# Supply-Chain Incident Response This playbook is the ECC operator runbook for npm, GitHub Actions, and cross-ecosystem package-registry incidents. It is intentionally conservative: registry signatures, provenance, and trusted publishing are useful signals, but they do not prove that the workflow executed the intended code path. ## Current External Trigger As of 2026-05-13, the active incident class is the May 2026 TanStack npm supply-chain compromise: - TanStack reported 84 malicious versions across 42 `@tanstack/*` packages, published on 2026-05-11 between 19:20 and 19:26 UTC. - GitHub advisory `GHSA-g7cv-rxg3-hmpx` / `CVE-2026-45321` describes install-time malware that harvests cloud credentials, GitHub tokens, npm credentials, Vault tokens, Kubernetes tokens, and SSH private keys. - The attack chain combined `pull_request_target`, GitHub Actions cache poisoning across a fork/base trust boundary, and OIDC token extraction from a GitHub Actions runner. - npm trusted publishing/provenance can confirm a package came from a bound CI identity. It cannot by itself prove that the CI cache, lifecycle scripts, or publish path were safe. Primary references: - - - - - ## ECC Exposure Check Run this before a release candidate, after a broad dependency bump, and after any package-registry incident. ```bash rg -n '(@tanstack|mistralai|uipath|opensearch|guardrails|axios)' \ package.json package-lock.json .opencode/package.json .opencode/package-lock.json npm ci --ignore-scripts npm audit signatures npm audit --audit-level=high node scripts/ci/validate-workflow-security.js node tests/scripts/npm-publish-surface.test.js node tests/run-all.js ``` If a search hit appears only in documentation examples, note it in the release evidence but do not rotate credentials for a docs-only reference. ## Immediate Response If ECC or a maintainer machine installed a known-bad package version: 1. Stop the host from publishing or deploying. 2. Preserve evidence before cleanup: - package manager command history; - `package-lock.json`, `pnpm-lock.yaml`, or `yarn.lock`; - CI run URLs and runner logs; - npm package versions and tarball integrity hashes; - outbound network logs where available. 3. Treat the install host as compromised if lifecycle scripts may have run. 4. Rotate every credential reachable by the process: - npm automation tokens and maintainer tokens; - GitHub PATs, fine-grained tokens, deploy keys, and Actions secrets; - cloud credentials, Vault tokens, Kubernetes service-account tokens, SSH keys, and local `.npmrc` tokens; - any MCP, plugin, or harness credentials available in environment variables or user-scope config. 5. Purge GitHub Actions caches for affected repositories. 6. Reinstall from a clean environment with `npm ci --ignore-scripts` first. 7. Re-enable lifecycle scripts only after the dependency tree and package versions are pinned to known-clean releases. ## GitHub Actions Rules ECC enforces these rules through `scripts/ci/validate-workflow-security.js`: - privileged workflows must not checkout untrusted PR refs; - workflows with write permissions must use `npm ci --ignore-scripts`; - workflows with `id-token: write` must not restore or save shared dependency caches; - workflows that run `npm audit` must also run `npm audit signatures`; - `pull_request_target` workflows must not restore or save shared dependency caches. Treat any violation as a release blocker. ## Publication Rules Before tagging or publishing ECC: 1. Verify there is no unexpected dependency on packages in the active advisory. 2. Use a clean checkout or throwaway worktree for release commands. 3. Do not mix PR/test caches with publish jobs. 4. Keep `id-token: write` limited to release workflows that do not use shared dependency caches. 5. Prefer trusted publishing/provenance where supported, while still requiring local package-surface tests and registry-signature verification. 6. Confirm npm dist-tag, GitHub release, Claude plugin, Codex plugin, and OpenCode package state in the publication-readiness evidence document. ## When To Escalate Escalate to a maintainer security review before any release or merge if: - a dependency lockfile references a package named in an active advisory; - a workflow combines `pull_request_target` with dependency installation, cache restore/save, PR-head checkout, or write permissions; - a release workflow combines `id-token: write` with shared cache usage; - a publish workflow uses a long-lived npm token without a documented reason; - AgentShield, GitGuardian, Dependabot, npm audit, or registry-signature checks disagree.