SKILL.md
protect-mcp — Policy Enforcement + Signed Receipts
Cryptographic governance for every Claude Code tool call. Each invocation is
evaluated against a Cedar policy and produces an Ed25519-signed receipt that
anyone can verify offline.
Overview
Claude Code runs powerful tools: Bash, Edit, Write, WebFetch. By default
there is no audit trail, no policy enforcement, and no way to prove what was
decided after the fact. protect-mcp closes all three gaps:
- Cedar policies (AWS's open authorization engine) evaluate every tool call
before execution. Cedar deny is authoritative.
- Ed25519 receipts record each decision with its inputs, the policy that
governed it, and the outcome. Receipts are hash-chained.
- Offline verification via
npx @veritasacta/verify. No server, no account,
no trust in the operator.
Problem
AI agents make decisions that affect money, safety, and rights. The Claude Code
session log records what happened, but the log is:
- Mutable — anyone with access can edit it
- Unsigned — there is no way to prove integrity
- Operator-bound — verification requires trusting whoever holds the log
For compliance contexts (finance, healthcare, regulated research), this is not
sufficient. You need tamper-evident evidence that can be verified by third
parties without trusting you.
Solution
Add protect-mcp to your Claude Code project:
# 1. Install the plugin (adds hooks + skill to your project)
claude plugin install wshobson/agents/protect-mcp
# 2. Configure hooks in .claude/settings.json (see below)
# 3. Start the receipt-signing server (runs locally, no external calls)
npx protect-mcp@latest serve --enforce
# 4. Use Claude Code normally. Every tool call is now policy-evaluated
# and produces a signed receipt in ./receipts/
Hook Configuration
Add the following to your project's .claude/settings.json:
{
"hooks": {
"PreToolUse": [
{
"matcher": ".*",
"hook": {
"type": "command",
"command": "npx protect-mcp@latest evaluate --policy ./protect.cedar --tool \"$TOOL_NAME\" --input \"$TOOL_INPUT\" || exit 2"
}
}
],
"PostToolUse": [
{
"matcher": ".*",
"hook": {
"type": "command",
"command": "npx protect-mcp@latest sign --tool \"$TOOL_NAME\" --input \"$TOOL_INPUT\" --output \"$TOOL_OUTPUT\" --receipts ./receipts/"
}
}
]
}
}
What each hook does
PreToolUse — Runs BEFORE the tool executes. Evaluates the tool call against
your Cedar policy file. If Cedar returns deny, the hook exits with code 2 and
Claude Code blocks the tool call entirely.
PostToolUse — Runs AFTER the tool completes. Signs a receipt containing the
tool name, input hash, output hash, decision, policy digest, and timestamp.
Writes the receipt to ./receipts/<timestamp>.json.
Cedar Policy File
Create ./protect.cedar at the project root:
// Allow read-only tools by default
permit (
principal,
action in [Action::"Read", Action::"Glob", Action::"Grep", Action::"WebFetch"],
resource
);
// Require explicit allow for destructive tools
permit (
principal,
action == Action::"Bash",
resource
) when {
// Allow safe commands only
context.command_pattern in ["git", "npm", "ls", "cat", "echo", "pwd", "test"]
};
// Never allow recursive deletion
forbid (
principal,
action == Action::"Bash",
resource
) when {
context.command_pattern == "rm -rf"
};
// Require confirmation for writes outside the project
forbid (
principal,
action in [Action::"Edit", Action::"Write"],
resource
) when {
context.path_starts_with != "."
};
Verification
Verify a single receipt:
npx @veritasacta/verify receipts/2026-04-15T10-30-00Z.json
# Exit 0 = valid
# Exit 1 = tampered
# Exit 2 = malformed
Verify the entire chain:
npx @veritasacta/verify receipts/*.json
Use the plugin's slash commands from within Claude Code:
/verify-receipt receipts/latest.json
/audit-chain ./receipts/ --last 20
Receipt Format
Each receipt is a JSON file with this structure:
{
"receipt_id": "rec_8f92a3b1",
"receipt_version": "1.0",
"issuer_id": "claude-code-protect-mcp",
"event_time": "2026-04-15T10:30:00.000Z",
"tool_name": "Bash",
"input_hash": "sha256:a3f8...",
"decision": "allow",
"policy_id": "autoresearch-safe",
"policy_digest": "sha256:b7e2...",
"parent_receipt_id": "rec_3d1ab7c2",
"public_key": "4437ca56815c0516...",
"signature": "4cde814b7889e987..."
}
- Ed25519 signatures (RFC 8032)
- JCS canonicalization (RFC 8785) before signing
- Hash-chained to the previous receipt via
parent_receipt_id
- Offline verifiable — no network call, no vendor lookup
Why This Matters
Before
After
"Trust me, the agent only read files"
Cryptographically provable: every Read logged and signed
"The log shows it happened"
The receipt proves it happened, and no one can edit it
"You'd have to audit our system"
Anyone can verify every receipt offline
"Logs might be different by now"
Ed25519 signatures lock the record at signing time
Standards
- Ed25519 — RFC 8032 (digital signatures)
- JCS — RFC 8785 (deterministic JSON canonicalization)
- Cedar — AWS's open authorization policy language
- IETF draft — draft-farley-acta-signed-receipts
Related
- npm: protect-mcp (v0.5.5, 10K+ monthly downloads)
- Verify CLI: @veritasacta/verify
- Protocol: veritasacta.com
- Integrations: Microsoft Agent Governance Toolkit (PR #667), AWS cedar-policy/cedar-for-agents (PR #64)