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Found 266 Skills
NestJS framework best practices and production patterns. Use whenever working with NestJS — creating modules, controllers, services, DTOs, guards, interceptors, pipes, middleware, or building REST/GraphQL/microservice APIs. Also use when setting up authentication, authorization, validation, queues, health checks, WebSockets, caching, or any @nestjs/* package. Even for simple NestJS tasks, this skill ensures correct import paths, proper decorator usage, and production-ready patterns. Covers NestJS v11 with Express v5, native JWT auth, Zod validation, Keyv caching, and Suites testing.
Audits the security posture of a CockroachDB cluster (Cloud or self-hosted) across network, authentication, authorization, encryption, audit logging, and backup dimensions. Use when assessing cluster security readiness, preparing for compliance reviews, or investigating security configuration gaps.
Tests authentication and authorization mechanisms in mobile application APIs to identify broken authentication, insecure token management, session fixation, privilege escalation, and IDOR vulnerabilities. Use when performing API security assessments against mobile app backends, testing JWT implementations, evaluating OAuth flows, or assessing session management. Activates for requests involving mobile API auth testing, token security assessment, OAuth mobile flow testing, or API authorization bypass.
Tests APIs for mass assignment (auto-binding) vulnerabilities where clients can modify object properties they should not have access to by including additional parameters in API requests. The tester identifies writable endpoints, adds undocumented fields to request bodies (role, isAdmin, price, balance), and checks if the server binds these to the data model without filtering. Part of OWASP API3:2023 Broken Object Property Level Authorization. Activates for requests involving mass assignment testing, parameter binding abuse, auto-binding vulnerability, or API over-posting.
Performs systematic security testing of web applications following the OWASP Web Security Testing Guide (WSTG) methodology to identify vulnerabilities in authentication, authorization, input validation, session management, and business logic. The tester uses Burp Suite as the primary interception proxy alongside manual testing techniques to find flaws that automated scanners miss. Activates for requests involving web app pentest, OWASP testing, application security assessment, or web vulnerability testing.
Automated Amazon store report retrieval skill, supporting end-to-end automated acquisition (request → polling → download → decompression) of over 95 report types including inventory reports, order reports, sales and traffic reports, FBA reports, financial settlement reports, etc.; upon completion, it automatically starts a temporary local HTTP service by default and generates an extractedFileHttpUrl for browsers to download the decompressed files. This skill depends on linkfox-amazon-store-auth (authorization and token management). This skill is triggered when users mention pulling Amazon reports, downloading Amazon reports, obtaining inventory reports, obtaining order reports, FBA reports, sales and traffic reports, financial settlement reports, Brand Analytics reports, ABA search term reports, or use phrases like pull Amazon report, download Amazon report, fetch inventory report, fetch orders report, FBA report, sales and traffic report, settlement report, Amazon store report. It should also be triggered whenever users need to retrieve any form of structured data (inventory, orders, sales, finance, returns, etc.) from the Amazon Seller Central.
Use when you need to design, review, or improve security in Spring Boot applications — including SecurityFilterChain, OAuth2/JWT resource server patterns, form login basics, method security (@PreAuthorize), CSRF and CORS for APIs, session fixation, security headers, exception handling, password encoding, and sensitive-data-safe logging. This should trigger for requests such as Add Spring Boot security support; Review Spring Boot security configuration; Improve API authorization in Spring Boot; Add JWT resource server security in Spring Boot; Harden Spring Boot security headers and CSRF settings. Part of cursor-rules-java project
Guides the agent through implementing authentication and authorization in FastAPI applications. Triggered when users ask to "add authentication", "implement login", "add JWT tokens", "create OAuth2 flow", "hash passwords", "protect endpoints", "add role-based access", "implement RBAC", "add API key auth", "secure the API", or mention authentication, authorization, JWT, OAuth2, password hashing, bcrypt, access tokens, refresh tokens, security dependencies, or API security.
Build modern monolith applications with Inertia.js - combining server-side frameworks (Laravel, Rails, etc.) with React/Vue/Svelte frontends without building APIs. Use when creating Inertia pages and layouts, working with Link component for navigation, building forms with Form component or useForm hook, handling validation and errors, managing shared data and props, implementing authentication and authorization, using manual visits with router, working with partial reloads, setting up persistent layouts, or configuring client-side setup.
Authentication and authorization expert specializing in JWT, OAuth 2.0, session management, RBAC, password security. Use for auth implementation, token management, or security issues.
Gate Wallet interaction with external DApps. Connect wallet, sign messages (EIP-712/personal_sign), sign and send DApp-generated transactions, ERC20 Approve authorization. Use when users need to interact with DeFi protocols, NFT platforms, or any DApp. Includes transaction confirmation gating and security review.
Write secure-by-default Node.js and TypeScript applications following security best practices. Use when: (1) Writing new Node.js/TypeScript code, (2) Creating API endpoints or middleware, (3) Handling user input or form data, (4) Implementing authentication or authorization, (5) Working with secrets or environment variables, (6) Setting up project configurations (tsconfig, eslint), (7) User mentions security concerns, (8) Reviewing code for vulnerabilities, (9) Working with file paths or child processes, (10) Setting up HTTP headers or CORS.