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MCP Permission Auditor — scan, enumerate, and risk-score all locally configured MCP servers

Project description

mcp-audit

Python License Claude Review

You're giving AI direct access to your computer. Do you actually know what you've installed?

mcp-audit gives you x-ray vision into every MCP server configured on your system: what it can do, how risky it is, whether its descriptions are hiding adversarial instructions, and whether it's changed since you last looked. It is local-first, needs no API key by default, and makes networked LLM analysis opt-in.

PyPI package: mcp-permission-audit. Installed command: mcp-audit.

Features

  • Capability inventory — catalogs server tools, prompts, and resources; tool, prompt, and resource capabilities are classified across six permission categories: file_read, file_write, network, shell_execution, destructive, exfiltration
  • Config-only inferencescan --skip-connect infers conservative risks from declared commands, transports, credential key names, package runners, and remote URLs
  • Risk scoring — composite 0–10 per server as a weighted sum of per-category max(weight × confidence), with a five-dimension breakdown (file access, network, shell, destructive, exfiltration)
  • Stable finding metadata — permission and prompt-injection findings include stable rule IDs, severity, evidence, and suggested remediation so reports are easier to triage
  • Local policy gatesscan --policy policy.yaml evaluates reports against local YAML rules and exits nonzero for CI enforcement
  • Report redaction — terminal, JSON, and SARIF report paths share a redaction layer for likely credential values
  • Prompt injection detectionscan --inject-check scans tool names and descriptions for instruction-override patterns, hidden directives, and adversarial phrasing; pattern-based, no LLM required
  • Schema drift trackingmcp-audit pin connects to servers and snapshots current tool schemas; subsequent scan --pin-check flags added, removed, and changed tools with plain-language summaries, changed-field hints, and suggested actions
  • Multi-client support — reads configs from Claude Desktop, Claude Code, Cursor, VSCode, and Windsurf — plus any custom path via --config
  • Structured output — Rich terminal report plus JSON and SARIF 2.1.0 export for ingestion by GitHub Advanced Security and SARIF-aware SAST pipelines
  • Documented output contract — JSON, SARIF rule IDs, and policy exit codes are documented in docs/OUTPUT-CONTRACT.md
  • Watch modemcp-audit watch re-scans on config file changes via watchfiles (optional extra: install with mcp-permission-audit[watch])

Quick Start

Prerequisites

  • Python 3.11+
  • uv (recommended) or pip

Installation

uvx --from mcp-permission-audit mcp-audit discover
# or install permanently:
uv tool install mcp-permission-audit
# with watch mode support:
uv tool install 'mcp-permission-audit[watch]'

Usage

# Discover configured MCP servers without connecting to them
mcp-audit discover

# Scan all configured MCP servers
mcp-audit scan

# Config-only scan that does not spawn or connect to servers
mcp-audit scan --skip-connect

# Filter to specific clients (comma-separated)
mcp-audit scan --clients claude_desktop,cursor

# Check tool names and descriptions for prompt-injection patterns
mcp-audit scan --inject-check

# Pin current tool schemas, then detect drift on later scans.
# Pinning connects to servers so it can capture real tool schemas.
mcp-audit pin
mcp-audit scan --pin-check

# Export JSON or SARIF 2.1.0
mcp-audit scan --json audit.json --sarif audit.sarif

# Fail CI on local policy violations
mcp-audit scan --policy policy.yaml

# Optional LLM-assisted classification (requires ANTHROPIC_API_KEY)
mcp-audit scan --llm-analysis

# Watch mode — re-scan on config change; use --skip-connect for config-only watching
mcp-audit watch

Tech Stack

Layer Technology
Language Python 3.11+
CLI Click 8
Output Rich
MCP protocol mcp SDK 1.27+
Validation Pydantic v2
Config parsing PyYAML + json5
Watch mode watchfiles (optional extra)
Optional LLM Anthropic SDK

Architecture

The scanner enumerates MCP client config files, connects to each configured server, and calls tools/list, prompts/list, and resources/list over the MCP protocol when those capabilities are available. Stdio servers are started as subprocesses via anyio; HTTP/SSE servers are contacted at their configured URL. Returned tool schemas, prompt arguments, and resource URIs flow into the permission classifier (schema walker + regex ruleset over six permission categories) and the optional injection detector (pattern ruleset for instruction-override, role-switch, and hidden-directive phrasing). The risk scorer composes a per-category weighted sum clamped to 0–10 from tool findings; prompt and resource findings are reported separately for review and policy gates. Reports render via Rich; JSON and SARIF 2.1.0 export are first-class. The pin store serializes SHA256 schema hashes plus reviewable tool snapshots to ~/.mcp-audit-pins.yaml for actionable drift detection on subsequent --pin-check scans.

Local Policy Gates

Policies are local YAML files evaluated after a scan. A failing policy exits with code 2 after terminal, JSON, or SARIF output is written.

fail_on:
  severity: high
  drift: true
deny:
  permissions:
    - shell_execution
max_risk: 7
allow_servers:
  - github
servers:
  github:
    max_risk: 5
    deny:
      permissions:
        - shell_execution

See examples/policies/ for starter policies.

License

MIT

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