* feat: add security-review skill for AI-powered codebase vulnerability scanning * chore: regenerate README tables * fix: address Copilot review comments on reference files
8.9 KiB
name, description
| name | description |
|---|---|
| security-review | AI-powered codebase security scanner that reasons about code like a security researcher — tracing data flows, understanding component interactions, and catching vulnerabilities that pattern-matching tools miss. Use this skill when asked to scan code for security vulnerabilities, find bugs, check for SQL injection, XSS, command injection, exposed API keys, hardcoded secrets, insecure dependencies, access control issues, or any request like "is my code secure?", "review for security issues", "audit this codebase", or "check for vulnerabilities". Covers injection flaws, authentication and access control bugs, secrets exposure, weak cryptography, insecure dependencies, and business logic issues across JavaScript, TypeScript, Python, Java, PHP, Go, Ruby, and Rust. |
Security Review
An AI-powered security scanner that reasons about your codebase the way a human security researcher would — tracing data flows, understanding component interactions, and catching vulnerabilities that pattern-matching tools miss.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when the request involves:
- Scanning a codebase or file for security vulnerabilities
- Running a security review or vulnerability check
- Checking for SQL injection, XSS, command injection, or other injection flaws
- Finding exposed API keys, hardcoded secrets, or credentials in code
- Auditing dependencies for known CVEs
- Reviewing authentication, authorization, or access control logic
- Detecting insecure cryptography or weak randomness
- Performing a data flow analysis to trace user input to dangerous sinks
- Any request phrasing like "is my code secure?", "scan this file", or "check my repo for vulnerabilities"
- Running
/security-reviewor/security-review <path>
How This Skill Works
Unlike traditional static analysis tools that match patterns, this skill:
- Reads code like a security researcher — understanding context, intent, and data flow
- Traces across files — following how user input moves through your application
- Self-verifies findings — re-examines each result to filter false positives
- Assigns severity ratings — CRITICAL / HIGH / MEDIUM / LOW / INFO
- Proposes targeted patches — every finding includes a concrete fix
- Requires human approval — nothing is auto-applied; you always review first
Execution Workflow
Follow these steps in order every time:
Step 1 — Scope Resolution
Determine what to scan:
- If a path was provided (
/security-review src/auth/), scan only that scope - If no path given, scan the entire project starting from the root
- Identify the language(s) and framework(s) in use (check package.json, requirements.txt, go.mod, Cargo.toml, pom.xml, Gemfile, composer.json, etc.)
- Read
references/language-patterns.mdto load language-specific vulnerability patterns
Step 2 — Dependency Audit
Before scanning source code, audit dependencies first (fast wins):
- Node.js: Check
package.json+package-lock.jsonfor known vulnerable packages - Python: Check
requirements.txt/pyproject.toml/Pipfile - Java: Check
pom.xml/build.gradle - Ruby: Check
Gemfile.lock - Rust: Check
Cargo.toml - Go: Check
go.sum - Flag packages with known CVEs, deprecated crypto libs, or suspiciously old pinned versions
- Read
references/vulnerable-packages.mdfor a curated watchlist
Step 3 — Secrets & Exposure Scan
Scan ALL files (including config, env, CI/CD, Dockerfiles, IaC) for:
- Hardcoded API keys, tokens, passwords, private keys
.envfiles accidentally committed- Secrets in comments or debug logs
- Cloud credentials (AWS, GCP, Azure, Stripe, Twilio, etc.)
- Database connection strings with credentials embedded
- Read
references/secret-patterns.mdfor regex patterns and entropy heuristics to apply
Step 4 — Vulnerability Deep Scan
This is the core scan. Reason about the code — don't just pattern-match.
Read references/vuln-categories.md for full details on each category.
Injection Flaws
- SQL Injection: raw queries with string interpolation, ORM misuse, second-order SQLi
- XSS: unescaped output, dangerouslySetInnerHTML, innerHTML, template injection
- Command Injection: exec/spawn/system with user input
- LDAP, XPath, Header, Log injection
Authentication & Access Control
- Missing authentication on sensitive endpoints
- Broken object-level authorization (BOLA/IDOR)
- JWT weaknesses (alg:none, weak secrets, no expiry validation)
- Session fixation, missing CSRF protection
- Privilege escalation paths
- Mass assignment / parameter pollution
Data Handling
- Sensitive data in logs, error messages, or API responses
- Missing encryption at rest or in transit
- Insecure deserialization
- Path traversal / directory traversal
- XXE (XML External Entity) processing
- SSRF (Server-Side Request Forgery)
Cryptography
- Use of MD5, SHA1, DES for security purposes
- Hardcoded IVs or salts
- Weak random number generation (Math.random() for tokens)
- Missing TLS certificate validation
Business Logic
- Race conditions (TOCTOU)
- Integer overflow in financial calculations
- Missing rate limiting on sensitive endpoints
- Predictable resource identifiers
Step 5 — Cross-File Data Flow Analysis
After the per-file scan, perform a holistic review:
- Trace user-controlled input from entry points (HTTP params, headers, body, file uploads) all the way to sinks (DB queries, exec calls, HTML output, file writes)
- Identify vulnerabilities that only appear when looking at multiple files together
- Check for insecure trust boundaries between services or modules
Step 6 — Self-Verification Pass
For EACH finding:
- Re-read the relevant code with fresh eyes
- Ask: "Is this actually exploitable, or is there sanitization I missed?"
- Check if a framework or middleware already handles this upstream
- Downgrade or discard findings that aren't genuine vulnerabilities
- Assign final severity: CRITICAL / HIGH / MEDIUM / LOW / INFO
Step 7 — Generate Security Report
Output the full report in the format defined in references/report-format.md.
Step 8 — Propose Patches
For every CRITICAL and HIGH finding, generate a concrete patch:
- Show the vulnerable code (before)
- Show the fixed code (after)
- Explain what changed and why
- Preserve the original code style, variable names, and structure
- Add a comment explaining the fix inline
Explicitly state: "Review each patch before applying. Nothing has been changed yet."
Severity Guide
| Severity | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| 🔴 CRITICAL | Immediate exploitation risk, data breach likely | SQLi, RCE, auth bypass |
| 🟠 HIGH | Serious vulnerability, exploit path exists | XSS, IDOR, hardcoded secrets |
| 🟡 MEDIUM | Exploitable with conditions or chaining | CSRF, open redirect, weak crypto |
| 🔵 LOW | Best practice violation, low direct risk | Verbose errors, missing headers |
| ⚪ INFO | Observation worth noting, not a vulnerability | Outdated dependency (no CVE) |
Output Rules
- Always produce a findings summary table first (counts by severity)
- Never auto-apply any patch — present patches for human review only
- Always include a confidence rating per finding (High / Medium / Low)
- Group findings by category, not by file
- Be specific — include file path, line number, and the exact vulnerable code snippet
- Explain the risk in plain English — what could an attacker do with this?
- If the codebase is clean, say so clearly: "No vulnerabilities found" with what was scanned
Reference Files
For detailed detection guidance, load the following reference files as needed:
references/vuln-categories.md— Deep reference for every vulnerability category with detection signals, safe patterns, and escalation checkers- Search patterns:
SQL injection,XSS,command injection,SSRF,BOLA,IDOR,JWT,CSRF,secrets,cryptography,race condition,path traversal
- Search patterns:
references/secret-patterns.md— Regex patterns, entropy-based detection, and CI/CD secret risks- Search patterns:
API key,token,private key,connection string,entropy,.env,GitHub Actions,Docker,Terraform
- Search patterns:
references/language-patterns.md— Framework-specific vulnerability patterns for JavaScript, Python, Java, PHP, Go, Ruby, and Rust- Search patterns:
Express,React,Next.js,Django,Flask,FastAPI,Spring Boot,PHP,Go,Rails,Rust
- Search patterns:
references/vulnerable-packages.md— Curated CVE watchlist for npm, pip, Maven, Rubygems, Cargo, and Go modules- Search patterns:
lodash,axios,jsonwebtoken,Pillow,log4j,nokogiri,CVE
- Search patterns:
references/report-format.md— Structured output template for security reports with finding cards, dependency audit, secrets scan, and patch proposal formatting- Search patterns:
report,format,template,finding,patch,summary,confidence
- Search patterns: