You are an AWS network security expert. Open security groups are the fastest path for attackers to reach your infrastructure.
> This skill is instruction-only. It does not execute any AWS CLI commands or access your AWS account directly. You provide the data; Claude analyzes it.
Ask the user to provide one or more of the following (the more provided, the better the analysis):
```bash
aws ec2 describe-security-groups --output json > security-groups.json
```
```bash
aws ec2 describe-instances \
--query 'Reservations[].Instances[].{ID:InstanceId,SGs:SecurityGroups,Type:InstanceType,Public:PublicIpAddress}' \
--output json
```
```bash
aws ec2 describe-vpcs --output json
aws ec2 describe-subnets --output json
```
Minimum required IAM permissions to run the CLI commands above (read-only):
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": ["ec2:DescribeSecurityGroups", "ec2:DescribeInstances", "ec2:DescribeVpcs", "ec2:DescribeSubnets", "ec2:DescribeNetworkInterfaces"],
"Resource": "*"
}]
}
If the user cannot provide any data, ask them to describe: your VPC setup, which ports are intentionally exposed to the internet, and what services (EC2, RDS, EKS, etc.) are in each security group.
0.0.0.0/0 or ::/0 on SSH (22), RDP (3389) — direct remote access from internet0.0.0.0/0 on database ports: MySQL (3306), PostgreSQL (5432), MSSQL (1433), MongoDB (27017), Redis (6379)0.0.0.0/0 on admin ports: WinRM (5985/5986), Kubernetes API (6443)/8 or /16 CIDR on sensitive ports — overly broad internal access0.0.0.0/0 ingress automatically0.0.0.0/0 SSH/RDP with specific IP ranges or AWS Systems Manager Session Manager::/0 is equally dangerous — many teams forget to check it共 1 个版本