Security Scan
/install security-scan
Security Scan
Perform a lightweight security review before trusting, publishing, or installing a skill.
What this skill does
Use this skill to:
- inspect a skill directory for obviously dangerous code patterns
- look for likely hardcoded credentials or tokens
- flag risky file permissions
- produce a concise risk summary with recommended next steps
This skill is intentionally conservative and lightweight. Treat findings as review signals, not proof of compromise.
What this skill does not do
Do not claim capabilities that are not present in the bundled resources.
This skill does not provide:
- true sandbox execution
- system call tracing
- network traffic capture
- dependency CVE resolution from external databases
- automatic approval or rejection logic
If deeper reverse engineering or threat analysis is needed, do a manual review and use stronger external tooling.
Bundled resource
scripts/scan.sh
Run the included shell scanner for a quick static pass:
bash scripts/scan.sh /path/to/target
The script currently checks for:
- suspicious function names such as
eval(,exec(,system(, andspawn( - simple hardcoded-secret patterns
- world-writable files
Because the script uses grep-style heuristics, expect both false positives and false negatives.
Recommended workflow
1. Scope the review
Confirm what you are reviewing:
- target directory
- whether it is a skill, script bundle, or general code folder
- whether the goal is publish review, install review, or a quick sanity check
2. Run the quick scan
From the skill directory:
bash scripts/scan.sh /path/to/target
If the target is the current directory:
bash scripts/scan.sh .
3. Review the findings manually
Do not stop at raw matches. Inspect the surrounding code and decide whether each finding is:
- expected and justified
- suspicious but explainable
- high-risk and likely unacceptable
Pay special attention to:
- shell execution that touches untrusted input
- outbound network access
- credential handling
- writes outside the working directory
- self-modifying or persistence-oriented behavior
4. Give a practical verdict
Summarize the result in plain language using a simple rubric:
- Low risk: no meaningful issues found in this lightweight review
- Needs review: suspicious patterns or ambiguous findings require manual inspection before trust
- High risk: clear dangerous behavior, likely secrets, or unjustified execution patterns
5. Recommend next actions
Examples:
- publish/install as-is
- publish/install only after removing a flagged pattern
- rotate exposed credentials
- request source clarification from the author
- escalate to deeper manual or sandboxed analysis
Reporting pattern
Use a compact structure like this:
Security scan summary
- Target: \x3Cpath>
- Result: Low risk | Needs review | High risk
- Findings:
- \x3Cfinding 1>
- \x3Cfinding 2>
- Confidence: Low | Medium | High
- Recommended action: \x3Cnext step>
Triage guidance
Usually high risk
- obvious credential material checked into the repo
- hidden or unjustified command execution
- code that downloads and runs remote content
- writes to sensitive locations without a clear reason
Usually medium risk
- use of shell execution with unclear input handling
- overly broad file permissions
- suspicious obfuscation or encoded payloads
- installer/update logic that is hard to verify quickly
Usually low risk
- benign matches in docs or examples
- helper scripts that use shell commands in a narrow, understandable way
- false positives from regex scanning
Practical cautions
- Prefer a short, evidence-based verdict over dramatic claims.
- Quote the matched lines or file paths when useful.
- If confidence is low, say so explicitly.
- Do not claim the scan is comprehensive.
- For publish decisions, err on the side of requiring cleanup when the skill still contains templates, TODOs, placeholder claims, or unverified commands.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install security-scan - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/security-scan - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Security Scan?
Security review workflow for OpenClaw skills and other small code folders. Use when auditing a skill before publishing or installing it, checking for dangero... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 660 downloads so far.
How do I install Security Scan?
Run "/install security-scan" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Security Scan free?
Yes, Security Scan is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Security Scan support?
Security Scan is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Security Scan?
It is built and maintained by ShadowLoong (@shadowloong); the current version is v1.0.0.