ONVIF device security scanner for testing authentication and brute-forcing credentials. Use when you need to assess security of IP cameras or ONVIF-enabled devices.
This skill inherits all available tools. When active, it can use any tool Claude has access to.
You are helping the user scan ONVIF devices for security issues including authentication bypasses and weak credentials using the onvifscan tool.
Onvifscan is an ONVIF device security scanner that can:
When the user asks to scan ONVIF devices, test IP cameras, or assess IoT device security:
Determine scan type:
auth: Authentication and access control testing (recommended to start)brute: Credential brute-forcing on password-protected endpointsGet target information:
Execute the scan:
onvifscan <subcommand> <url> [options]Tests ONVIF endpoints for authentication requirements:
onvifscan auth http://192.168.1.100
Options:
-v, --verbose: Show full XML responses-a, --all: Test ALL endpoints including potentially destructive ones--format text|json|quiet: Output formatAttempts credential brute-forcing on protected endpoints:
onvifscan brute http://192.168.1.100
Options:
--usernames <file>: Custom usernames wordlist (default: built-in onvif-usernames.txt)--passwords <file>: Custom passwords wordlist (default: built-in onvif-passwords.txt)--format text|json|quiet: Output formatQuick auth check on a device:
onvifscan auth 192.168.1.100
Auth check with verbose output:
onvifscan auth http://192.168.1.100:8080 -v
Brute force with custom wordlists:
onvifscan brute 192.168.1.100 --usernames custom-users.txt --passwords custom-pass.txt
http:// - it will be added automatically-a flag with caution - may test destructive endpointswordlists/ directory