Semgrep Rule Creator

VerifiedSafe

Creates custom Semgrep rules for detecting security vulnerabilities and code patterns. Includes validation, testing, and false positive prevention.

Sby Skills Guide Bot
SecurityIntermediate
306/2/2026
Claude CodeCursorWindsurf
#semgrep#rule-creation#static-analysis#security#custom-rules

Recommended for

Our review

This skill creates custom Semgrep rules for detecting security vulnerabilities, bug patterns, and code patterns, with built-in testing and validation.

Strengths

  • Guided approach to write precise, tested rules.
  • Prioritizes taint mode for data flow vulnerabilities.
  • Rejects common shortcuts and anti-patterns.
  • Mandates testing before optimization.

Limitations

  • Requires prior understanding of Semgrep and AST.
  • Does not cover running existing rule sets (use another skill).
  • Rules are limited to one YAML file per rule.
When to use it

Use this skill when you need to write custom Semgrep rules to detect specific code patterns or vulnerabilities in your codebase.

When not to use it

Do not use it for running existing Semgrep rule sets or for general static analysis without need for custom rules.

Security analysis

Safe
Quality score90/100

The skill is instructional, guiding creation of Semgrep rules with no dangerous commands. Allowed tools (Bash, Read, Write, etc.) are used for file operations and running semgrep --test, which is safe. No obfuscation, data exfiltration, or system destruction risks.

No concerns found

Examples

Detect eval() usage
Create a Semgrep rule to detect the use of eval() in Python code, including tests for vulnerable and safe cases.
SQL injection taint rule
Write a Semgrep taint mode rule to find SQL injection in Java where user input flows into executeQuery().
Custom pattern for insecure crypto
Create a Semgrep rule to detect the use of weak cryptographic algorithms like MD5 in JavaScript, with test cases.

name: semgrep-rule-creator description: Creates custom Semgrep rules for detecting security vulnerabilities, bug patterns, and code patterns. Use when writing Semgrep rules or building custom static analysis detections. allowed-tools:

  • Bash
  • Read
  • Write
  • Edit
  • Glob
  • Grep
  • WebFetch

Semgrep Rule Creator

Create production-quality Semgrep rules with proper testing and validation.

When to Use

Ideal scenarios:

  • Writing Semgrep rules for specific bug patterns
  • Writing rules to detect security vulnerabilities in your codebase
  • Writing taint mode rules for data flow vulnerabilities
  • Writing rules to enforce coding standards

When NOT to Use

Do NOT use this skill for:

  • Running existing Semgrep rulesets
  • General static analysis without custom rules (use static-analysis skill)

Rationalizations to Reject

When writing Semgrep rules, reject these common shortcuts:

  • "The pattern looks complete" → Still run semgrep --test --config <rule-id>.yaml <rule-id>.<ext> to verify. Untested rules have hidden false positives/negatives.
  • "It matches the vulnerable case" → Matching vulnerabilities is half the job. Verify safe cases don't match (false positives break trust).
  • "Taint mode is overkill for this" → If data flows from user input to a dangerous sink, taint mode gives better precision than pattern matching.
  • "One test is enough" → Include edge cases: different coding styles, sanitized inputs, safe alternatives, and boundary conditions.
  • "I'll optimize the patterns first" → Write correct patterns first, optimize after all tests pass. Premature optimization causes regressions.
  • "The AST dump is too complex" → The AST reveals exactly how Semgrep sees code. Skipping it leads to patterns that miss syntactic variations.

Anti-Patterns

Too broad - matches everything, useless for detection:

# BAD: Matches any function call
pattern: $FUNC(...)

# GOOD: Specific dangerous function
pattern: eval(...)

Missing safe cases in tests - leads to undetected false positives:

# BAD: Only tests vulnerable case
# ruleid: my-rule
dangerous(user_input)

# GOOD: Include safe cases to verify no false positives
# ruleid: my-rule
dangerous(user_input)

# ok: my-rule
dangerous(sanitize(user_input))

# ok: my-rule
dangerous("hardcoded_safe_value")

Overly specific patterns - misses variations:

# BAD: Only matches exact format
pattern: os.system("rm " + $VAR)

# GOOD: Matches all os.system calls with taint tracking
mode: taint
pattern-sinks:
  - pattern: os.system(...)

Strictness Level

This workflow is strict - do not skip steps:

  • Read documentation first: See Documentation before writing Semgrep rules
  • Test-first is mandatory: Never write a rule without tests
  • 100% test pass is required: "Most tests pass" is not acceptable
  • Optimization comes last: Only simplify patterns after all tests pass
  • Avoid generic patterns: Rules must be specific, not match broad patterns
  • Prioritize taint mode: For data flow vulnerabilities
  • One YAML file - one Semgrep rule: Each YAML file must contain only one Semgrep rule; don't combine multiple rules in a single file
  • No generic rules: When targeting a specific language for Semgrep rules - avoid generic pattern matching (languages: generic)
  • Forbidden todook and todoruleid test annotations: todoruleid: <rule-id> and todook: <rule-id> annotations in tests files for future rule improvements are forbidden

Overview

This skill guides creation of Semgrep rules that detect security vulnerabilities and code patterns. Rules are created iteratively: analyze the problem, write tests first, analyze AST structure, write the rule, iterate until all tests pass, optimize the rule.

Approach selection:

  • Taint mode (prioritize): Data flow issues where untrusted input reaches dangerous sinks
  • Pattern matching: Simple syntactic patterns without data flow requirements

Why prioritize taint mode? Pattern matching finds syntax but misses context. A pattern eval($X) matches both eval(user_input) (vulnerable) and eval("safe_literal") (safe). Taint mode tracks data flow, so it only alerts when untrusted data actually reaches the sink—dramatically reducing false positives for injection vulnerabilities.

Iterating between approaches: It's okay to experiment. If you start with taint mode and it's not working well (e.g., taint doesn't propagate as expected, too many false positives/negatives), switch to pattern matching. Conversely, if pattern matching produces too many false positives on safe cases, try taint mode instead. The goal is a working rule—not rigid adherence to one approach.

Output structure - exactly 2 files in a directory named after the rule-id:

<rule-id>/
├── <rule-id>.yaml     # Semgrep rule
└── <rule-id>.<ext>    # Test file with ruleid/ok annotations

Quick Start

rules:
  - id: insecure-eval
    languages: [python]
    severity: HIGH
    message: User input passed to eval() allows code execution
    mode: taint
    pattern-sources:
      - pattern: request.args.get(...)
    pattern-sinks:
      - pattern: eval(...)

Test file (insecure-eval.py):

# ruleid: insecure-eval
eval(request.args.get('code'))

# ok: insecure-eval
eval("print('safe')")

Run tests (from rule directory): semgrep --test --config <rule-id>.yaml <rule-id>.<ext>

Quick Reference

  • For commands, pattern operators, and taint mode syntax, see quick-reference.md.
  • For detailed workflow and examples, you MUST see workflow.md

Workflow

Copy this checklist and track progress:

Semgrep Rule Progress:
- [ ] Step 1: Analyze the Problem
- [ ] Step 2: Write Tests First
- [ ] Step 3: Analyze AST structure
- [ ] Step 4: Write the rule
- [ ] Step 5: Iterate until all tests pass (semgrep --test)
- [ ] Step 6: Optimize the rule (remove redundancies, re-test)
- [ ] Step 7: Final Run

Documentation

REQUIRED: Before writing any rule, use WebFetch to read all of these 4 links with Semgrep documentation:

  1. Rule Syntax
  2. Pattern Syntax
  3. ToB Testing Handbook - Semgrep
  4. Constant propagation
  5. Writing Rules Index
Related skills