zeroize-audit

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zeroize-audit — Claude Skill workflow skill. Use this skill when the user needs Detects missing zeroization of sensitive data in source code and identifies zeroization removed by compiler optimizations, with assembly-level analysis, and control-flow verification. Use for auditing C/C++/Rust code handling secrets, keys, passwords, or other sensitive data and the operator should preserve the upstream workflow, copied support files, and provenance before merging or handing off.

diegosouzapw By diegosouzapw schedule Updated 6/2/2026

name: zeroize-audit description: "zeroize-audit \u2014 Claude Skill workflow skill. Use this skill when the user needs Detects missing zeroization of sensitive data in source code and identifies zeroization removed by compiler optimizations, with assembly-level analysis, and control-flow verification. Use for auditing C/C++/Rust code handling secrets, keys, passwords, or other sensitive data and the operator should preserve the upstream workflow, copied support files, and provenance before merging or handing off." version: "0.0.1" category: testing-security tags: ["zeroize-audit", "detects", "missing", "zeroization", "sensitive", "data", "and", "identifies"] complexity: advanced risk: caution tools: ["codex-cli", "claude-code", "cursor", "gemini-cli", "opencode"] source: community author: "sickn33" date_added: "2026-04-15" date_updated: "2026-04-25"

zeroize-audit — Claude Skill

Overview

This public intake copy packages plugins/antigravity-awesome-skills-claude/skills/zeroize-audit from https://github.com/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills into the native Omni Skills editorial shape without hiding its origin.

Use it when the operator needs the upstream workflow, support files, and repository context to stay intact while the public validator and private enhancer continue their normal downstream flow.

This intake keeps the copied upstream files intact and uses the external_source block in metadata.json plus ORIGIN.md as the provenance anchor for review.

zeroize-audit — Claude Skill

Imported source sections that did not map cleanly to the public headings are still preserved below or in the support files. Notable imported sections: Purpose, Scope, Inputs, Prerequisites, Approved Wipe APIs, Finding Capabilities.

When to Use This Skill

Use this section as the trigger filter. It should make the activation boundary explicit before the operator loads files, runs commands, or opens a pull request.

  • Auditing cryptographic implementations (keys, seeds, nonces, secrets)
  • Reviewing authentication systems (passwords, tokens, session data)
  • Analyzing code that handles PII or sensitive credentials
  • Verifying secure cleanup in security-critical codebases
  • Investigating memory safety of sensitive data handling
  • General code review without security focus

Operating Table

Situation Start here Why it matters
First-time use metadata.json Confirms repository, branch, commit, and imported path through the external_source block before touching the copied workflow
Provenance review ORIGIN.md Gives reviewers a plain-language audit trail for the imported source
Workflow execution SKILL.md Starts with the smallest copied file that materially changes execution
Supporting context SKILL.md Adds the next most relevant copied source file without loading the entire package
Handoff decision ## Related Skills Helps the operator switch to a stronger native skill when the task drifts

Workflow

This workflow is intentionally editorial and operational at the same time. It keeps the imported source useful to the operator while still satisfying the public intake standards that feed the downstream enhancer flow.

  1. Confirm the user goal, the scope of the imported workflow, and whether this skill is still the right router for the task.
  2. Read the overview and provenance files before loading any copied upstream support files.
  3. Load only the references, examples, prompts, or scripts that materially change the outcome for the current request.
  4. Execute the upstream workflow while keeping provenance and source boundaries explicit in the working notes.
  5. Validate the result against the upstream expectations and the evidence you can point to in the copied files.
  6. Escalate or hand off to a related skill when the work moves out of this imported workflow's center of gravity.
  7. Before merge or closure, record what was used, what changed, and what the reviewer still needs to verify.

Imported Workflow Notes

Imported: Purpose

Detect missing zeroization of sensitive data in source code and identify zeroization that is removed or weakened by compiler optimizations (e.g., dead-store elimination), with mandatory LLVM IR/asm evidence. Capabilities include:

  • Assembly-level analysis for register spills and stack retention
  • Data-flow tracking for secret copies
  • Heap allocator security warnings
  • Semantic IR analysis for loop unrolling and SSA form
  • Control-flow graph analysis for path coverage verification
  • Runtime validation test generation

Examples

Example 1: Ask for the upstream workflow directly

Use @zeroize-audit to handle <task>. Start from the copied upstream workflow, load only the files that change the outcome, and keep provenance visible in the answer.

Explanation: This is the safest starting point when the operator needs the imported workflow, but not the entire repository.

Example 2: Ask for a provenance-grounded review

Review @zeroize-audit against metadata.json and ORIGIN.md, then explain which copied upstream files you would load first and why.

Explanation: Use this before review or troubleshooting when you need a precise, auditable explanation of origin and file selection.

Example 3: Narrow the copied support files before execution

Use @zeroize-audit for <task>. Load only the copied references, examples, or scripts that change the outcome, and name the files explicitly before proceeding.

Explanation: This keeps the skill aligned with progressive disclosure instead of loading the whole copied package by default.

Example 4: Build a reviewer packet

Review @zeroize-audit using the copied upstream files plus provenance, then summarize any gaps before merge.

Explanation: This is useful when the PR is waiting for human review and you want a repeatable audit packet.

Best Practices

Treat the generated public skill as a reviewable packaging layer around the upstream repository. The goal is to keep provenance explicit and load only the copied source material that materially improves execution.

  • Keep the imported skill grounded in the upstream repository; do not invent steps that the source material cannot support.
  • Prefer the smallest useful set of support files so the workflow stays auditable and fast to review.
  • Keep provenance, source commit, and imported file paths visible in notes and PR descriptions.
  • Point directly at the copied upstream files that justify the workflow instead of relying on generic review boilerplate.
  • Treat generated examples as scaffolding; adapt them to the concrete task before execution.
  • Route to a stronger native skill when architecture, debugging, design, or security concerns become dominant.

Troubleshooting

Problem: The operator skipped the imported context and answered too generically

Symptoms: The result ignores the upstream workflow in plugins/antigravity-awesome-skills-claude/skills/zeroize-audit, fails to mention provenance, or does not use any copied source files at all. Solution: Re-open metadata.json, ORIGIN.md, and the most relevant copied upstream files. Check the external_source block first, then restate the provenance before continuing.

Problem: The imported workflow feels incomplete during review

Symptoms: Reviewers can see the generated SKILL.md, but they cannot quickly tell which references, examples, or scripts matter for the current task. Solution: Point at the exact copied references, examples, scripts, or assets that justify the path you took. If the gap is still real, record it in the PR instead of hiding it.

Problem: The task drifted into a different specialization

Symptoms: The imported skill starts in the right place, but the work turns into debugging, architecture, design, security, or release orchestration that a native skill handles better. Solution: Use the related skills section to hand off deliberately. Keep the imported provenance visible so the next skill inherits the right context instead of starting blind.

Related Skills

  • @00-andruia-consultant - Use when the work is better handled by that native specialization after this imported skill establishes context.
  • @00-andruia-consultant-v2 - Use when the work is better handled by that native specialization after this imported skill establishes context.
  • @10-andruia-skill-smith - Use when the work is better handled by that native specialization after this imported skill establishes context.
  • @10-andruia-skill-smith-v2 - Use when the work is better handled by that native specialization after this imported skill establishes context.

Additional Resources

Use this support matrix and the linked files below as the operator packet for this imported skill. They should reflect real copied source material, not generic scaffolding.

Resource family What it gives the reviewer Example path
references copied reference notes, guides, or background material from upstream references/n/a
examples worked examples or reusable prompts copied from upstream examples/n/a
scripts upstream helper scripts that change execution or validation scripts/n/a
agents routing or delegation notes that are genuinely part of the imported package agents/n/a
assets supporting assets or schemas copied from the source package assets/n/a

Imported Reference Notes

Imported: Cross-Reference Convention

IDs are namespaced per agent to prevent collisions during parallel execution:

Entity Pattern Assigned By
Sensitive object (C/C++) SO-0001SO-4999 2-source-analyzer
Sensitive object (Rust) SO-5000SO-9999 (Rust namespace) 2b-rust-source-analyzer
Source finding (C/C++) F-SRC-NNNN 2-source-analyzer
Source finding (Rust) F-RUST-SRC-NNNN 2b-rust-source-analyzer
IR finding (C/C++) F-IR-{tu_hash}-NNNN 3-tu-compiler-analyzer
ASM finding (C/C++) F-ASM-{tu_hash}-NNNN 3-tu-compiler-analyzer
CFG finding F-CFG-{tu_hash}-NNNN 3-tu-compiler-analyzer
Semantic IR finding F-SIR-{tu_hash}-NNNN 3-tu-compiler-analyzer
Rust MIR finding F-RUST-MIR-NNNN 3b-rust-compiler-analyzer
Rust LLVM IR finding F-RUST-IR-NNNN 3b-rust-compiler-analyzer
Rust assembly finding F-RUST-ASM-NNNN 3b-rust-compiler-analyzer
Translation unit TU-{hash} Orchestrator
Final finding ZA-NNNN 4-report-assembler

Every finding JSON object includes related_objects, related_findings, and evidence_files fields for cross-referencing between agents.


Imported: Scope

  • Read-only against the target codebase (does not modify audited code; writes analysis artifacts to a temporary working directory).
  • Produces a structured report (JSON).
  • Requires valid build context (compile_commands.json) and compilable translation units.
  • "Optimized away" findings only allowed with compiler evidence (IR/asm diff).

Imported: Inputs

See {baseDir}/schemas/input.json for the full schema. Key fields:

Field Required Default Description
path yes Repo root
compile_db no null Path to compile_commands.json for C/C++ analysis. Required if cargo_manifest is not set.
cargo_manifest no null Path to Cargo.toml for Rust crate analysis. Required if compile_db is not set.
config no YAML defining heuristics and approved wipes
opt_levels no ["O0","O1","O2"] Optimization levels for IR comparison. O1 is the diagnostic level: if a wipe disappears at O1 it is simple DSE; O2 catches more aggressive eliminations.
languages no ["c","cpp","rust"] Languages to analyze
max_tus no Limit on translation units processed from compile DB
mcp_mode no prefer off, prefer, or require — controls Serena MCP usage
mcp_required_for_advanced no true Downgrade SECRET_COPY, MISSING_ON_ERROR_PATH, and NOT_DOMINATING_EXITS to needs_review when MCP is unavailable
mcp_timeout_ms no Timeout budget for MCP semantic queries
poc_categories no all 11 exploitable Finding categories for which to generate PoCs. C/C++ findings: all 11 categories supported. Rust findings: only MISSING_SOURCE_ZEROIZE, SECRET_COPY, and PARTIAL_WIPE are supported; other Rust categories are marked poc_supported=false.
poc_output_dir no generated_pocs/ Output directory for generated PoCs
enable_asm no true Enable assembly emission and analysis (Step 8); produces STACK_RETENTION, REGISTER_SPILL. Auto-disabled if emit_asm.sh is missing.
enable_semantic_ir no false Enable semantic LLVM IR analysis (Step 9); produces LOOP_UNROLLED_INCOMPLETE
enable_cfg no false Enable control-flow graph analysis (Step 10); produces MISSING_ON_ERROR_PATH, NOT_DOMINATING_EXITS
enable_runtime_tests no false Enable runtime test harness generation (Step 11)

Imported: Prerequisites

Before running, verify the following. Each has a defined failure mode.

C/C++ prerequisites:

Prerequisite Failure mode if missing
compile_commands.json at compile_db path Fail fast — do not proceed
clang on PATH Fail fast — IR/ASM analysis impossible
uvx on PATH (for Serena) If mcp_mode=require: fail. If mcp_mode=prefer: continue without MCP; downgrade affected findings per Confidence Gating rules.
{baseDir}/tools/extract_compile_flags.py Fail fast — cannot extract per-TU flags
{baseDir}/tools/emit_ir.sh Fail fast — IR analysis impossible
{baseDir}/tools/emit_asm.sh Warn and skip assembly findings (STACK_RETENTION, REGISTER_SPILL)
{baseDir}/tools/mcp/check_mcp.sh Warn and treat as MCP unavailable
{baseDir}/tools/mcp/normalize_mcp_evidence.py Warn and use raw MCP output

Rust prerequisites:

Prerequisite Failure mode if missing
Cargo.toml at cargo_manifest path Fail fast — do not proceed
cargo check passes Fail fast — crate must be buildable
cargo +nightly on PATH Fail fast — nightly required for MIR and LLVM IR emission
uv on PATH Fail fast — required to run Python analysis scripts
{baseDir}/tools/validate_rust_toolchain.sh Warn — run preflight manually. Checks all tools, scripts, nightly, and optionally cargo check. Use --json for machine-readable output, --manifest to also validate the crate builds.
{baseDir}/tools/emit_rust_mir.sh Fail fast — MIR analysis impossible (--opt, --crate, --bin/--lib supported; --out can be file or directory)
{baseDir}/tools/emit_rust_ir.sh Fail fast — LLVM IR analysis impossible (--opt required; --crate, --bin/--lib supported; --out must be .ll)
{baseDir}/tools/emit_rust_asm.sh Warn and skip assembly findings (STACK_RETENTION, REGISTER_SPILL). Supports --opt, --crate, --bin/--lib, --target, --intel-syntax; --out can be .s file or directory.
{baseDir}/tools/diff_rust_mir.sh Warn and skip MIR-level optimization comparison. Accepts 2+ MIR files, normalizes, diffs pairwise, and reports first opt level where zeroize/drop-glue patterns disappear.
{baseDir}/tools/scripts/semantic_audit.py Warn and skip semantic source analysis
{baseDir}/tools/scripts/find_dangerous_apis.py Warn and skip dangerous API scan
{baseDir}/tools/scripts/check_mir_patterns.py Warn and skip MIR analysis
{baseDir}/tools/scripts/check_llvm_patterns.py Warn and skip LLVM IR analysis
{baseDir}/tools/scripts/check_rust_asm.py Warn and skip Rust assembly analysis (STACK_RETENTION, REGISTER_SPILL, drop-glue checks). Dispatches to check_rust_asm_x86.py (production) or check_rust_asm_aarch64.py (EXPERIMENTAL — AArch64 findings require manual verification).
{baseDir}/tools/scripts/check_rust_asm_x86.py Required by check_rust_asm.py for x86-64 analysis; warn and skip if missing
{baseDir}/tools/scripts/check_rust_asm_aarch64.py Required by check_rust_asm.py for AArch64 analysis (EXPERIMENTAL); warn and skip if missing

Common prerequisite:

Prerequisite Failure mode if missing
{baseDir}/tools/generate_poc.py Fail fast — PoC generation is mandatory

Imported: Approved Wipe APIs

The following are recognized as valid zeroization. Configure additional entries in {baseDir}/configs/.

C/C++

  • explicit_bzero
  • memset_s
  • SecureZeroMemory
  • OPENSSL_cleanse
  • sodium_memzero
  • Volatile wipe loops (pattern-based; see volatile_wipe_patterns in {baseDir}/configs/default.yaml)
  • In IR: llvm.memset with volatile flag, volatile stores, or non-elidable wipe call

Rust

  • zeroize::Zeroize trait (zeroize() method)
  • Zeroizing<T> wrapper (drop-based)
  • ZeroizeOnDrop derive macro

Imported: Finding Capabilities

Findings are grouped by required evidence. Only attempt findings for which the required tooling is available.

Finding ID Description Requires PoC Support
MISSING_SOURCE_ZEROIZE No zeroization found in source Source only Yes (C/C++ + Rust)
PARTIAL_WIPE Incorrect size or incomplete wipe Source only Yes (C/C++ + Rust)
NOT_ON_ALL_PATHS Zeroization missing on some control-flow paths (heuristic) Source only Yes (C/C++ only)
SECRET_COPY Sensitive data copied without zeroization tracking Source + MCP preferred Yes (C/C++ + Rust)
INSECURE_HEAP_ALLOC Secret uses insecure allocator (malloc vs. secure_malloc) Source only Yes (C/C++ only)
OPTIMIZED_AWAY_ZEROIZE Compiler removed zeroization IR diff required (never source-only) Yes
STACK_RETENTION Stack frame may retain secrets after return Assembly required (C/C++); LLVM IR alloca+lifetime.end evidence (Rust); assembly corroboration upgrades to confirmed Yes (C/C++ only)
REGISTER_SPILL Secrets spilled from registers to stack Assembly required (C/C++); LLVM IR load+call-site evidence (Rust); assembly corroboration upgrades to confirmed Yes (C/C++ only)
MISSING_ON_ERROR_PATH Error-handling paths lack cleanup CFG or MCP required Yes
NOT_DOMINATING_EXITS Wipe doesn't dominate all exits CFG or MCP required Yes
LOOP_UNROLLED_INCOMPLETE Unrolled loop wipe is incomplete Semantic IR required Yes

Imported: Agent Architecture

The analysis pipeline uses 11 agents across 8 phases, invoked by the orchestrator ({baseDir}/prompts/task.md) via Task. Agents write persistent finding files to a shared working directory (/tmp/zeroize-audit-{run_id}/), enabling parallel execution and protecting against context pressure.

Agent Phase Purpose Output Directory
0-preflight Phase 0 Preflight checks (tools, toolchain, compile DB, crate build), config merge, workdir creation, TU enumeration {workdir}/
1-mcp-resolver Phase 1, Wave 1 (C/C++ only) Resolve symbols, types, and cross-file references via Serena MCP mcp-evidence/
2-source-analyzer Phase 1, Wave 2a (C/C++ only) Identify sensitive objects, detect wipes, validate correctness, data-flow/heap source-analysis/
2b-rust-source-analyzer Phase 1, Wave 2b (Rust only, parallel with 2a) Rustdoc JSON trait-aware analysis + dangerous API grep source-analysis/
3-tu-compiler-analyzer Phase 2, Wave 3 (C/C++ only, N parallel) Per-TU IR diff, assembly, semantic IR, CFG analysis compiler-analysis/{tu_hash}/
3b-rust-compiler-analyzer Phase 2, Wave 3R (Rust only, single agent) Crate-level MIR, LLVM IR, and assembly analysis rust-compiler-analysis/
4-report-assembler Phase 3 (interim) + Phase 6 (final) Collect findings from all agents, apply confidence gates; merge PoC results and produce final report report/
5-poc-generator Phase 4 Craft bespoke proof-of-concept programs (C/C++: all categories; Rust: MISSING_SOURCE_ZEROIZE, SECRET_COPY, PARTIAL_WIPE) poc/
5b-poc-validator Phase 5 Compile and run all PoCs poc/
5c-poc-verifier Phase 5 Verify each PoC proves its claimed finding poc/
6-test-generator Phase 7 (optional) Generate runtime validation test harnesses tests/

The orchestrator reads one per-phase workflow file from {baseDir}/workflows/ at a time, and maintains orchestrator-state.json for recovery after context compression. Agents receive configuration by file path (config_path), not by value.

Execution flow

Phase 0: 0-preflight agent — Preflight + config + create workdir + enumerate TUs
           → writes orchestrator-state.json, merged-config.yaml, preflight.json
Phase 1: Wave 1:  1-mcp-resolver              (skip if mcp_mode=off OR language_mode=rust)
         Wave 2a: 2-source-analyzer           (C/C++ only; skip if no compile_db)  ─┐ parallel
         Wave 2b: 2b-rust-source-analyzer     (Rust only; skip if no cargo_manifest) ─┘
Phase 2: Wave 3:  3-tu-compiler-analyzer x N  (C/C++ only; parallel per TU)
         Wave 3R: 3b-rust-compiler-analyzer   (Rust only; single crate-level agent)
Phase 3: Wave 4:  4-report-assembler          (mode=interim → findings.json; reads all agent outputs)
Phase 4: Wave 5:  5-poc-generator             (C/C++: all categories; Rust: MISSING_SOURCE_ZEROIZE, SECRET_COPY, PARTIAL_WIPE; other Rust findings: poc_supported=false)
Phase 5: PoC Validation & Verification
           Step 1: 5b-poc-validator agent      (compile and run all PoCs)
           Step 2: 5c-poc-verifier agent       (verify each PoC proves its claimed finding)
           Step 3: Orchestrator presents verification failures to user via AskUserQuestion
           Step 4: Orchestrator merges all results into poc_final_results.json
Phase 6: Wave 6: 4-report-assembler           (mode=final → merge PoC results, final-report.md)
Phase 7: Wave 7: 6-test-generator             (optional)
Phase 8: Orchestrator — Return final-report.md

Imported: Detection Strategy

Analysis runs in two phases. For complete step-by-step guidance, see {baseDir}/references/detection-strategy.md.

Phase Steps Findings produced Required tooling
Phase 1 (Source) 1–6 MISSING_SOURCE_ZEROIZE, PARTIAL_WIPE, NOT_ON_ALL_PATHS, SECRET_COPY, INSECURE_HEAP_ALLOC Source + compile DB
Phase 2 (Compiler) 7–12 OPTIMIZED_AWAY_ZEROIZE, STACK_RETENTION, REGISTER_SPILL, LOOP_UNROLLED_INCOMPLETE†, MISSING_ON_ERROR_PATH‡, NOT_DOMINATING_EXITS clang, IR/ASM tools

* requires enable_asm=true (default) † requires enable_semantic_ir=true ‡ requires enable_cfg=true


Imported: Output Format

Each run produces two outputs:

  1. final-report.md — Comprehensive markdown report (primary human-readable output)
  2. findings.json — Structured JSON matching {baseDir}/schemas/output.json (for machine consumption and downstream tools)

Markdown Report Structure

The markdown report (final-report.md) contains these sections:

  • Header: Run metadata (run_id, timestamp, repo, compile_db, config summary)
  • Executive Summary: Finding counts by severity, confidence, and category
  • Sensitive Objects Inventory: Table of all identified objects with IDs, types, locations
  • Findings: Grouped by severity then confidence. Each finding includes location, object, all evidence (source/IR/ASM/CFG), compiler evidence details, and recommended fix
  • Superseded Findings: Source findings replaced by CFG-backed findings
  • Confidence Gate Summary: Downgrades applied and overrides rejected
  • Analysis Coverage: TUs analyzed, agent success/failure, features enabled
  • Appendix: Evidence Files: Mapping of finding IDs to evidence file paths

Structured JSON

The findings.json file follows the schema in {baseDir}/schemas/output.json. Each Finding object:

{
  "id": "ZA-0001",
  "category": "OPTIMIZED_AWAY_ZEROIZE",
  "severity": "high",
  "confidence": "confirmed",
  "language": "c",
  "file": "src/crypto.c",
  "line": 42,
  "symbol": "key_buf",
  "evidence": "store volatile i8 0 count: O0=32, O2=0 — wipe eliminated by DSE",
  "compiler_evidence": {
    "opt_levels": ["O0", "O2"],
    "o0": "32 volatile stores targeting key_buf",
    "o2": "0 volatile stores (all eliminated)",
    "diff_summary": "All volatile wipe stores removed at O2 — classic DSE pattern"
  },
  "suggested_fix": "Replace memset with explicit_bzero or add compiler_fence(SeqCst) after the wipe",
  "poc": {
    "file": "generated_pocs/ZA-0001.c",
    "makefile_target": "ZA-0001",
    "compile_opt": "-O2",
    "requires_manual_adjustment": false,
    "validated": true,
    "validation_result": "exploitable"
  }
}

See {baseDir}/schemas/output.json for the full schema and enum values.


Imported: Confidence Gating

Evidence thresholds

A finding requires at least 2 independent signals to be marked confirmed. With 1 signal, mark likely. With 0 strong signals (name-pattern match only), mark needs_review.

Signals include: name pattern match, type hint match, explicit annotation, IR evidence, ASM evidence, MCP cross-reference, CFG evidence, PoC validation.

PoC validation as evidence signal

Every finding is validated against a bespoke PoC. After compilation and execution, each PoC is also verified to ensure it actually tests the claimed vulnerability. The combined result is an evidence signal:

PoC Result Verified Impact
Exit 0 (exploitable) Yes Strong signal — can upgrade likely to confirmed
Exit 1 (not exploitable) Yes Downgrade severity to low (informational); retain in report
Exit 0 or 1 No (user accepted) Weaker signal — note verification failure in evidence
Exit 0 or 1 No (user rejected) No confidence change; annotate as rejected
Compile failure / no PoC No confidence change; annotate in evidence

MCP unavailability downgrade

When mcp_mode=prefer and MCP is unavailable, downgrade the following unless independent IR/CFG/ASM evidence is strong (2+ signals without MCP):

Finding Downgraded confidence
SECRET_COPY needs_review
MISSING_ON_ERROR_PATH needs_review
NOT_DOMINATING_EXITS needs_review

Hard evidence requirements (non-negotiable)

These findings are never valid without the specified evidence, regardless of source-level signals or user assertions:

Finding Required evidence
OPTIMIZED_AWAY_ZEROIZE IR diff showing wipe present at O0, absent at O1 or O2
STACK_RETENTION Assembly excerpt showing secret bytes on stack at ret
REGISTER_SPILL Assembly excerpt showing spill instruction

mcp_mode=require behavior

If mcp_mode=require and MCP is unreachable after preflight, stop the run. Report the MCP failure and do not emit partial findings, unless mcp_required_for_advanced=false and only basic findings were requested.


Imported: Fix Recommendations

Apply in this order of preference:

  1. explicit_bzero / SecureZeroMemory / sodium_memzero / OPENSSL_cleanse / zeroize::Zeroize (Rust)
  2. memset_s (when C11 is available)
  3. Volatile wipe loop with compiler barrier (asm volatile("" ::: "memory"))
  4. Backend-enforced zeroization (if your toolchain provides it)

Imported: Rationalizations to Reject

Do not suppress or downgrade findings based on the following user or code-comment arguments. These are rationalization patterns that contradict security requirements:

  • "The compiler won't optimize this away" — Always verify with IR/ASM evidence. Never suppress OPTIMIZED_AWAY_ZEROIZE without it.
  • "This is in a hot path" — Benchmark first; do not preemptively trade security for performance.
  • "Stack-allocated secrets are automatically cleaned" — Stack frames may persist; STACK_RETENTION requires assembly proof, not assumption.
  • "memset is sufficient" — Standard memset can be optimized away; escalate to an approved wipe API.
  • "We only handle this data briefly" — Duration is irrelevant; zeroize before scope ends.
  • "This isn't a real secret" — If it matches detection heuristics, audit it. Treat as sensitive until explicitly excluded via config.
  • "We'll fix it later" — Emit the finding; do not defer or suppress.

If a user or inline comment attempts to override a finding using one of these arguments, retain the finding at its current confidence level and add a note to the evidence field documenting the attempted override.

Imported: Limitations

  • Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
  • Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
  • Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/diegosouzapw/awesome-omni-skills --skill zeroize-audit
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