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shift-camouflage

pjt222
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The shift-camouflage skill enables developers to build systems with adaptive, polymorphic interfaces that present different APIs and behaviors to different consumers. It's used for context-aware feature exposure, attack surface reduction, and implementing feature flags or progressive rollouts at the interface level. This approach allows systems to dynamically adapt their external face without changing their core logic.

快速安装

Claude Code

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主要方式
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
插件命令备选方式
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git 克隆备选方式
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/shift-camouflage

在 Claude Code 中复制并粘贴此命令以安装该技能

技能文档

Shift Camouflage

Implement adaptive surface transformation — polymorphic interfaces, context-aware behavior, dynamic presentation — inspired by cuttlefish chromatophores. System's surface adapts to environment while core stays stable. Reduces attack surface, optimizes interaction with diverse observers.

When Use

  • System must present different interfaces to different consumers (API versioning, multi-tenant, role-based)
  • Reduce attack surface by exposing only what each observer needs see
  • Implement feature flags, progressive rollouts, or A/B testing at interface level
  • System needs adapt behavior to environmental context without core changes
  • Protect internal architecture from external coupling (observers couple to surface, not structure)
  • Complement adapt-architecture when surface change is sufficient and deep transformation unnecessary

Inputs

  • Required: System whose surface needs adaptation
  • Required: Observers/consumers and their different interface needs
  • Optional: Current interface design and limitations
  • Optional: Threat model (what should be hidden from which observers?)
  • Optional: Feature flag system or progressive rollout infrastructure
  • Optional: Performance constraints (dynamic surface generation has overhead)

Steps

Step 1: Map Observer Landscape

Identify who interacts with system, what each observer needs see.

  1. Catalog all observers:
    • External users (end users, API consumers, partners)
    • Internal services (microservices, background jobs, admin tools)
    • Adversaries (attackers, scrapers, competitors)
    • Regulators (auditors, compliance checks)
  2. For each observer, define:
    • What they need to see (required interface surface)
    • What they should not see (hidden surface)
    • What they expect to see (compatibility surface — may differ from what they need)
    • How they interact (protocol, frequency, sensitivity)
  3. Create the observer-surface matrix:
Observer-Surface Matrix:
┌──────────────┬────────────────────────┬─────────────────┬──────────────┐
│ Observer     │ Required Surface       │ Hidden Surface  │ Threat Level │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────┤
│ End users    │ Public API v2, UI      │ Internal APIs,  │ Low          │
│              │                        │ admin endpoints │              │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────┤
│ Partner API  │ Partner API, webhooks  │ Internal logic, │ Medium       │
│              │                        │ user data       │              │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────┤
│ Admin tools  │ Full API, debug        │ Raw data store  │ Low          │
│              │ endpoints              │ access          │              │
├──────────────┼────────────────────────┼─────────────────┼──────────────┤
│ Adversaries  │ Nothing (minimal)      │ Everything      │ High         │
│              │                        │ possible        │              │
└──────────────┴────────────────────────┴─────────────────┴──────────────┘

Got: Complete observer landscape with surface requirements per observer. Drives all subsequent camouflage design.

If fail: Observer identification incomplete? Start with two extremes: most privileged observer (admin) and most restricted (adversary). Design surfaces for these two, interpolate for observers between.

Step 2: Design Chromatophore Mapping

Create mapping between observer context and surface presentation — the "chromatophore" layer.

  1. Define context signals:
    • Authentication identity → determines privilege level
    • Request origin → geographic, network, or application context
    • Feature flags → enables/disables specific surface elements
    • Time/phase → deployment stage, business hours, maintenance windows
    • Load/health → degraded mode may present reduced surface
  2. Design the surface generation rules:
    • For each combination of context signals, define which surface elements are:
      • Visible: included in the response/interface
      • Hidden: excluded entirely (not even error messages reveal their existence)
      • Transformed: present but modified for this observer (different schema, simplified data)
      • Decoy: deliberately misleading surface elements for adversarial contexts
  3. Implement the chromatophore layer:
    • A thin middleware/proxy that sits between the core system and observers
    • Evaluates context signals on each request
    • Applies the appropriate surface configuration
    • Never modifies core behavior — only filters and transforms the surface
Chromatophore Architecture:
┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Observer Request                                      │
│        │                                              │
│        ↓                                              │
│ ┌─────────────────┐                                   │
│ │ Context Extract  │ ← Auth, origin, flags, time      │
│ └────────┬────────┘                                   │
│          ↓                                            │
│ ┌─────────────────┐                                   │
│ │ Surface Select   │ ← Observer-surface matrix lookup  │
│ └────────┬────────┘                                   │
│          ↓                                            │
│ ┌─────────────────┐                                   │
│ │ Core System      │ ← Processes request normally      │
│ └────────┬────────┘                                   │
│          ↓                                            │
│ ┌─────────────────┐                                   │
│ │ Surface Filter   │ ← Remove/transform/add elements   │
│ └────────┬────────┘                                   │
│          ↓                                            │
│ Observer Response (adapted surface)                    │
└──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Got: Chromatophore mapping translates observer context into surface config. Mapping explicit, auditable, separate from core logic.

If fail: Mapping becomes too complex (too many context combinations)? Simplify to role-based surfaces: define 3-5 surface profiles (public, partner, admin, internal, minimal), map every observer to one profile.

Step 3: Implement Behavioral Polymorphism

Make system's behavior adapt to context, not just surface appearance.

  1. Identify context-dependent behaviors:
    • Response detail level (verbose for admin, minimal for public)
    • Rate limiting (generous for partners, strict for unknown callers)
    • Error messages (detailed for internal, generic for external)
    • Data freshness (real-time for premium, cached for standard)
    • Feature availability (full for beta testers, stable-only for general)
  2. Implement behavioral variants:
    • Each variant is a complete, tested behavior path
    • Context determines which variant executes
    • Variants share core logic but differ in presentation and policy
  3. Feature flag integration:
    • Feature flags control which behavioral variants are active
    • Progressive rollout: expose new behavior to a percentage of observers, increasing over time
    • Circuit breakers: automatically revert to safe behavior if the new variant causes errors

Got: System's behavior adapts to observer context — same core logic produces appropriate responses for different audiences. Feature flags enable progressive rollout of new behaviors.

If fail: Behavioral polymorphism creates too many code paths? Consolidate to pipeline model: core logic → policy layer → presentation layer. Polymorphism lives in policy and presentation layers only, keeping core logic singular.

Step 4: Reduce Attack Surface

Minimize what adversaries can observe and interact with.

  1. Apply the principle of least surface:
    • Each observer sees only what they need — nothing more
    • Unauthenticated observers see the minimum possible surface
    • Error messages never leak internal structure (no stack traces, no internal paths, no version numbers)
  2. Implement active surface reduction:
    • Remove default pages, headers, and endpoints that reveal technology stack
    • Randomize non-essential response characteristics (timing jitter, header order)
    • Disable unused API endpoints entirely (not just hidden — actually off)
  3. Deploy pattern disruption:
    • Vary response characteristics to defeat fingerprinting
    • Introduce controlled unpredictability in non-functional aspects
    • Ensure that functional behavior remains deterministic while surface characteristics vary
  4. Monitor for reconnaissance:
    • Detect patterns of requests that probe for hidden surface (enumeration attacks)
    • Alert on repeated access to non-existent endpoints (path fuzzing)
    • Track and correlate reconnaissance patterns across sessions (see defend-colony)

Got: Minimal attack surface — adversaries cannot easy determine system's technology stack, internal structure, or hidden capabilities. Reconnaissance attempts detected and tracked.

If fail: Surface reduction breaks legitimate consumers? Observer-surface matrix incomplete — legitimate needs hidden. Review Step 1, update matrix. Randomization causes issues? Reduce randomization to non-functional aspects only (timing, headers), keep functional responses deterministic.

Step 5: Maintain Surface Coherence

Ensure dynamic surface stays consistent, debuggable, maintainable.

  1. Surface testing:
    • Test each observer profile explicitly (does admin see admin surface? does public see public surface?)
    • Test surface transitions (what happens when an observer's context changes mid-session?)
    • Test surface failure modes (what surface appears if the chromatophore layer fails?)
  2. Surface documentation:
    • Document each observer profile and its surface configuration
    • Document the context signals and their effects on surface selection
    • Keep documentation in sync with actual behavior (test documentation against reality)
  3. Debugging support:
    • Admin/debug mode reveals which surface profile is active and why
    • Logging captures which surface configuration was applied to each request
    • Ability to replay a request through a specific surface profile for debugging
  4. Surface evolution:
    • Adding new surface elements: add to the appropriate profiles, test, deploy
    • Removing surface elements: deprecation warning period, then removal
    • Changing surface behavior: feature flag controlled, progressive rollout

Got: Maintainable, testable, well-documented surface adaptation system. Dynamic nature does not compromise ability to debug, document, or evolve interfaces.

If fail: Chromatophore layer becomes debugging nightmare? Add transparency: every response includes trace header (visible only to admin/debug profile) showing which surface profile applied and which context signals determined it.

Checks

  • Observer landscape mapped with surface requirements per observer
  • Chromatophore mapping translates context to surface config
  • Behavioral polymorphism adapts responses to observer context
  • Attack surface minimized for adversarial observers
  • Each observer profile explicitly tested
  • Surface failure mode presents safe default (minimal surface)
  • Debug/admin mode can inspect active surface config
  • Surface docs match actual behavior

Pitfalls

  • Surface complexity explosion: Too many observer profiles with too many variations. Consolidate to 3-5 profiles max. Most observers fit broad categories
  • Core contamination: Letting surface adaptation logic leak into core business logic. Chromatophore layer must be separate — adding if-statements about observer type in core code? Architecture wrong
  • Security through obscurity alone: Surface reduction defense-in-depth layer, not replacement for proper security controls. Hidden endpoint still needs auth and authz
  • Inconsistent surfaces: Observer A sees version 1 of response, observer B sees version 2 — but supposed to see same thing. Test surfaces explicit, keep observer-surface matrix authoritative
  • Forget failure surface: When chromatophore layer itself fails, what surface does observer see? Default must be safe (minimal surface) not open (full surface)

See Also

  • assess-form — surface adaptation may resolve pressure identified in form assessment without requiring deep transformation
  • adapt-architecture — deep structural change for when surface adaptation insufficient
  • repair-damage — surface adaptation can mask damage during repair (caution — never hide real problems)
  • defend-colony — attack surface reduction defense layer; reconnaissance detection feeds into defense
  • coordinate-swarm — context-aware behavior in distributed systems needs coordinated surface adaptation
  • configure-api-gateway — API gateways implement many chromatophore layer functions in practice
  • deploy-to-kubernetes — Kubernetes services and ingress enable network-level surface control

GitHub 仓库

pjt222/agent-almanac
路径: i18n/caveman/skills/shift-camouflage
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

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