AANA File Operation Guardrail Skill
/install aana-file-operation-guardrail
AANA File Operation Guardrail Skill
Use this skill when an OpenClaw-style agent may delete, move, rename, overwrite, publish, upload, export, transform, or bulk-edit user files.
This is an instruction-only skill. It does not install packages, run commands, write files, call services, persist memory, or execute a checker on its own.
Core Principle
File operations should be scoped, reversible when possible, explicitly authorized, and limited to the files the user actually intended.
The agent should separate:
- files explicitly named by the user,
- files discovered by a reviewed search or listing,
- files that are candidates but not yet approved,
- files outside the intended workspace or target folder,
- files that need backup, preview, dry-run, or human approval,
- files that must not be touched.
When To Use
Use this skill before:
- deleting files or folders,
- moving, renaming, or reorganizing files,
- overwriting existing content,
- bulk-editing many files,
- publishing, uploading, exporting, or sharing files,
- running cleanup operations,
- changing generated artifacts that may replace user work,
- applying scripts or formatters across broad paths,
- modifying files outside the current project workspace.
File Risk Classes
Treat these as higher risk:
- user-authored source files, papers, notes, decks, spreadsheets, images, videos, and documents,
- credentials, config, environment, account, billing, payment, legal, health, or personal files,
- files outside the current workspace,
- large directories, globbed paths, recursive operations, and bulk edits,
- published assets, release artifacts, website files, package outputs, and shared folders,
- operations that are difficult to undo or verify.
AANA File Safety Loop
- Identify the intended operation: delete, move, rename, overwrite, publish, upload, export, or bulk edit.
- Identify the target set: list exact paths or describe the approved folder boundary.
- Check scope: confirm the target paths are inside the intended workspace or explicitly named destination.
- Check necessity: remove unrelated files from the target set.
- Check reversibility: prefer dry-run, preview, diff, backup, copy, trash, or staged change before irreversible action.
- Check authorization: require explicit user approval for destructive, recursive, cross-folder, publish, upload, or broad operations.
- Check evidence: do not infer that a file is safe to delete or overwrite without verifying path, ownership, and purpose.
- Choose action: accept, revise, ask, defer, refuse, or route to human review.
Required Pre-Flight Checks
Before a risky file operation, verify:
- the operation type,
- the exact target path or bounded target folder,
- whether recursion, globbing, or bulk edits are involved,
- whether files are generated or user-authored,
- whether a backup, diff, or dry-run is available,
- whether the operation crosses project, account, cloud, or shared-folder boundaries,
- whether the result will be published, uploaded, or shared.
Approval Rules
Ask for explicit user approval before:
- deleting files or directories,
- overwriting non-generated files,
- moving files out of the current workspace,
- applying recursive or glob-based changes,
- publishing or uploading files,
- modifying personal, legal, health, financial, credential, or account files,
- changing more files than the user named,
- acting when path resolution or ownership is unclear.
Approval should name the operation and target scope, for example:
I am about to delete 12 generated files under build/cache/. No user-authored files are included. Proceed?
Safer Alternatives
Prefer:
- preview or dry-run before action,
- diff before overwrite,
- copy before move,
- trash or archive before permanent delete,
- narrow path lists before broad globs,
- generated-output folders before source folders,
- explicit allowlists before recursive edits,
- separate commit or checkpoint before large changes.
Do Not
- Delete or overwrite files because they appear unused without evidence.
- Expand the target scope beyond the user request.
- Follow broad paths such as a home directory, drive root, cloud root, or repository root unless clearly intended and approved.
- Publish, upload, or share private files without explicit approval.
- Store file contents or paths in memory without permission.
- Treat hidden files, configs, credentials, or dotfiles as safe by default.
- Continue after discovering unexpected files in the target set.
Review Payload
When using a configured AANA checker, send only a minimal review payload:
task_summaryoperation_typetarget_scopetarget_countrisk_classesauthorization_statusreversibility_statusscope_statusrecommended_action
Do not include raw file contents, secrets, private records, or full directory dumps when a path summary is enough.
Decision Rule
- If scope is narrow, authorized, necessary, and reversible, accept.
- If the operation is useful but target scope is too broad, revise to a narrower allowlist.
- If authorization, path ownership, or expected impact is unclear, ask.
- If the operation needs a dry-run, diff, backup, verified tool, or human review, defer.
- If the request would destroy, expose, or overwrite unrelated user files, refuse and explain briefly.
- If a checker is unavailable or untrusted, use manual file-safety review.
Output Pattern
For file-sensitive actions, prefer:
File operation review:
- Operation: ...
- Target scope: ...
- Risk: ...
- Safeguard: dry-run / diff / backup / explicit approval / not needed
- Decision: accept / revise / ask / defer / refuse
Do not include this review block unless useful to the user or needed before taking action.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install aana-file-operation-guardrail - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/aana-file-operation-guardrail - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is AANA File Operation Guardrail Skill?
Ensures file operations like delete, move, rename, overwrite, or publish are scoped, reversible, authorized, and limited to intended user files only. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 72 downloads so far.
How do I install AANA File Operation Guardrail Skill?
Run "/install aana-file-operation-guardrail" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is AANA File Operation Guardrail Skill free?
Yes, AANA File Operation Guardrail Skill is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does AANA File Operation Guardrail Skill support?
AANA File Operation Guardrail Skill is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created AANA File Operation Guardrail Skill?
It is built and maintained by mindbomber (@mindbomber); the current version is v1.0.0.