Back to Skills

security-audit-codebase

pjt222
Updated 2 days ago
5 views
17
2
17
View on GitHub
Developmentapi

About

This skill performs automated security audits on codebases, detecting exposed secrets, vulnerable dependencies, injection flaws, and OWASP Top 10 issues. It's designed for use before deployment, during periodic reviews, or when preparing for compliance audits. The tool operates with read, write, edit, and bash capabilities to systematically scan project files.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Primary
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Plugin CommandAlternative
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternative
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/security-audit-codebase

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

Documentation

Security Audit Codebase

Perform a systematic security review of a codebase to identify vulnerabilities and exposed secrets.

When to Use

  • Before publishing or deploying a project
  • Periodic security review of existing projects
  • After adding authentication, API integration, or user input handling
  • Before open-sourcing a private repository
  • Preparing for a security compliance audit

Inputs

  • Required: Codebase to audit
  • Optional: Specific focus area (secrets, dependencies, injection, auth)
  • Optional: Compliance framework (OWASP, ISO 27001, SOC 2)
  • Optional: Previous audit findings for comparison

Procedure

Step 1: Scan for Exposed Secrets

Search for patterns that indicate hardcoded secrets:

# API keys and tokens
grep -rn "sk-\|ghp_\|gho_\|github_pat_\|hf_\|AKIA" --include="*.{md,js,ts,py,R,json,yml,yaml}" .

# Generic secret patterns
grep -rn "password\s*=\s*['\"]" --include="*.{js,ts,py,R,json}" .
grep -rn "api[_-]key\s*[=:]\s*['\"]" --include="*.{js,ts,py,R,json}" .
grep -rn "secret\s*[=:]\s*['\"]" --include="*.{js,ts,py,R,json}" .

# Connection strings
grep -rn "postgresql://\|mysql://\|mongodb://" .

# Private keys
grep -rn "BEGIN.*PRIVATE KEY" .

Got: No real secrets found — only placeholders like YOUR_TOKEN_HERE or [email protected].

If fail: If real secrets are found, remove them immediately, rotate the exposed credential, and clean git history with git filter-branch or git-filter-repo. Treat any exposed secret as compromised.

Step 2: Check .gitignore Coverage

Verify sensitive files are excluded:

# Check that these are git-ignored
git check-ignore .env .Renviron credentials.json node_modules/

# Look for tracked sensitive files
git ls-files | grep -i "\.env\|\.renviron\|credentials\|secret"

Got: All sensitive files (.env, .Renviron, credentials.json) are listed in .gitignore, and git ls-files returns no tracked sensitive files.

If fail: If sensitive files are tracked, run git rm --cached <file> to untrack them, add to .gitignore, and commit. The file remains on disk but is no longer version-controlled.

Step 3: Audit Dependencies

Node.js:

npm audit
npx audit-ci --moderate

Python:

pip-audit
safety check

R:

# Check for known vulnerabilities in packages
# No built-in tool, but verify package sources
renv::status()

Got: No high or critical vulnerabilities in dependencies. Moderate and low vulnerabilities documented for review.

If fail: If critical vulnerabilities are found, update the affected packages immediately with npm audit fix or pip install --upgrade. If updates introduce breaking changes, document the vulnerability and create a remediation plan.

Step 4: Check for Injection Vulnerabilities

SQL Injection:

# Look for string concatenation in queries
grep -rn "paste.*SELECT\|paste.*INSERT\|paste.*UPDATE\|paste.*DELETE" --include="*.R" .
grep -rn "query.*\+.*\|query.*\$\{" --include="*.{js,ts}" .

All database queries should use parameterized queries, not string concatenation.

Command Injection:

# Look for shell execution with user input
grep -rn "system\(.*paste\|exec(\|spawn(" --include="*.{R,js,ts,py}" .

XSS (Cross-Site Scripting):

# Look for unescaped user content in HTML
grep -rn "innerHTML\|dangerouslySetInnerHTML\|v-html" --include="*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,vue}" .

Got: No SQL, command, or XSS injection vectors found. All database queries use parameterized statements, shell commands avoid user-controlled input, and HTML output is properly escaped.

If fail: If injection vulnerabilities are found, replace string concatenation in queries with parameterized queries, sanitize or escape user input before shell execution, and use framework-safe rendering methods instead of innerHTML or dangerouslySetInnerHTML.

Step 5: Review Authentication and Authorization

Checklist:

  • Passwords hashed with bcrypt/argon2 (not MD5/SHA1)
  • Session tokens are random and sufficiently long
  • Authentication tokens have expiration
  • API endpoints check authorization
  • CORS configured restrictively
  • CSRF protection enabled for state-changing operations

Got: All checklist items pass: passwords use strong hashing, tokens are random with expiration, endpoints enforce authorization, CORS is restrictive, and CSRF protection is active.

If fail: Prioritize fixes by severity: weak password hashing and missing authorization are critical, while CORS and CSRF issues are high. Document all findings with their severity level.

Step 6: Check Configuration Security

# Debug mode in production configs
grep -rn "debug\s*[=:]\s*[Tt]rue\|DEBUG\s*=\s*1" --include="*.{json,yml,yaml,toml,cfg}" .

# Permissive CORS
grep -rn "Access-Control-Allow-Origin.*\*\|cors.*origin.*\*" --include="*.{js,ts}" .

# HTTP instead of HTTPS
grep -rn "http://" --include="*.{js,ts,py,R}" . | grep -v "localhost\|127.0.0.1\|http://"

Got: Debug mode is disabled in production configurations, CORS does not use wildcard origins in production, and all external URLs use HTTPS.

If fail: If debug mode is enabled in production configs, disable it immediately. Replace wildcard CORS origins with explicit allowed domains. Update http:// URLs to https:// where the endpoint supports it.

Step 7: Document Findings

Create an audit report:

# Security Audit Report

**Date**: YYYY-MM-DD
**Auditor**: [Name]
**Scope**: [Repository/Project]
**Status**: [PASS/FAIL/CONDITIONAL]

## Findings Summary

| Category | Status | Details |
|----------|--------|---------|
| Exposed secrets | PASS | No secrets found |
| .gitignore | PASS | Sensitive files excluded |
| Dependencies | WARN | 2 moderate vulnerabilities |
| Injection | PASS | Parameterized queries used |
| Auth/AuthZ | N/A | No authentication in scope |
| Configuration | PASS | Debug mode disabled |

## Detailed Findings

### Finding 1: [Title]
- **Severity**: Low / Medium / High / Critical
- **Location**: `path/to/file:line`
- **Description**: What was found
- **Recommendation**: How to fix
- **Status**: Open / Resolved

## Recommendations
1. Update dependencies to fix moderate vulnerabilities
2. [Additional recommendations]

Got: A complete SECURITY_AUDIT_REPORT.md saved in the project root with findings categorized by severity, each with a specific location, description, and recommendation.

If fail: With too many findings to document individually, group by category and prioritize critical/high findings. Generate the report regardless of outcome to establish a baseline.

Validation

  • No hardcoded secrets in source code
  • .gitignore covers all sensitive files
  • No high/critical dependency vulnerabilities
  • No injection vulnerabilities
  • Authentication is properly implemented (if applicable)
  • Audit report is complete and findings addressed

Pitfalls

  • Only checking current files: Secrets in git history are still exposed. Check with git log -p --all -S 'secret_pattern'.
  • Ignoring dev dependencies: Development dependencies can still introduce supply chain risks.
  • False sense of security from .gitignore: .gitignore only prevents future tracking. Already-committed files need git rm --cached.
  • Overlooking configuration files: docker-compose.yml, CI configs, and deployment scripts often contain secrets.
  • Not rotating compromised credentials: Finding and removing a secret is not enough. The credential must be revoked and regenerated.

Related Skills

  • configure-git-repository - proper .gitignore setup
  • write-claude-md - documenting security requirements
  • setup-gxp-r-project - security in regulated environments

GitHub Repository

pjt222/agent-almanac
Path: i18n/caveman-lite/skills/security-audit-codebase
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

Related Skills

qmd

Development

qmd is a local search and indexing CLI tool that enables developers to index and search through local files using hybrid search combining BM25, vector embeddings, and reranking. It supports both command-line usage and MCP (Model Context Protocol) mode for integration with Claude. The tool uses Ollama for embeddings and stores indexes locally, making it ideal for searching documentation or codebases directly from the terminal.

View skill

subagent-driven-development

Development

This skill executes implementation plans by dispatching a fresh subagent for each independent task, with code review between tasks. It enables fast iteration while maintaining quality gates through this review process. Use it when working on mostly independent tasks within the same session to ensure continuous progress with built-in quality checks.

View skill

mcporter

Development

The mcporter skill enables developers to manage and call Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers directly from Claude. It provides commands to list available servers, call their tools with arguments, and handle authentication and daemon lifecycle. Use this skill for integrating and testing MCP server functionality in your development workflow.

View skill

adk-deployment-specialist

Development

This skill deploys and orchestrates Vertex AI ADK agents using A2A protocol, managing AgentCard discovery, task submission, and supporting tools like Code Execution Sandbox and Memory Bank. It enables building multi-agent systems with sequential, parallel, or loop orchestration patterns in Python, Java, or Go. Use it when asked to deploy ADK agents or orchestrate agent workflows on Google Cloud.

View skill