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britrik

vettr

by Britrik · GitHub ↗ · v2.0.4 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install vettr
Description
Static analysis security scanner for third-party OpenClaw skills. Detects eval/spawn risks, malicious dependencies, typosquatting, and prompt injection patte...
README (SKILL.md)

skill-vettr v2.0.3

Security scanner for third-party OpenClaw skills. Analyses source code, dependencies, and metadata before installation using tree-sitter AST parsing and regex pattern matching.

Installation

npm install

This installs all Node.js dependencies, including tree-sitter .wasm grammar files required at runtime for AST-based analysis. The .wasm files are located in node_modules and must be present for the skill to function.

⚠️ Install safety: npm install runs dependency lifecycle scripts, which can execute arbitrary code. For stronger isolation, run npm ci --ignore-scripts — but note that tree-sitter native/WASM artifacts may not build, breaking AST analysis. Prefer installing inside a container or VM when possible.

External Binaries

The vet-url and vet-clawhub commands invoke external binaries via execSafe (which uses execFile — no shell is spawned). Only the following commands are permitted:

Binary Used By Purpose
git vet-url Clone .git URLs (with hooks disabled)
curl vet-url Download archive URLs
tar vet-url Extract downloaded archives
clawhub vet-clawhub Fetch skills from ClawHub registry

The /skill:vet command (local path vetting) requires only node and no external binaries.

Commands

  • /skill:vet --path \x3Cdirectory> — Vet a local skill directory
  • /skill:vet-url --url \x3Chttps://...> — Download and vet from URL
  • /skill:vet-clawhub --skill \x3Cslug> — Fetch and vet from ClawHub

Detection Categories

Category Method Examples
Code execution AST eval(), new Function(), vm.runInThisContext()
Shell injection AST exec(), execSync(), spawn("bash"), child_process imports
Dynamic require AST require(variable), require(templateString)
Prototype pollution AST proto assignment
Prompt injection Regex Instruction override patterns, control tokens (in string literals)
Homoglyph attacks Regex Cyrillic/Greek lookalike characters in identifiers
Encoded names Regex Unicode/hex-escaped "eval", "exec"
Credential paths Regex Cloud and SSH credential directory references, system credential store access
Network calls AST fetch() with literal URLs (checked against allowlist)
Malicious deps Config Known bad packages, lifecycle scripts, git/http deps
Typosquatting Levenshtein Skill names within edit distance 2 of targets
Dangerous permissions Config shell:exec, credentials:read in SKILL.md

Limitations

⚠️ This is a heuristic scanner with inherent limitations. It cannot guarantee safety.

  • Static analysis only — Cannot detect runtime behaviour (e.g., code that fetches malware after install)
  • Evasion possible — Sophisticated obfuscation or multi-stage string construction can evade detection
  • JS/TS only — Binary payloads, images, and non-text files are skipped
  • Limited network detection — Only detects fetch() with literal URL strings; misses axios, http module, dynamic URLs
  • No sandboxing — Does not execute or isolate target code
  • Comment scanning — Prompt injection detection scans string literals, not comments
  • Filesystem scopevet-url downloads and extracts remote archives into a temp directory; vet accepts paths under os.tmpdir(), ~/.openclaw, and ~/Downloads by default. Set allowCwd: true in config to also permit process.cwd() (see Configuration below)
  • External binary trustvet-url and vet-clawhub invoke git, curl, tar, and clawhub via execFile. These binaries must be trusted and present on PATH

For high-security environments, combine with sandboxing, network isolation, and manual source review. Run inside a disposable container when vetting untrusted URLs.

Configuration

allowCwd

By default, process.cwd() is not included in the set of allowed vetting roots. The default allowed roots are:

  • os.tmpdir()
  • ~/.openclaw
  • ~/Downloads

To allow vetting paths under the current working directory, set allowCwd: true in your vetting config:

{
  "allowCwd": true
}

⚠️ Security implication: Enabling allowCwd means the scanner will accept any path under the directory you launched it from. If you run from / or $HOME, this effectively grants access to your entire filesystem. Only enable this when running from a scoped project directory or inside a container.

.vettrignore

Place a .vettrignore file in the root of the skill directory being scanned to exclude files or directories from analysis. This is useful for excluding test fixtures that contain deliberate malicious patterns.

Format

  • One glob pattern per line
  • Lines starting with # are comments
  • Empty lines are ignored
  • Patterns ending with / match entire directories
  • * matches any sequence of non-separator characters
  • ** matches any sequence including path separators (recursive)
  • ? matches a single non-separator character

Example

# Exclude test fixtures containing deliberate prompt injection vectors
test/fixtures/

# Exclude generated files
dist/
*.min.js

If the .vettrignore file is unreadable or contains invalid UTF-8, the engine logs an INFO-level warning and proceeds with a full scan.

Usage Guidance
Install only if you are comfortable with a Node-based scanner that reads the skill directories you point it at. Use remote vetting commands only for URLs and ClawHub slugs you intend to inspect, prefer an isolated directory or container for untrusted archives, and leave autoVet disabled unless you want pre-install scans to run automatically. If you fork or reuse the full repository, review the included AI PR review workflow because it can send PR diffs to a third-party AI service.
Capability Tags
cryptorequires-sensitive-credentials
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The source implements the stated purpose: static analysis of OpenClaw skills, dependency metadata, prompt-injection patterns, network-call literals, and risky permissions.
Instruction Scope
Runtime commands are scoped to local path vetting, URL vetting, ClawHub slug vetting, and an optional pre-install hook that is disabled by default and prompts or blocks based on scan results.
Install Mechanism
Installation uses npm with tree-sitter dependencies that may run lifecycle scripts; this risk is explicitly disclosed in the skill documentation with isolation guidance.
Credentials
The skill can read target skill directories and can invoke git, curl, tar, and clawhub for remote vetting, but this is purpose-aligned, allowlisted through execFile, input-sanitized, and documented.
Persistence & Privilege
No hidden persistence or background worker was found; the only persistent behavior is a user-configured autoVet pre-install hook, documented as opt-in.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install vettr
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /vettr
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v2.0.4
Clean republish without test fixtures — scanner for third-party OpenClaw skills
Metadata
Slug vettr
Version 2.0.4
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is vettr?

Static analysis security scanner for third-party OpenClaw skills. Detects eval/spawn risks, malicious dependencies, typosquatting, and prompt injection patte... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 34 downloads so far.

How do I install vettr?

Run "/install vettr" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is vettr free?

Yes, vettr is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does vettr support?

vettr is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created vettr?

It is built and maintained by Britrik (@britrik); the current version is v2.0.4.

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