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--- ## What is Nyx? **Nyx** is a lightweight, lightning-fast Rust-native command-line tool that detects security vulnerabilities across 10 programming languages. It combines [`tree-sitter`](https://tree-sitter.github.io/) parsing, intra-procedural control-flow graphs, and cross-file taint analysis with an optional SQLite-backed index to deliver deep, repeatable scans on projects of any size. --- ## Key Capabilities | Capability | Description | |---|---| | Multi-language support | Rust, C, C++, Java, Go, PHP, Python, Ruby, TypeScript, JavaScript | | AST-level pattern matching | Language-specific queries written against precise parse trees | | Control-flow graph analysis | Auth gaps, unguarded sinks, unreachable security code, resource leaks, error fallthrough | | Cross-file taint tracking | BFS taint propagation from sources through sanitizers to sinks with function summaries | | Cross-language interop | Taint flows across language boundaries via explicit interop edges | | Two-pass architecture | Pass 1 extracts function summaries; Pass 2 runs taint with full cross-file context | | Incremental indexing | SQLite database stores file hashes, summaries, and findings to skip unchanged files | | Parallel execution | File walking and analysis run concurrently via Rayon; scales with available CPU cores | | Configurable analysis rules | Define custom sources, sanitizers, sinks, terminators, and event handlers per language via TOML config or CLI | | Configurable scan parameters | Exclude directories, set maximum file size, tune worker threads, limit output, and more | | Multiple output formats | Console (default), JSON, and SARIF 2.1.0 for CI integration | | Progress reporting | Real-time progress bars for file discovery and analysis passes | --- ## Why choose Nyx? | Advantage | What it means for you | |---|---| | **Pure-Rust, single binary** | No JVM, Python, or server to install; drop the `nyx` executable into your `$PATH` and go. | | **Massively parallel** | Uses Rayon and a thread-pool walker; scales to all CPU cores. Scanning the entire **rust-lang/rust** codebase (~53,000 files) on an M2 MacBook Pro takes **~1 s**. | | **Deep analysis** | Real CFG construction and taint propagation, not just regex matching. Cross-file function summaries, capability-based sanitizer tracking, and scored findings. | | **Index-aware** | An optional SQLite index stores file hashes and findings; subsequent scans touch *only* changed files, slashing CI times. | | **Offline & privacy-friendly** | Requires no login, cloud account, or telemetry. Perfect for air-gapped environments and strict compliance policies. | | **Tree-sitter precision** | Parses real language grammars, not regexes, giving far fewer false positives than line-based scanners. | | **Extensible** | Add new patterns with concise `tree-sitter` queries; no SaaS lock-in. | --- ## Installation ### Install crate ```bash $ cargo install nyx-scanner ``` ### Install Github release 1. Navigate to the [Releases](https://github.com/ecpeter23/nyx/releases) page of the repository. 2. Download the appropriate binary for your system: ```nyx-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zip``` for Linux ```nyx-x86_64-pc-windows-msvc.zip``` for Windows ```nyx-x86_64-apple-darwin.zip``` or ```nyx-aarch64-apple-darwin.zip``` for macOS (Intel or Apple Silicon) 3. Unzip the file and move the executable to a directory in your system PATH: ```bash # Example for Unix systems unzip nyx-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu.zip chmod +x nyx sudo mv nyx /usr/local/bin/ ``` ```bash # Example for Windows in PowerShell Expand-Archive -Path nyx-x86_64-pc-windows-msvc.zip -DestinationPath . Move-Item -Path .\nyx.exe -Destination "C:\Program Files\Nyx\" # Add to PATH manually if needed ``` 4. Verify the installation: ```bash nyx --version ``` ### Build from source ```bash $ git clone https://github.com/ecpeter23/nyx.git $ cd nyx $ cargo build --release # optional – copy the binary into PATH $ cargo install --path . ``` Nyx targets **stable Rust 1.85 or later**. --- ## Quick Start ```bash # Scan the current directory (creates/uses an index automatically) $ nyx scan # Scan a specific path and emit JSON $ nyx scan ./server --format json # Emit SARIF 2.1.0 for CI integration (GitHub Code Scanning, etc.) $ nyx scan --format sarif > results.sarif # Perform an ad-hoc scan without touching the index $ nyx scan --no-index # Restrict results to high-severity findings $ nyx scan --high-only # AST pattern matching only (fastest, no CFG/taint) $ nyx scan --ast-only # CFG + taint analysis only (skip AST pattern rules) $ nyx scan --cfg-only # Include test/vendor/benchmark paths at original severity # (by default these are downgraded one tier) $ nyx scan --include-nonprod ``` ### Index Management ```bash # Create or rebuild an index $ nyx index build [PATH] [--force] # Display index metadata (size, modified date, etc.) $ nyx index status [PATH] # List all indexed projects (add -v for detailed view) $ nyx list [-v] # Remove a single project or purge all indexes $ nyx clean $ nyx clean --all ``` ### Configuration Management ```bash # Print the effective merged configuration $ nyx config show # Print the config directory path $ nyx config path # Add a custom sanitizer rule (written to nyx.local) $ nyx config add-rule --lang javascript --matcher escapeHtml --kind sanitizer --cap html_escape # Add a terminator function $ nyx config add-terminator --lang javascript --name process.exit ``` --- ## Analysis Modes Nyx supports three analysis modes, selectable via the `scanner.mode` config option or CLI flags: | Mode | CLI flag | What runs | |---|---|---| | **Full** (default) | — | AST pattern matching + CFG construction + taint analysis | | **AST-only** | `--ast-only` | AST pattern matching only; skips CFG and taint entirely | | **Taint-only** | `--cfg-only` | CFG + taint analysis only; filters out AST pattern findings | ### What the CFG + taint engine detects | Finding | Rule ID | Description | |---|---|---| | Tainted data flow | `taint-*` | Untrusted data (env vars, user input, file reads) flowing to dangerous sinks (shell exec, SQL, file write) without matching sanitization | | Unguarded sink | `cfg-unguarded-sink` | Sink calls not dominated by a guard or sanitizer on the control-flow path | | Auth gap | `cfg-auth-gap` | Web handler functions that reach privileged sinks without an auth check | | Unreachable security code | `cfg-unreachable-*` | Sanitizers, guards, or sinks in dead code branches | | Error fallthrough | `cfg-error-fallthrough` | Error-handling branches that don't terminate, allowing execution to fall through to dangerous operations | | Resource leak | `cfg-resource-leak` | Resources acquired but not released on all exit paths (malloc/free, fopen/fclose, Lock/Unlock) | Findings are scored and ranked by severity, proximity to entry point, path complexity, and taint confirmation. --- ## Supported Languages All 10 languages have full AST pattern matching and CFG/taint analysis. Resource leak detection is available where language-specific acquire/release pairs are defined. | Language | AST Patterns | CFG + Taint | Resource Leaks | |---|---|---|---| | Rust | Yes | Yes | Yes | | C | Yes | Yes | Yes | | C++ | Yes | Yes | Yes | | Java | Yes | Yes | Yes | | Go | Yes | Yes | Yes | | PHP | Yes | Yes | Yes | | Python | Yes | Yes | Yes | | Ruby | Yes | Yes | Yes | | TypeScript | Yes | Yes | Yes | | JavaScript | Yes | Yes | Yes | --- ## Configuration Overview Nyx merges a default configuration file (`nyx.conf`) with user overrides (`nyx.local`). Both live in the platform-specific configuration directory shown below. | Platform | Directory | |---|---| | Linux | `~/.config/nyx/` | | macOS | `~/Library/Application Support/dev.ecpeter23.nyx/` | | Windows | `%APPDATA%\ecpeter23\nyx\config\` | Minimal example (`nyx.local`): ```toml [scanner] mode = "full" # full | ast | taint min_severity = "Medium" follow_symlinks = true excluded_extensions = ["mp3", "mp4"] [output] default_format = "json" max_results = 200 quiet = true # suppress status messages [performance] worker_threads = 8 # 0 = auto-detect batch_size = 200 channel_multiplier = 2 ``` ### Custom Analysis Rules You can define custom sources, sanitizers, sinks, terminators, and event handlers per language. These take priority over built-in rules, letting you teach Nyx about project-specific functions. ```toml [analysis.languages.javascript] terminators = ["process.exit"] event_handlers = ["addEventListener"] [[analysis.languages.javascript.rules]] matchers = ["escapeHtml"] kind = "sanitizer" # "source" | "sanitizer" | "sink" cap = "html_escape" # "env_var" | "html_escape" | "shell_escape" | # "url_encode" | "json_parse" | "file_io" | "all" [[analysis.languages.javascript.rules]] matchers = ["dangerouslySetHTML"] kind = "sink" cap = "html_escape" ``` Rules can also be added interactively via `nyx config add-rule` and `nyx config add-terminator`. A fully documented `nyx.conf` is generated automatically on first run. --- ## Architecture in Brief Nyx uses a **two-pass architecture** to enable cross-file analysis without sacrificing parallelism: 1. **File enumeration** -- A parallel walker (Rayon + `ignore` crate) applies gitignore rules, size limits, and user exclusions. 2. **Pass 1 -- Summary extraction** -- Each file is parsed via tree-sitter, an intra-procedural CFG is built (petgraph), and a `FuncSummary` is exported per function capturing source/sanitizer/sink capabilities (bitflags), taint propagation behavior, and callee lists. Summaries are persisted to SQLite. 3. **Summary merge** -- All per-file summaries are merged into a `GlobalSummaries` map with conservative conflict resolution (union caps, OR booleans). 4. **Pass 2 -- Analysis** -- Files are re-parsed and analyzed with the full cross-file context: BFS taint propagation resolves callees against local and global summaries, CFG analysis checks for auth gaps, unguarded sinks, resource leaks, and more. 5. **Reporting** -- Findings are scored, ranked, deduplicated, and emitted to the console or serialized as JSON. With indexing enabled, Pass 1 skips files whose blake3 content hash is unchanged, and cached findings are served directly for AST-only results. --- ## Roadmap ### Phase 1 -- Deep Static Engine | Feature | Description | |---|---| | Interprocedural call graph | Precise symbol resolution via `FuncKey`, language-scoped namespaces, cross-module linking. No name-collision merging -- full call graph with topological analysis. | | Path-sensitive analysis | Track path predicates and conditional constraints. Detect infeasible paths and validation-only-in-one-branch patterns. Dramatically reduces false positives. | | Dataflow & state modeling | Resource state machines (init -> use -> close), auth state transitions, privilege level tracking. Semantic analysis beyond pattern matching. | | Attack surface ranking | Score entry points by distance-to-sink, guard strength, path complexity, and privilege escalation potential. Deterministic attack surface scoring. | ### Phase 2 -- Dynamic Capability | Feature | Description | |---|---| | Controlled dynamic execution | Local sandbox: identify entry points, spin up test harnesses, inject payloads, detect runtime crashes and command execution. Deterministic automated exploit validation -- static finds `exec(user_input)`, dynamic confirms it with `; id`. | | Fuzzing integration | libFuzzer (C/C++), cargo-fuzz (Rust), go-fuzz, HTTP fuzzing harness. Static engine identifies interesting functions, fuzzer targets only those. | ### Phase 3 -- Intelligent Reasoning Layer | Feature | Description | |---|---| | Semantic similarity | Embeddings for finding similar vulnerability patterns across codebases. | | LLM reasoning | AI-assisted detection of non-obvious logic bugs. | | Exploit refinement | Automated loops to refine and validate exploit chains. | ### Other planned improvements | Area | Details | |---|---| | Output formats | JUnit XML, HTML report generator | | Language coverage | Expanded taint rules per language | | Rule updates | Remote rule feed with signature verification | | UX | Smart file-watch re-scan | Community feedback shapes priorities -- please [open an issue](https://github.com/ecpeter23/nyx/issues) to discuss proposed changes. --- ## Contributing Pull requests are welcome. To contribute: 1. Fork the repository and create a feature branch. 2. Adhere to `rustfmt` and ensure `cargo clippy --all -- -D warnings` passes. 3. Add unit and/or integration tests where applicable (`cargo test` should remain green). 4. Submit a concise, well-documented pull request. Please open an issue for any crash, panic, or suspicious result -- attach the minimal code snippet and mention the Nyx version. See `CONTRIBUTING.md` for full guidelines. --- ## License Nyx is licensed under the **GNU General Public License v3.0 (GPL-3.0)**. This ensures that all modified versions of the scanner remain free and open-source, protecting the integrity and transparency of security tools. See [LICENSE](./LICENSE) for full details.