALYSIS
   └── Validate and prioritize
       ├── False positive elimination
       ├── Risk scoring
       └── Attack chain mapping

4. REPORTING
   └── Actionable findings
       ├── Clear reproduction steps
       ├── Business impact
       └── Remediation guidance
```

---

## 8. Code Pattern Analysis

### High-Risk Patterns

| Pattern | Risk | Look For |
|---------|------|----------|
| **String concat in queries** | Injection | `"SELECT * FROM " + user_input` |
| **Dynamic code execution** | RCE | `eval()`, `exec()`, `Function()` |
| **Unsafe deserialization** | RCE | `pickle.loads()`, `unserialize()` |
| **Path manipulation** | Traversal | User input in file paths |
| **Disabled security** | Various | `verify=False`, `--insecure` |

### Secret Patterns

| Type | Indicators |
|------|-----------|
| API Keys | `api_key`, `apikey`, high entropy |
| Tokens | `token`, `bearer`, `jwt` |
| Credentials | `password`, `secret`, `key` |
| Cloud | `AWS_`, `AZURE_`, `GCP_` prefixes |

---

## 9. Cloud Security Considerations

### Shared Responsibility

| Layer | You Own | Provider Owns |
|-------|---------|---------------|
| Data | ✅ | ❌ |
| Application | ✅ | ❌ |
| OS/Runtime | Depends | Depends |
| Infrastructure | ❌ | ✅ |

### Cloud-Specific Checks

- IAM: Least privilege applied?
- Storage: Public buckets?
- Network: Security groups tightened?
- Secrets: Using secrets manager?

---

## 10. Anti-Patterns

| ❌ Don't | ✅ Do |
|----------|-------|
| Scan without understanding | Map attack surface first |
| Alert on every CVE | Prioritize by exploitability + asset |
| Ignore false positives | Maintain verified baseline |
| Fix symptoms only | Address root causes |
| Scan once before deploy | Continuous scanning |
| Trust third-party deps blindly | Verify integrity, audit code |

---

## 11. Reporting Principles

### Finding Structure

Each finding should answer:
1. **What?** - Clear vulnerability description
2. **Where?** - Exact location (file, line, endpoint)
3. **Why?** - Root cause explanation
4. **Impact?** - Business consequence
5. **How to fix?** - Specific remediation

### Severity Classification

| Severity | Criteria |
|----------|----------|
| **Critical** | RCE, auth bypass, mass data exposure |
| **High** | Data exposure, privilege escalation |
| **Medium** | Limited scope, requires conditions |
| **Low** | Informational, best practice |

---

> **Remember:** Vulnerability scanning finds issues. Expert thinking prioritizes what matters. Always ask: "What would an attacker do with this?"

## When to Use
This skill is applicable to execute the workflow or actions described in the overview.

## Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
- Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
- Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.

Related Skills

skill-scanner

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Scan agent skills for security issues before adoption. Detects prompt injection, malicious code, excessive permissions, secret exposure, and supply chain risks.

find-skills

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Helps users discover and install agent skills when they ask questions like "how do I do X", "find a skill for X", "is there a skill that can...", or express interest in extending capabilities. This skill should be used when the user is looking for functionality that might exist as an installable skill.

vercel-cli-with-tokens

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Deploy and manage projects on Vercel using token-based authentication. Use when working with Vercel CLI using access tokens rather than interactive login — e.g. "deploy to vercel", "set up vercel", "add environment variables to vercel".

vercel-react-view-transitions

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Guide for implementing smooth, native-feeling animations using React's View Transition API (`<ViewTransition>` component, `addTransitionType`, and CSS view transition pseudo-elements). Use this skill whenever the user wants to add page transitions, animate route changes, create shared element animations, animate enter/exit of components, animate list reorder, implement directional (forward/back) navigation animations, or integrate view transitions in Next.js. Also use when the user mentions view transitions, `startViewTransition`, `ViewTransition`, transition types, or asks about animating between UI states in React without third-party animation libraries.

vercel-react-native-skills

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

React Native and Expo best practices for building performant mobile apps. Use when building React Native components, optimizing list performance, implementing animations, or working with native modules. Triggers on tasks involving React Native, Expo, mobile performance, or native platform APIs.

deploy-to-vercel

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Deploy applications and websites to Vercel. Use when the user requests deployment actions like "deploy my app", "deploy and give me the link", "push this live", or "create a preview deployment".

vercel-composition-patterns

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

React composition patterns that scale. Use when refactoring components with boolean prop proliferation, building flexible component libraries, or designing reusable APIs. Triggers on tasks involving compound components, render props, context providers, or component architecture. Includes React 19 API changes.

vercel-deploy

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Deploy applications and websites to Vercel. Use this skill when the user requests deployment actions such as "Deploy my app", "Deploy this to production", "Create a preview deployment", "Deploy and give me the link", or "Push this live". No authentication required - returns preview URL and claimable deployment link.

ckm:ui-styling

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Create beautiful, accessible user interfaces with shadcn/ui components (built on Radix UI + Tailwind), Tailwind CSS utility-first styling, and canvas-based visual designs. Use when building user interfaces, implementing design systems, creating responsive layouts, adding accessible components (dialogs, dropdowns, forms, tables), customizing themes and colors, implementing dark mode, generating visual designs and posters, or establishing consistent styling patterns across applications.

ckm:design

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Comprehensive design skill: brand identity, design tokens, UI styling, logo generation (55 styles, Gemini AI), corporate identity program (50 deliverables, CIP mockups), HTML presentations (Chart.js), banner design (22 styles, social/ads/web/print), icon design (15 styles, SVG, Gemini 3.1 Pro), social photos (HTML→screenshot, multi-platform). Actions: design logo, create CIP, generate mockups, build slides, design banner, generate icon, create social photos, social media images, brand identity, design system. Platforms: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, YouTube, Instagram, Pinterest, TikTok, Threads, Google Ads.

ckm:design-system

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Token architecture, component specifications, and slide generation. Three-layer tokens (primitive→semantic→component), CSS variables, spacing/typography scales, component specs, strategic slide creation. Use for design tokens, systematic design, brand-compliant presentations.

ckm:brand

38
from lingxling/awesome-skills-cn

Brand voice, visual identity, messaging frameworks, asset management, brand consistency. Activate for branded content, tone of voice, marketing assets, brand compliance, style guides.