返回技能列表

decode-minified-js-gates

pjt222
更新于 2 days ago
7 次查看
17
2
17
在 GitHub 上查看
开发general

关于

This skill analyzes minified JavaScript to identify and classify feature flag gate implementations, extracting details like reader variants, default values, and logical conditions. It helps developers understand flag behavior when names are unclear or multiple flagging libraries are used. The analysis supports reverse-engineering by decoding gate mechanics and structured configuration schemas.

快速安装

Claude Code

推荐
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/decode-minified-js-gates

在 Claude Code 中复制并粘贴此命令以安装该技能

技能文档

Decode Minified JS Gates

Read call-site ctx around flag string in minified JS bundle → produce gate-mechanics record: which reader variant, what default, what conjunction, what role. probe-feature-flag-state answers "is gate on/off?" → this skill answers prerequisite: "what does gate actually do?"

Use When

  • Flag surfaced by sweep-flag-namespace unclassifiable from name alone
  • Binary uses >1 gate-reader fn → need to know which a flag invokes
  • Gate "default" non-bool ({}, null, numeric literal) → decode actual reader variant
  • Suspect kill-switch (inverted gate) but can't confirm from name
  • Predicate combines gates w/ && → enumerate co-gates before probing

In

  • Required: minified JS bundle file (.js, .mjs, .bun)
  • Required: target flag string to decode, literal form
  • Optional: known reader fn names from prior decode pass → speeds Step 2
  • Optional: ctx-window size override; default 300 chars before, 200 chars after flag occurrence

Do

Step 1: Extract Ctx Window

Locate flag string → capture asymmetric window around each occurrence. Pre-ctx (before flag) → reader fn name. Post-ctx (after) → default value + conjunction.

BUNDLE=/path/to/cli/bundle.js
FLAG=acme_widget_v3                   # synthetic placeholder
PRE=300
POST=200

# All byte offsets where the flag string occurs
grep -boE "\"${FLAG}\"" "$BUNDLE" | cut -d: -f1 > /tmp/decode-offsets.txt
wc -l /tmp/decode-offsets.txt

# Capture an asymmetric window per occurrence
while read -r offset; do
  start=$((offset - PRE))
  [ "$start" -lt 0 ] && start=0
  length=$((PRE + POST))
  echo "=== offset $offset ==="
  dd if="$BUNDLE" bs=1 skip="$start" count="$length" 2>/dev/null
  echo
done < /tmp/decode-offsets.txt > /tmp/decode-windows.txt

less /tmp/decode-windows.txt

Fast first pass: grep -oE w/ negative lookbehind via PCRE catches same windows in one pipe.

→ one or more ctx windows per flag occurrence, ~500 chars each. Multi-occurrences typically share reader fn but may differ in default or conjunction → inspect each independently.

If err: bundle too large for dd-per-occurrence (binary >100MB or many occurrences) → use rg -B 5 -A 3 "$FLAG" "$BUNDLE" for structured-output approx. Windows look corrupt → bundle may be UTF-16 or have non-ASCII delimiters → use iconv or treat as binary.

Step 2: ID Reader Variant

Minified gate libs commonly expose 4–6 reader variants w/ different semantics. Reader fn name = first cue; call signature = verifier.

Variant taxonomy (synthetic names — substitute actual minified IDs from your bundle):

VariantSynthetic shapeReturnsCommon usage
Sync booleangate("flag", false) or gate("flag", true)booleanStandard on/off feature switches
Sync config-objectfvReader("flag", {key: value})JSON objectStructured config (delays, allowlists, model names)
Bootstrap-aware TTLttlReader("flag", default, ttlMs)boolean (cached)Startup-path gates before remote config arrives
Truthy-onlytruthyReader("flag")truthy/falsyQuick checks; no explicit default
Async bootstrapasyncReader("flag")Promise<boolean>Gates resolved post-bootstrap
Async bridgebridgeReader("flag")Promise<boolean>Bridge/relay-channel gates with separate evaluation path

Match each ctx window vs variant patterns:

# Test for variant patterns. Replace the synthetic reader names with the
# actual minified identifiers found in the bundle.
grep -oE '\b(gate|fvReader|ttlReader|truthyReader|asyncReader|bridgeReader)\("acme_widget_v3"' /tmp/decode-windows.txt | sort | uniq -c

Multi-variants for same flag (rare but real — flag read both sync at startup + async post-bootstrap) → record each occurrence's variant separately. Probe results may differ.

→ every gate-call occurrence tagged w/ one variant. Variant counts across whole sweep produce binary-level distribution (e.g., "60% sync bool, 30% config-object, 10% TTL").

If err: ctx window has no recognizable reader pattern → flag may not actually be gate-called → recheck call-site classification from sweep-flag-namespace Step 2. Window has reader name not in taxonomy → document as new variant in research artifacts → decide whether warrants separate handling.

Step 3: Extract Default Value

Default = second positional arg to reader (or absent for truthy-only / async variants). Capture exact literal — false, true, null, 0, string, or JSON config object.

# Boolean default extraction (sync boolean and TTL variants)
grep -oE '\b(gate|ttlReader)\("acme_widget_v3",\s*(true|false)' /tmp/decode-windows.txt

# Config-object default — match the opening brace and capture until the
# matching brace at the same nesting depth. For minified bundles this is
# usually safe with a non-greedy match because objects rarely span lines.
grep -oE 'fvReader\("acme_widget_v3",\s*\{[^}]*\}' /tmp/decode-windows.txt

# Numeric default (rare but real for TTL or threshold gates)
grep -oE '\b(gate|ttlReader)\("acme_widget_v3",\s*[0-9]+' /tmp/decode-windows.txt

Config-object defaults → inspect JSON structure. Keys often hint at gate's purpose (e.g., {maxRetries: 3, timeoutMs: 5000} = retry-policy config, not feature toggle).

→ exact literal default per occurrence. Bools unambiguous; config-objects need manual read of structure.

If err: config-object's matching brace falls outside ctx window → increase post-ctx size in Step 1. Default appears as var ref (e.g., gate("flag", x)) → default computed at runtime → note as DYNAMIC, probe actual returned value via probe-feature-flag-state.

Step 4: Detect Conjunctions + Kill Switches

Many gates participate in compound predicates. Conjunctions (&&) + inversions (!) change gate's effective role.

# Conjunction detection: gate-call followed by `&&` and another gate-call
# within the same predicate window
grep -oE '(gate|fvReader|ttlReader|truthyReader|asyncReader|bridgeReader)\("acme_widget_v3"[^)]*\)\s*&&\s*(gate|fvReader|ttlReader|truthyReader|asyncReader|bridgeReader)\("acme_[a-zA-Z0-9_]+"' /tmp/decode-windows.txt

# Kill-switch detection: leading `!` before the gate-call
grep -oE '!\s*(gate|fvReader|ttlReader|truthyReader|asyncReader|bridgeReader)\("acme_widget_v3"' /tmp/decode-windows.txt

Each detected conjunction → list co-gate flag names. Now part of probe scope. Target flag's eval depends on co-gates → probing target alone produces incomplete state.

Each detected inversion → mark flag as kill switch in gate-mechanics record. Kill switches flip meaning of default: kill switch w/ default=false = "feature on by default" (since !false === true), normal gate w/ default=false = "feature off by default."

→ conjunction list (possibly empty) + inversion flag (bool) per occurrence.

If err: conjunction has >2 co-gates → predicate complex enough regex misses structure. Read ctx window manually → document predicate shape verbatim in gate-mechanics record.

Step 5: Classify Gate's Role

Synthesize Steps 2–4 → role classification. Roles drive different probe strategies + integration risk.

RoleSignatureImplication
Feature switchsync boolean, no inversion, no conjunctionStandard on/off; probe directly
Config providersync config-object (fvReader)Read returned object; default-empty {} ≠ feature off
Lifecycle guardbootstrap-aware TTL or async bootstrapState depends on bootstrap timing; probe at multiple points
Kill switchinverted gate, default-falseFeature on for users by default; flag flips it OFF
Conjunction memberany variant with && co-gateCannot evaluate alone; co-gates are part of the probe scope
Bridge gateasync bridge variantProbe must occur over the bridge channel, not the main path

→ every gate-call occurrence has exactly one primary role. Some flags appear in multiple roles across occurrences (e.g., feature switch in one call site, conjunction member in another) → record each role independently.

If err: role doesn't fit table → binary uses gate lib not yet documented in skill. Add row w/ synthetic IDs → contribute variant back to skill (or project-specific extension) for future investigators.

Step 6: Produce Gate-Mechanics Record

Combine per-flag findings → structured record. JSONL convenient → each flag = one line, easy merge w/ sweep-flag-namespace inventory.

{"flag":"acme_widget_v3","variant":"sync_boolean","default":false,"role":"feature_switch","conjunctions":[],"inverted":false,"occurrences":3}
{"flag":"acme_retry_policy","variant":"sync_config_object","default":{"maxRetries":3,"timeoutMs":5000},"role":"config_provider","conjunctions":[],"inverted":false,"occurrences":1}
{"flag":"acme_legacy_path","variant":"sync_boolean","default":false,"role":"kill_switch","conjunctions":[],"inverted":true,"occurrences":2}
{"flag":"acme_beta_feature","variant":"sync_boolean","default":false,"role":"conjunction_member","conjunctions":["acme_beta_program_active"],"inverted":false,"occurrences":1}

Gate-mechanics record feeds probe-feature-flag-state Step 2 (gate-vs-event disambig): variant + role + conjunction list determines what observations count as evidence of LIVE / DARK / INDETERMINATE state.

→ one JSONL record per flag (or per flag-occurrence if single flag has multiple distinct mechanics). Record reproducible — running proc again vs same binary produces same record.

If err: records vary across runs → upstream step non-deterministic. Most often: regex in Step 1 missing or over-matching occurrences. Lock regexes for duration of campaign.

Check

  • Step 1 produces one ctx window per flag occurrence; windows ~500 chars
  • Step 2 tags each occurrence w/ exactly one reader variant from taxonomy
  • Step 3 captures exact default literal (bool, config-object, or DYNAMIC)
  • Step 4 surfaces all conjunctions + kill-switch inversions in windows
  • Step 5 assigns one role per occurrence, drawn from role table
  • Step 6 produces JSONL gate-mechanics record diffing cleanly across re-runs
  • All worked examples use synthetic placeholders (acme_*, gate, fvReader, etc.) — no real flag names, reader names, or config-object schemas
  • Record consumable by probe-feature-flag-state (same flag IDs, compatible field names)

Traps

  • Read "default" as "behavior": gate w/ default=true = on by default in this binary, but server overrides may flip. Default = baseline; runtime probe (probe-feature-flag-state) = state.
  • Conflate config-object empty default w/ feature off: fvReader("flag", {}) returns empty object as default — but flag = on (gate evals truthy). Treating {} as "off" misclassifies config-providers as feature switches.
  • Miss kill switches: leading ! before gate-call inverts meaning. Skipping Step 4 → record says "default=false, feature off by default" when truth = "default=false, feature ON by default due to inversion."
  • Probe one half of conjunction: if acme_widget_v3 && acme_user_in_cohort = predicate, probing only acme_widget_v3 and finding LIVE ≠ feature live → conjunction may still gate off via cohort flag.
  • Trust reader names across vers: minified IDs change between major vers. Step 2 taxonomy by signature (call shape, return type, default position), not name. Binary ver changes → re-derive reader names from fresh decode pass.
  • Window too narrow: 200/100 split misses config-object defaults spanning 300+ chars. Defaults of 300/200 or 400/300 safer; tighten only if bundle huge + window cost matters.
  • Leak real reader names: minified reader names sometimes look like nonsense (a, b, Yc1) → feel safe to paste verbatim. Still findings → substitute synthetic placeholders before publishing methodology.

  • probe-feature-flag-state — uses gate-mechanics record to interpret runtime observations
  • sweep-flag-namespace — produces candidate flag set this skill decodes
  • monitor-binary-version-baselines — tracks reader-name changes across binary versions; re-derive Step 2 patterns when baselines flip
  • redact-for-public-disclosure — how to publish gate-decoding methodology without exposing real reader names or schemas
  • conduct-empirical-wire-capture — validates gate-mechanics record vs runtime behavior

GitHub 仓库

pjt222/agent-almanac
路径: i18n/caveman-ultra/skills/decode-minified-js-gates
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

相关推荐技能

qmd

开发

这是一个本地搜索和索引的CLI工具,支持BM25、向量搜索和重排序功能。开发者可以用它快速索引本地文件(如Markdown文档)并进行混合搜索,特别适合代码库或文档的本地检索。它还提供MCP模式,能轻松集成到Claude开发环境中使用。

查看技能

subagent-driven-development

开发

该Skill用于在当前会话中执行包含独立任务的实施计划,它会为每个任务分派一个全新的子代理并在任务间进行代码审查。这种"全新子代理+任务间审查"的模式既能保障代码质量,又能实现快速迭代。适合需要在当前会话中连续执行独立任务,并希望在每个任务后都有质量把关的开发场景。

查看技能

mcporter

开发

mcporter Skill 让开发者能在Claude中直接管理和调用MCP服务器。它支持列出可用服务器、调用工具、处理OAuth认证以及管理服务器守护进程。开发者可以通过命令行式交互快速执行`mcporter list`查看服务器,或使用`mcporter call`直接调用工具,简化了MCP工作流程。

查看技能

adk-deployment-specialist

开发

这是一个用于部署和编排Google Vertex AI ADK智能体的Claude Skill,专为构建生产级多智能体系统而设计。它支持通过A2A协议进行智能体通信,提供代码执行沙箱和记忆库功能,并能处理智能体发现与任务提交。当开发者需要部署ADK智能体或编排多智能体协作时,可使用此Skill来简化Vertex AI Agent Engine的部署流程。

查看技能