@pi-vault/pi-guardrails

Pi extension for damage control - prevents dangerous operations, protects env files, gates destructive commands

Packages

Package details

extension

Install @pi-vault/pi-guardrails from npm and Pi will load the resources declared by the package manifest.

$ pi install npm:@pi-vault/pi-guardrails
Package
@pi-vault/pi-guardrails
Version
0.1.0
Published
Jun 20, 2026
Downloads
not available
Author
lanhhoang
License
MIT
Types
extension
Size
48.9 KB
Dependencies
1 dependency · 2 peers
Pi manifest JSON
{
  "extensions": [
    "./src/index.ts"
  ]
}

Security note

Pi packages can execute code and influence agent behavior. Review the source before installing third-party packages.

README

@pi-vault/pi-guardrails

npm version Quality Node >=22.19.0 License: MIT

Damage control for the Pi coding agent. Protects sensitive files, enforces workspace boundaries, and gates dangerous commands so a runaway tool call never wrecks your day.

Install

pi install npm:@pi-vault/pi-guardrails

Reload Pi after install:

/reload

To try a local checkout before publishing:

pi -e /absolute/path/to/pi-guardrails

Quick Start

pi-guardrails works out of the box — no configuration needed.

Any tool call the agent (or a ! user command) tries to make goes through three checks: sensitive paths, workspace boundary, and dangerous commands. Each check produces a three-state decision:

  • Allow — run silently.
  • Ask — show a three-button dialog: Allow once, Allow for session, Deny.
  • Deny — block with a clear reason.

Allow for session remembers the decision for the same action for the rest of the session, so repeated runs of the same safe command don't keep prompting.

What it does

  • Sensitive file protection — blocks reads and writes to .env, .env.*, .dev.vars, .git/**, ~/.ssh/**, ~/.aws/**, and ~/.gnupg/**. Exception patterns allow .env.example, .env.test, *.example.env, and *.pub SSH keys.
  • Workspace boundary enforcement — file actions that target paths outside the current working directory prompt for confirmation by default.
  • Bash command allowlist — known-safe commands (ls, cat, git status, git log, npm install, etc.) run without prompting.
  • Bash command denylist — known-dangerous patterns (rm -rf /, mkfs, dd if=/dev/zero, fork bomb, etc.) are always blocked.
  • Shell composition detection — commands using &&, ||, ;, |, >, >>, <, <<, $(...), or backticks prompt for confirmation.
  • Bash path extraction — sensitive files are blocked even when accessed via an allowlisted command (e.g. cat .env, grep ~/.ssh/id_rsa).
  • Symlink resolution — file paths are canonicalized before rules run, so a symlink inside the workspace pointing to ~/.aws/credentials is still blocked.
  • Session-scoped approvals — once you approve an action for the session, the same action bypasses checks for the rest of the session.
  • Fail-closed — when no interactive UI is available, Ask decisions block instead of silently allowing. Rule errors are treated as dangerous.
  • Three-state decision modelsensitive-path and dangerous-command always deny. outside-workspace and shell-composition follow your policy (ask or deny). Everything else asks.

Default Behavior

Action Default
Reading or writing a sensitive file (.env, ~/.ssh/, ~/.aws/, .git/, ~/.gnupg/) Deny
Running a known-dangerous command (rm -rf /, mkfs, fork bomb, etc.) Deny
Accessing a file or directory outside the current workspace Ask
Running a shell command with &&, |, >, $(), backticks, etc. Ask
Running a command not in the safe-command list (e.g. git commit, npm publish) Ask
Running a safe command (ls, cat, git status, npm install, etc.) Allow

What It Protects

Always denied paths

  • Environment files.env, .env.local, .env.production, .dev.vars. Exception: .env.example, .env.test, .env.sample, *.example.env.
  • Git internals — everything under .git/.
  • SSH keys~/.ssh/id_rsa, ~/.ssh/config, etc. Exception: *.pub (public keys).
  • AWS credentials — everything under ~/.aws/.
  • GnuPG keys — everything under ~/.gnupg/.

Always denied commands

  • rm -rf /, rm -rf ~, rm -rf /*
  • :(){ :|:& };: (the fork bomb)
  • mkfs, dd if=/dev/zero, dd if=/dev/random
  • > /dev/sda, shred, wipefs, blkdiscard

Configuration

Create a config file to override the defaults. The default location is resolved by your pi settings. All fields are optional — missing ones fall back to built-in defaults.

{
  "enabled": true,
  "protectedPaths": [
    {
      "id": "env-files",
      "enabled": false
    }
  ],
  "bashAllowlist": ["my-custom-readonly-tool"],
  "bashDenylist": ["my-custom-evil-command"],
  "outsideWorkspacePolicy": "ask",
  "shellOperatorPolicy": "ask",
  "debug": false
}

Top-level fields

  • enabled — set to false to disable every check without uninstalling. Default: true.
  • protectedPaths — array of rules matched against file paths. Override a default rule by its id or append a new one. See Protected path rules.
  • bashAllowlist — array of single-word or multi-word prefixes. git status matches git status --short but not git statusbar. Merged with the default allowlist. Default: ~95 safe commands.
  • bashDenylist — array of substring patterns matched against the full command. Merged with the default denylist. Default: 11 dangerous patterns.
  • outsideWorkspacePolicy — what to do when a file action targets a path outside the current directory. "ask" (default) or "deny".
  • shellOperatorPolicy — what to do when a bash command uses &&, |, >, etc. "ask" (default) or "deny".
  • debug — when true, logs every Ask decision to console.debug in addition to the default console.warn for blocks. Default: false.

Protected path rules

{
  "id": "my-secret-files",
  "description": "Project-specific secrets",
  "patterns": [{ "pattern": "secrets/**" }],
  "allowedPatterns": [{ "pattern": "secrets/public/**" }],
  "enabled": true
}
  • id — stable identifier used to override or disable a default rule by id.
  • description — human-readable label shown in block reasons.
  • patterns — array of file or directory patterns to protect.
  • allowedPatterns — optional exceptions (e.g. .env.example).
  • enabled — set to false to skip this rule. Default: true.

Patterns support glob (*, **) by default and case-insensitive regex when "regex": true. A pattern with no / matches the basename anywhere; a pattern with / matches the full path. A leading ~ is expanded to your home directory.

Invalid patterns (bad regex, empty string) disable just that rule and log a warning — they never throw or silently disable the whole extension.

Disable All Checks

Set the master switch:

{ "enabled": false }

Or disable a single rule by id:

{
  "protectedPaths": [
    { "id": "env-files", "enabled": false }
  ]
}

Compatibility

  • Node >=22.19.0
  • Peer dependencies: @earendil-works/pi-coding-agent, @earendil-works/pi-tui
  • Intended for Pi sessions with package and extension support

Development

pnpm install
pnpm check
pnpm pack --dry-run

License

MIT