| name | cyber-audit |
| description | Run read-only exposure checks for security advisories and write a structured local audit report. |
| category | security |
| risk | safe |
| source | community |
| source_repo | davidondrej/skills |
| source_type | community |
| date_added | 2026-07-07 |
| author | davidondrej |
| tags | ["security","audit","read-only"] |
| tools | ["claude","codex"] |
| license | MIT |
| license_source | https://github.com/davidondrej/skills/blob/main/LICENSE |
| disable-model-invocation | true |
cyber-audit
When to Use
- Use when the user asks whether their machine or projects are affected by a CVE, breach, or package advisory.
- Use when a read-only local security exposure report is appropriate.
Hard rules
- Read-only. No installs, removes, upgrades, restarts, network calls, or file modifications outside
~/Documents/security-audits/.
- No
sudo. Never.
- One report per invocation. Always end by writing the
.md file (even if the verdict is "Not affected" — the audit trail matters).
- If a check requires a state-changing command, skip it and note "not checked (would require state change)" in the table. Do not run it.
Workflow
- Identify scope. Extract from the advisory: package/binary name, affected versions, platform (macOS / Linux / Windows), attack vector (supply chain / RCE / local / network).
- Run checks in parallel (Bash tool, multiple calls in one message). Pick relevant checks for the advisory type — don't run all of them.
- Build the table as you go. Each row = one check + concrete result (version number, path, "None", "N/A").
- Write the report to
~/Documents/security-audits/YYYY-MM-DD-<short-kebab-slug>.md. Use today's date from the environment header.
- Tell the user the verdict in one line + path to the report.
Check menu (pick what's relevant)
which npm pnpm yarn; npm root -g; pnpm root -g 2>/dev/null
ls /opt/homebrew/lib/node_modules
find ~ -maxdepth 8 -type d -name "<pkg>" 2>/dev/null \
| grep -v -E "(Library/Caches|\.Trash)"
find ~/Documents ~/Desktop ~/Downloads -maxdepth 8 -type f \
\( -name "package.json" -o -name "package-lock.json" \
-o -name "pnpm-lock.yaml" -o -name "yarn.lock" \) 2>/dev/null \
| xargs grep -l "<pkg>" 2>/dev/null
which python3 pip pipx uv
pip list 2>/dev/null | grep -i "<pkg>"
find ~/Documents -maxdepth 6 -name "requirements*.txt" -o -name "pyproject.toml" \
-o -name "poetry.lock" -o -name "uv.lock" 2>/dev/null | xargs grep -l "<pkg>" 2>/dev/null
brew list --versions <formula> 2>/dev/null
which <binary>; <binary> --version 2>/dev/null
pgrep -lf "<binary>"
lsof -iTCP -sTCP:LISTEN -P -n 2>/dev/null | grep "<port>"
ls ~/Library/LaunchAgents /Library/LaunchAgents /Library/LaunchDaemons 2>/dev/null \
| grep -i "<vendor>"
launchctl getenv <VAR>; grep -r "<VAR>" ~/.zshrc ~/.zprofile ~/.config 2>/dev/null
ls ~/.vscode/extensions 2>/dev/null | grep -i "<ext>"
If the advisory mentions an ecosystem not above (Rust cargo, Go modules, Ruby gems, Docker images, etc.), apply the same pattern: global install path + manifest grep + running processes.
Report template
File: ~/Documents/security-audits/YYYY-MM-DD-<short-kebab-slug>.md
# <Subject> — Audit
**Date:** YYYY-MM-DD
**Host:** the user's Mac
## <CVEs | Advisory> in scope
- **<ID or source> "<Name>"** — <one-line description>. <Affected versions or scope>.
## Audit results
| Check | Result |
|---|---|
| <Check 1> | <Result> |
| <Check 2> | <Result> |
## Verdict
**<Not affected. | Affected. | Partially affected.>**
- <Rationale bullet 1>
- <Rationale bullet 2>
## Action taken
None — diagnostic only, no files modified, no <packages installed/removed | services started/stopped | firewall rules changed>.
## Follow-ups
- <Actionable item, or "None" if truly nothing>
Match the tone of the two existing reports in ~/Documents/security-audits/ — terse, factual, bulleted, no hedging.
Verdict wording
- Not affected. — package/binary absent, or installed but patched, or not running and not exposed.
- Affected. — vulnerable version present and reachable by the attack vector.
- Partially affected. — present but mitigated (e.g. binary installed but service not running, or listener bound to loopback only). Spell out the mitigation in the bullets.
When to break the read-only rule
Never on your own. If the verdict is "Affected", list the remediation command in Follow-ups and stop. The user runs it.
Reference
Two existing reports in ~/Documents/security-audits/ show the expected style:
baseline-audit.md (long-form baseline audit — different format, do not mimic)
YYYY-MM-DD-example-advisory.md and any newer YYYY-MM-DD-*.md files (this is the format to match)
Limitations
- Adapted from
davidondrej/skills; verify local paths, tools, credentials, and agent features before acting.
- For commands, remote access, scheduling, browser automation, or file-changing workflows, get explicit user approval and confirm the target environment first.