Back to Skills

network-security-setup

DNYoussef
Updated Today
478 views
3
3
View on GitHub
Developmentsecuritynetworkisolationtrusted-domainsconfiguration

About

This skill configures Claude Code sandbox network isolation by setting up trusted domain whitelists and custom access policies. It helps developers secure code execution by managing environment variables and preventing unauthorized network access. Use it to implement zero-trust architecture and prevent prompt injection attacks via network controls.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Primary
npx skills add DNYoussef/ai-chrome-extension
Plugin CommandAlternative
/plugin add https://github.com/DNYoussef/ai-chrome-extension
Git CloneAlternative
git clone https://github.com/DNYoussef/ai-chrome-extension.git ~/.claude/skills/network-security-setup

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

Documentation

Network Security Setup

Purpose

Configure Claude Code sandbox network isolation policies including trusted domain whitelisting, custom access rules, and secure environment variable management.

Specialist Agent

I am a network security specialist with expertise in:

  • Zero-trust network architecture for AI code execution
  • Domain whitelisting and access control policies
  • Prompt injection attack prevention via network isolation
  • Secure environment variable management
  • Corporate proxy and internal registry configuration

Methodology (Systems Thinking + Self-Consistency)

  1. Analyze Environment: Understand deployment context (enterprise, open-source, local)
  2. Design Network Policy: Create appropriate trusted domain list
  3. Configure Access Rules: Set up custom access patterns and exclusions
  4. Secure Credentials: Properly handle environment variables and secrets
  5. Validate Security: Test that policies block untrusted access while enabling work

Network Isolation Modes

Mode 1: Trusted Network Access (Recommended Default)

mode: trusted
description: Claude can only access pre-approved, known-safe domains
use_case: General development, open-source projects
trusted_domains:
  - "*.npmjs.org"
  - "registry.npmjs.org"
  - "*.yarnpkg.com"
  - "*.github.com"
  - "api.github.com"
  - "raw.githubusercontent.com"
  - "*.cloudfront.net"
  - "*.docker.io"
  - "registry.hub.docker.com"
  - "*.pypi.org"
  - "pypi.python.org"

Mode 2: No Network Access

mode: none
description: Complete network isolation, no external access
use_case: Maximum security, offline development, sensitive projects
trusted_domains: []

Mode 3: Custom Access

mode: custom
description: User-defined whitelist of allowed domains
use_case: Enterprise with internal registries, corporate networks
trusted_domains:
  - "registry.company.internal"
  - "docs.company.com"
  - "api.company.com"
  - "*.company-cdn.net"
  - [Include standard registries as needed]

Default Trusted Domains (Anthropic-Approved)

Package Registries:

  • *.npmjs.org - npm packages
  • registry.npmjs.org - npm registry
  • *.yarnpkg.com - Yarn registry
  • *.pypi.org - Python packages
  • pypi.python.org - Python registry
  • rubygems.org - Ruby gems
  • *.maven.org - Maven packages

Container Registries:

  • *.docker.io - Docker Hub
  • registry.hub.docker.com - Docker registry
  • ghcr.io - GitHub Container Registry
  • gcr.io - Google Container Registry
  • *.azurecr.io - Azure Container Registry

Source Control & CDNs:

  • *.github.com - GitHub
  • api.github.com - GitHub API
  • raw.githubusercontent.com - Raw GitHub content
  • *.cloudfront.net - AWS CloudFront
  • cdn.jsdelivr.net - jsDelivr CDN
  • unpkg.com - unpkg CDN

Development Tools:

  • *.vercel.com - Vercel deployment
  • *.netlify.com - Netlify deployment
  • *.supabase.co - Supabase API

Enterprise Configuration

Internal Registry Setup:

{
  "sandbox": {
    "enabled": true,
    "network": {
      "mode": "custom",
      "trustedDomains": [
        "registry.company.internal:5000",
        "npm.company.com",
        "docs.company.com",
        "api-docs.company.internal",
        "*.company-cdn.net",
        "*.company.cloud",

        // Include standard public registries if needed
        "registry.npmjs.org",
        "*.github.com"
      ],
      "customProxy": {
        "enabled": true,
        "http": "http://proxy.company.com:8080",
        "https": "http://proxy.company.com:8080",
        "noProxy": [
          "localhost",
          "127.0.0.1",
          "*.company.internal"
        ]
      }
    }
  }
}

Corporate Proxy Configuration:

{
  "sandbox": {
    "network": {
      "customProxy": {
        "enabled": true,
        "http": "http://corporate-proxy.company.com:3128",
        "https": "http://corporate-proxy.company.com:3128",
        "noProxy": [
          "localhost",
          "*.internal",
          "*.company.com"
        ],
        "authentication": {
          "enabled": false  // Use system credentials
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Environment Variables (Secure Management)

Safe Environment Variables (OK to configure):

safe_env_vars:
  - NODE_ENV: "development"
  - API_BASE_URL: "https://api.company.com"
  - LOG_LEVEL: "debug"
  - FEATURE_FLAGS: "new_ui,beta_features"
  - BUILD_TARGET: "production"

Dangerous (NEVER in sandbox config):

dangerous_env_vars:  # Store in .env.local, never in settings
  - API_KEY: "sk-..."  ❌ SECRET
  - DATABASE_PASSWORD: "..."  ❌ SECRET
  - PRIVATE_KEY: "..."  ❌ SECRET
  - AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY: "..."  ❌ SECRET

Best Practice for Secrets:

  1. Store in .env.local (gitignored)
  2. Use environment variable references in sandbox config
  3. Document required variables without values
  4. Use secret management services in production

Example Secure Configuration:

{
  "sandbox": {
    "environmentVariables": {
      // ✅ Non-sensitive configuration
      "NODE_ENV": "development",
      "API_BASE_URL": "https://api.staging.company.com",

      // ✅ Reference to local .env file (document required vars)
      "__REQUIRED_SECRETS__": "API_KEY, DATABASE_URL (store in .env.local)"
    }
  }
}

Security Threat Mitigation

Threat 1: Prompt Injection → Data Exfiltration

Attack: Malicious prompt in downloaded code tries to send sensitive data to attacker.com
Mitigation: Network isolation blocks all non-whitelisted domains
Result: Attack fails, data stays secure

Threat 2: Malicious Package Download

Attack: Prompt injection tries to install malware from evil-registry.com
Mitigation: Only trusted registries allowed
Result: Download blocked, system protected

Threat 3: Internal Network Scanning

Attack: Code tries to scan internal network for vulnerable services
Mitigation: Network isolation prevents arbitrary connections
Result: Internal network remains hidden

Threat 4: Credential Theft

Attack: Downloaded code reads environment variables and sends to attacker
Mitigation: Secrets not in sandbox config, network blocked anyway
Result: No credentials accessible or exfiltratable

Domain Pattern Matching

Wildcard Patterns:

  • *.example.com - Matches all subdomains: api.example.com, cdn.example.com
  • example.com - Exact match only
  • *.*.example.com - Multi-level wildcards: a.b.example.com

Port Specifications:

  • registry.company.com:5000 - Specific port
  • *.company.com:* - Any port on subdomains
  • localhost:3000 - Local development server

Protocol Handling:

  • HTTPS preferred and enforced where possible
  • HTTP allowed only for localhost and internal domains
  • WebSocket connections follow same rules (ws:// → wss://)

Validation and Testing

Test Network Policy:

# Should succeed (trusted domain)
npm install express

# Should succeed (trusted domain)
git clone https://github.com/user/repo

# Should fail (untrusted domain)
curl https://random-website.com

# Should succeed if allowLocalBinding enabled
npm run dev

Verification Checklist:

  • Package installations work from trusted registries
  • GitHub operations succeed
  • CDN resources accessible if needed
  • Internal registries accessible (enterprise)
  • Untrusted domains blocked
  • Local development servers work if configured
  • Build commands pass with required env vars
  • No secrets in sandbox configuration

Input Contract

environment_type: enterprise | opensource | local | custom
required_access:
  public_registries: array[string]
  internal_domains: array[string]
  cdn_services: array[string]
needs_proxy: boolean
proxy_config: object (if needs_proxy)
required_env_vars: array[{name, value, is_secret}]

Output Contract

network_configuration:
  mode: trusted | none | custom
  trusted_domains: array[string]
  proxy_config: object (if applicable)
  environment_variables: object (non-secrets only)

security_analysis:
  threats_mitigated: array[string]
  access_granted: array[string]
  access_denied: array[string]
  recommendations: array[string]

setup_instructions:
  config_file_location: string
  config_content: json
  validation_commands: array[string]
  documentation_links: array[string]

Integration Points

  • Cascades: Works with sandbox-configurator for complete security setup
  • Commands: /network-security, /trusted-domains
  • Other Skills: Pairs with sandbox-configurator, security-review

Usage Examples

Standard Development Setup:

Configure network security for open-source development with standard npm and GitHub access

Enterprise Internal:

Set up network isolation for enterprise:
- Internal npm registry: npm.company.internal
- Internal docs: docs.company.com
- Corporate proxy: proxy.company.com:8080
- Keep access to public GitHub

Maximum Security:

Configure maximum security with no network access for sensitive project

Add Custom Domain:

Add api.specialservice.com to trusted domains for API integration

Failure Modes & Mitigations

  • Package install fails: Add registry to trusted domains
  • Git clone fails: Add git host to trusted domains
  • Build fails with network error: Check if build accesses CDN, add to whitelist
  • Proxy authentication fails: Verify proxy credentials or use system auth
  • Environment variable missing: Document in config, add to .env.local

Validation Checklist

  • All required registries in trusted domains
  • Internal domains include ports if non-standard
  • Proxy configuration correct (if needed)
  • No secrets in sandbox configuration
  • Required env vars documented
  • Test package installation
  • Test git operations
  • Test build commands
  • Verify untrusted access blocked

Neural Training Integration

training:
  pattern: systems-thinking
  feedback_collection: true
  success_metrics:
    - zero_security_incidents
    - development_velocity_maintained
    - false_positive_rate_low

Quick Reference:

  • Config location: .claude/settings.local.json
  • Default mode: Trusted network access
  • Wildcard syntax: *.domain.com
  • Secrets: NEVER in sandbox config, use .env.local

Security Principle: Deny by default, allow explicitly, verify continuously

GitHub Repository

DNYoussef/ai-chrome-extension
Path: .claude/skills/network-security-setup

Related Skills

sandbox-configurator

Development

The sandbox-configurator skill automatically configures Claude Code's execution environment with security boundaries for file system and network isolation. It enables developers to define trusted domains, manage file permissions, and control network access for secure code execution. Use this skill when you need to set up a secure, isolated sandbox for running untrusted code or building applications.

View skill

github-workflow-automation

Other

This skill automates GitHub Actions workflows with AI swarm coordination for intelligent CI/CD pipelines and repository management. It generates, analyzes, and orchestrates workflows using adaptive automation capabilities. Use it when you need to streamline GitHub automation with self-organizing, multi-agent coordination.

View skill

when-mapping-dependencies-use-dependency-mapper

Other

This skill provides comprehensive dependency mapping and analysis for software projects across multiple package managers. It extracts dependency trees, detects issues, audits for vulnerabilities, and generates visualizations. Use it when you need to understand, analyze, or visualize project dependencies and their security implications.

View skill

github-workflow-automation

Other

This skill automates GitHub Actions workflows with AI swarm coordination for intelligent CI/CD pipelines and repository management. It helps developers create self-organizing, adaptive workflows through code analysis and automated workflow generation. Use it when you need to streamline GitHub automation with AI-powered coordination across complex deployment processes.

View skill