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Read-only MCP/agent-gateway readiness scanner — scores a repo across 7 security dimensions.
Read-only MCP/agent-gateway readiness scanner — scores a repo across 7 security dimensions.
Valid MCP server (2 strong, 3 medium validity signals). No known CVEs in dependencies. Package registry verified. Imported from the Official MCP Registry.
11 files analyzed · 1 issue found
Security scores are indicators to help you make informed decisions, not guarantees. Always review permissions before connecting any MCP server.
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Add this to your MCP configuration file:
{
"mcpServers": {
"io-github-willianpinho-mcp-gateway-scan": {
"args": [
"-y",
"mcp-gateway-scan"
],
"command": "npx"
}
}
}From the project's GitHub README.
Read-only static scanner for MCP / agent-gateway production-readiness anti-patterns. Point it at a repo, get a 7-dimension red/yellow/green score in seconds.
Built by the team behind the Provenwright MCP Gateway Readiness Audit — a full cited audit with evidence index, scored gap matrix, and 90-day roadmap. Full audit: willianpinho.com/mcp-audit
npx mcp-gateway-scan ./path/to/your/gateway
It scans your code and config for the failure modes that turn an MCP gateway from a demo into an incident — authorization decided by the model, error handlers that fail open, unpinned supply chains, dark traces, unbounded spend, inline secrets, and missing operational levers — and prints exactly where each one lives.
100% read-only. It only reads files. It never executes your code, never makes network
calls, and never prints a secret value — for inline-secret hits it reports the location
only (<file:line>), with the value redacted.
# one-off
npx mcp-gateway-scan <path>
# or global
pnpm add -g mcp-gateway-scan
mcp-gateway-scan <path>
Requires Node ≥ 18.
mcp-gateway-scan <path> [options]
Options:
--json Machine-readable JSON instead of the terminal report
--ci Compact, no-color output for pipelines; exits 1 on any RED
--no-color Disable ANSI colors
-h, --help Show help
-v, --version Print version
Exit codes:
0 no red dimensions
1 one or more red dimensions
2 usage / IO error
The same package can also run as an MCP server so your agent runs the scan conversationally — just ask it to "scan this repo for gateway-readiness".
Claude Code (one command):
claude mcp add gateway-scan -- npx -y mcp-gateway-scan mcp
Cursor / any MCP client — add to your .mcp.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"gateway-scan": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "mcp-gateway-scan", "mcp"]
}
}
}
Then ask your agent to run the scan_gateway tool:
{ "path": "<repo or dir>", "ci": false } (ci optional — adds the CI gate verdict).Same package, two modes —
mcp-gateway-scan mcpis the server (use it from your agent); the defaultmcp-gateway-scan <path>is the CLI (run it directly in a terminal or CI). Themcpsubcommand does not change the CLI behavior.
[RED] D2 Fail-close / fail-open posture S1
Error handlers on the call path return allow/true/ok or pass — the
system fails OPEN. A degraded auth/policy check silently becomes
'allow'. Launch blocker.
✗ gateway.ts:23 fail-open on error path return { allowed: true };
[GREEN] D6 Security, secrets & identity S1
No inline secrets; credentials referenced from a manager/env and
IDP/OIDC identity wiring is present.
✓ docker-compose.yml:7 secret-manager / env reference DATABASE_URL: op://Production/gateway-db/url
SCORE
┌────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────┬─────────┬──────────┐
│ Dim │ Title │ Status │ Severity │
├────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┼─────────┼──────────┤
│ D1 │ Tool-access governance & RBAC │ RED │ S1 │
│ ... │ ... │ ... │ ... │
└────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────┴─────────┴──────────┘
0 green 0 yellow 7 red
--ci prints a compact, greppable summary and exits non-zero on any red dimension, so a
regression (a new fail-open handler, an unpinned image, a committed secret) fails the build:
# .github/workflows/gateway-readiness.yml
- name: MCP gateway readiness scan
run: npx mcp-gateway-scan ./gateway --ci
RED D2 S1 Fail-close / fail-open posture (findings=1)
RESULT green=4 yellow=2 red=1
VERDICT FAIL — red dimension(s) present; see findings above.
| Dim | Checks for |
|---|---|
| D1 Tool-access / RBAC | Authorization expressed in prompts; absence of a gateway policy layer |
| D2 Fail-close | catch/except blocks that return allow/true/ok/pass; missing timeouts |
| D3 Onboarding / supply chain | :latest, @main, npx -y …@, unpinned images; rewards sha256: / integrity |
| D4 Observability | Presence/absence of OTel / traceparent / spans; raw prompts in logs |
| D5 Routing / cost | Missing max_tokens / budget / rate-limit / quota |
| D6 Secrets / identity | Inline secret literals (location only, value redacted); rewards op:// / vault: / process.env; IDP/OIDC |
| D7 Prod-readiness | Missing kill-switch / feature-flag, 429 / rate-limit, eval / red-team gate |
Each dimension is scored 🟢 green / 🟡 yellow / 🔴 red with a severity tag, plus the matched
evidence (file:line). The methodology behind the rubric maps to OWASP Top 10 for LLM
Applications, the MCP spec (2025-06-18), and OpenTelemetry GenAI semantic conventions.
mcp-gateway-scan fixtures/secure # mostly green
mcp-gateway-scan fixtures/vulnerable # mostly red
The fixtures/vulnerable tree contains only fake, non-functional placeholder secrets
(sk-EXAMPLENOTREAL…, AKIAEXAMPLE…) so you can see the redacted-secret output safely.
Every finding is meant to be defensible to a skeptical senior engineer. The scanner
distinguishes prompt content (a system-message string / YAML prompt field) from code
that merely documents a pattern — so a doc comment quoting rg 'only use|if the user is admin' is not flagged as authorization-in-prompt, while the same words inside a real
system prompt are. Comment lines and grep-recipe / regex documentation are suppressed
across all dimensions, and "control present" signals are matched in code/config, not prose.
This is a fast, free heuristic wedge — a static pattern scanner. A green score is a good signal, not a guarantee; a red score is a concrete pointer to fix. It does not run fault-injection, inspect your live IAM/IDP, or read your traces. That depth is what a full MCP Gateway Readiness Audit provides: a cited Gap Matrix and a sequenced 90-day remediation roadmap.
| This scanner (free, MIT) | Full MCP Gateway Readiness Audit (paid) | |
|---|---|---|
| Method | static pattern checks | read-only review of your live codebase |
| Live tests | — | fault-injection (F1–F5), trace verification |
| Evidence | matched line | per-finding file:line in an evidence index |
| Output | 7-dimension score | cited gap matrix + severity + sequenced 90-day roadmap |
| Delivery | instant, automated | expert engagement + live review session |
Need the full audit? This scanner is a free heuristic wedge. The Provenwright MCP Gateway Readiness Audit goes deeper: read-only assessment of your live codebase, per-finding evidence (file + line), a cited Gap Matrix, and a sequenced 90-day remediation roadmap.
See a sample report: provenwright.com/sample/
Full audit info: willianpinho.com/mcp-audit
Book a 15-min call: cal.com/willianpinho
Email: me@willianpinho.com
MIT © Willian Pinho
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