nyx/docs/dynamic.md

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# Dynamic verification
Nyx verifies every `Confidence >= Medium` finding by default: it builds
a minimal harness, runs your code's entry point against a curated payload corpus
inside a sandbox, and records the verdict in each finding's evidence block.
## Default-on semantics
```
nyx scan # verifies Medium+ findings (default)
nyx scan --no-verify # static analysis only, no harness execution
nyx scan --verify # same as default; explicit for clarity in scripts
```
`--no-verify` is the escape hatch. It overrides the config default for a single
run without changing `nyx.toml`.
### What "verified" means
A finding with `dynamic_verdict.status: Confirmed` was successfully triggered
by at least one payload in nyx's corpus. The corpus covers common patterns for
each vulnerability class (SQL injection, XSS, command injection, SSRF, etc.) per
language.
A finding with `dynamic_verdict.status: NotConfirmed` was attempted but no
payload fired. This is not a false-positive signal — it means the corpus did not
have a payload that matched the specific sink variant or the execution path was
not reachable in the test harness.
A finding with `dynamic_verdict.status: Unsupported` could not be attempted.
Common reasons: confidence below threshold, no flow steps, language or sink type
not yet supported by the harness layer.
### Confidence gate
Only `Confidence >= Medium` findings are verified by default (§5.1). To also
verify low-confidence findings — for corpus building or backfill — pass
`--verify-all-confidence`:
```
nyx scan --verify-all-confidence
```
This is not recommended for production scans because low-confidence findings have
a higher false-positive rate and the harness may produce unreliable verdicts.
## nyx.toml opt-out
If you want static-only scans permanently, set `verify = false` in `nyx.toml`:
```toml
[scanner]
verify = false
```
This survives upgrades — the M7 default flip only changes the inherited default
for projects that have not explicitly set the field.
## Sandbox backends
nyx uses docker when available, then falls back to an in-process runner:
```
nyx scan --backend docker # require docker; fail if unavailable
nyx scan --backend process # in-process runner (no container; less isolation)
nyx scan --unsafe-sandbox # alias for --backend process
```
The docker backend mounts only the entry file's directory and blocks all
outbound network by default. When out-of-band detection is enabled (`oob_listener`
in config), the container gets `--network bridge` with a host-gateway route.
## Repro artifacts
When a finding is `Confirmed`, nyx writes a repro artifact to
`~/.cache/nyx/repro/<stable_hash>/`. The artifact contains the harness spec and
the triggering payload. You can regenerate the verdict with:
```
nyx scan --verify <path> # re-scans and re-verifies
```
See `docs/output.md` for the `dynamic_verdict` field schema.
## Wall-clock cost
Verification adds harness build + sandbox startup time per finding. On typical
codebases with 1050 Medium+ findings, end-to-end overhead is 25× static-only.
If scan time is unacceptable for a given workflow (e.g. IDE integration, quick
pre-commit check), use `--no-verify` for that workflow and rely on the full scan
in CI.
## Opting in to feedback
False positives (nyx says `Confirmed` but you disagree) can be recorded:
```
nyx verify-feedback <finding_id> --wrong "reason"
```
This writes to the local telemetry log (`~/.cache/nyx/dynamic/events.jsonl`)
and contributes to precision monitoring. Feedback is never uploaded automatically.
## nyx serve integration
The browser UI shows `dynamic_verdict` in each finding's detail panel and
uses the verdict in ranking (Confirmed findings surface first). The scan compare
page has a **Verdict Diff** tab that shows which findings changed verification
status between two scans.