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300 lines
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Markdown
300 lines
16 KiB
Markdown
# Language Maturity Matrix
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Nyx supports ten languages, but support depth is not uniform. This page gives an
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honest per-language picture so you can calibrate expectations before depending
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on Nyx for a given stack.
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The classifications here are grounded in three concrete signals:
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1. **Rule depth**: how many distinct source / sanitizer / sink matchers exist
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for the language in `src/labels/<lang>.rs`, and how many vulnerability
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classes (Cap bits) those matchers cover.
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2. **Benchmark results**: rule-level precision / recall / F1 on the 492-case
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corpus in
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[`tests/benchmark/RESULTS.md`](https://github.com/elicpeter/nyx/blob/master/tests/benchmark/RESULTS.md).
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3. **Known weak spots**: FPs and FNs the maintainers have deliberately left
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in the benchmark rather than suppressed, plus structural engine
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limitations the corpus does not stress, documented in
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[`RESULTS.md`](https://github.com/elicpeter/nyx/blob/master/tests/benchmark/RESULTS.md).
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The synthetic corpus has effectively saturated: every
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real-CVE fixture fires and rule-level precision and recall are both 100%.
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All ten languages report rule-level F1 = 100.0%. Aggregate rule-level
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P=1.000, R=1.000, F1=1.000. That means F1 alone no longer differentiates
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tiers, so the differentiators are **rule depth**, **gated-sink coverage**,
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and **structural idioms the corpus does not fully stress** (deep pointer
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aliasing in C/C++, framework-specific context). All parser integrations
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use tree-sitter and are stable; parsing is not a differentiator.
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---
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## Tier Summary
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| Tier | Languages | F1 | What to expect |
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|------|-----------|----|----------------|
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| **Stable** | Python, JavaScript, TypeScript | 100% | Deep rule sets, gated sinks (argument-role-aware), framework detection, extensive fixtures, and the bulk of advanced-analysis (SSA two-level solve, context-sensitivity, symbolic execution, abstract interpretation) coverage. Safe to depend on in CI gates. |
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| **Beta** | Go, Java, PHP, Ruby, Rust | 100% | Solid mid-depth rule sets with narrower cap coverage and **no gated sinks**. Cross-file flows work; some idioms (variable-typed method receivers, framework context, string interpolation, match-arm guards) are partially modeled. Usable in CI; review FP/FN lists before tightening gates. |
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| **Preview** | C, C++ | 100% on synthetic corpus | Recent work taught the engine to follow taint through `std::vector` / `std::string` / map containers (including `c_str()`), through fluent builder chains like `Socket::builder().host(h).connect()`, and through inline class member functions. Function pointers and deeper pointer aliasing through `*p` / `p->field` are still not tracked. Rule-level scores against a corpus of obvious unsafe-API uses look perfect, but that is not the same as a clean audit on a real codebase. Pair with clang-tidy, Clang Static Analyzer, or Infer. |
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---
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## Per-Language Detail
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### Stable tier
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#### Python: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(46-case corpus)*
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- **Rule depth**: 5 source families, 7 sanitizer families, 21 sink matchers
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spanning HTML, URL, Shell, SQL, Code, SSRF, File I/O, and Deserialization.
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- **Framework context**: Flask, Django, argparse source matchers; `flask_request`
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import-alias support.
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- **Advanced analysis**: gated sinks (`Popen`, `subprocess.run/call` with
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activation-arg awareness), most SSA-equivalence and symbolic-execution
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fixtures target Python.
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- **Fixtures**: 125 under `tests/fixtures/` plus 42 benchmark cases.
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- **Blind spots**: f-string interpolation is not explicitly modeled as a
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distinct taint-producing construct; string-formatting flows are caught by
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the general concatenation path.
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#### JavaScript: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(42-case corpus)*
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- **Rule depth**: 3 source families, 10 sanitizer families, 24 sink matchers
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spanning HTML, URL, JSON, Shell, SQL, Code, SSRF, and File I/O.
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- **Advanced analysis**: gated sinks (`setAttribute`, `parseFromString`),
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two-level SSA solve for top-level + per-function scopes
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(`analyse_ssa_js_two_level`), prefix-locked SSRF suppression via
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StringFact, abstract-interpretation interval tracking.
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- **Framework context**: Express, Koa, Fastify (via in-file import scan when
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`package.json` is absent).
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- **Fixtures**: 238 under `tests/fixtures/`; the largest fixture set of any
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language.
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- **Blind spots**: template literals are lowered through concatenation rather
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than modeled as a first-class taint operator; dynamic property access
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(`obj[user]`) is conservatively treated.
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#### TypeScript: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(47-case corpus)*
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- **Rule depth**: Shares the JS ruleset (3 sources, 10 sanitizers, 24 sinks)
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plus TS-specific grammar handling.
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- **Advanced analysis**: TSX and JSX grammars wired;
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discriminated-union narrowing, generic erasure, decorator flow, and
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interface dispatch are all validated against adversarial type-system
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stressors.
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- **Framework context**: Fastify detection via `detect_in_file_frameworks`
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(import-driven, no `package.json` required).
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- **Fixtures**: 39 test fixtures plus 42 benchmark cases.
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- **Blind spots**: `as any` casts and `any`-typed flows are handled
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conservatively (treated as tainted).
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### Beta tier
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#### Go: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(56-case corpus)*
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- **Rule depth**: 4 source families, 4 sanitizer families, 9 sink matchers
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covering HTML, URL, Shell, SQL, SSRF, Crypto, and File I/O.
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- **Framework context**: Gin, Echo source matchers.
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- **Recent fix**: `strings.ReplaceAll` is now recognised as a CMDi sanitiser
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in chain-wrapper / call-site-replace shapes, clearing the last open
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Go safe-fixture FP (`go-safe-009`, `validate(s string)` wrapping a
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`strings.ReplaceAll` over `;`).
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- **Known gaps**: no gated sinks, no deserialization class. `fmt.Sprintf`
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is deliberately not a sink. Cap coverage is narrower than the Stable
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tier and argument-role-aware sink modeling is not yet implemented for Go,
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so production CI gates may surface additional FPs the corpus does not
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exercise.
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#### Java: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(35-case corpus)*
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- **Rule depth**: 3 source families, 8 sanitizer families, 10 sink matchers
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covering HTML, URL, Shell, SQL, Code, SSRF, and Deserialization.
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- **Framework context**: Spring, JPA, Hibernate ORM rules; JNDI injection
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sinks.
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- **Known gaps**: no gated sinks. Variable-receiver method calls
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(`client.send(...)` vs `HttpClient.send(...)`) rely on type-qualified
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resolution from receiver-type inference; flows where the receiver type
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cannot be inferred are conservatively over-tainted on unusual builder
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chains.
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#### PHP: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(37-case corpus)*
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- **Rule depth**: 3 source families (`$_GET`, `$_POST`, `$_REQUEST`
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superglobals), 7 sanitizer families, 10 sink matchers covering HTML, URL,
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Shell, SQL, Code, SSRF, File I/O, and Deserialization.
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- **Known gaps**: no gated sinks. Limited framework context (Laravel raw
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methods only). `echo` language-construct detection is wired but its
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inner-argument propagation is narrower than function-call sinks.
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#### Ruby: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(39-case corpus)*
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- **Rule depth**: 3 source families, 7 sanitizer families, 16 sink matchers
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covering HTML, Shell, SQL, Code, SSRF, File I/O, and Deserialization. SSRF
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coverage includes `URI.open` and the low-level `OpenURI.open_uri` it
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delegates to (the canonical CarrierWave CVE-2021-21288 sink).
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Statement-level chained-call wrappers
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(`YAML.safe_load(File.read(filename))`, `Marshal.load(File.read(p))`,
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`String.new(File.read(x))`) classify the inner sink for cross-function
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summary extraction so the outer call does not strip the sink classification
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on the helper.
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- **Framework context**: Rails helpers (`sanitize_sql`, `permit`, `require`).
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- **Known gaps**: string interpolation inside shell and SQL strings is
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recognized structurally but not modeled as a distinct operator.
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`begin/rescue/ensure` exception-edge wiring is documented as deferred
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(structurally incompatible with `build_try()`).
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#### Rust: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(70-case adversarial corpus)*
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Rust holds the largest per-language adversarial corpus. PathFact-driven
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path-domain narrowing covers the `rs-safe-*` regression set.
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- **Rule depth**: 6 source families, **2** sanitizer families (prefix and
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type-coercion), 11 sink matchers covering HTML, Shell, SQL, SSRF,
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Deserialization, and File I/O. Extensive framework source coverage
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(Axum, Actix, Rocket); the most of any language on the source side. The
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narrow sanitizer count is the primary reason Rust is not in the Stable
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tier. Engine-side path/typed sanitizer recognition (PathFact) compensates,
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but the ruleset itself is shallow.
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- **Coverage**: SQL class (`rusqlite`, `sqlx`, `diesel`, `postgres`),
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Deserialization class (`serde_yaml`, `bincode`, `rmp_serde`, `ciborium`,
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`ron`, `toml`), file I/O (`fs::remove_file/dir/rename/copy`), and the
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`reqwest` SSRF builder chain.
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- **PathFact-narrowed shapes** (`src/abstract_interp/path_domain.rs` plus
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per-return-path PathFact entries on `SsaFuncSummary`) cover
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`.replace("..","")` sanitisers, negative-validation returns, match-arm
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guards via condition lifting, static-map lookups,
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`.contains("..")` + `.starts_with('/')` rejection, Option-returning
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user sanitisers, `Path::new(p).is_absolute()` typed rejection,
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cross-function `.contains("..")` rejection, and the
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`CVE-2018-20997` / `CVE-2022-36113` / `CVE-2024-24576` patch shapes.
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- **Not yet covered**: unsafe FFI / `std::mem::transmute` (no rules), Tokio
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`process::Command` async variants (not distinguished from sync),
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`hyper` / `surf` / `ureq` SSRF clients (reqwest family only).
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### Preview tier
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C and C++ remain **Preview** despite reporting 100% rule-level F1 on the
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synthetic corpus. The engine follows taint through STL containers, builder
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chains, inline member functions, and the wider `std::sto*` family, so the
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gap between "passes the synthetic corpus" and "would catch the same flow
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on a real codebase" is narrower than the synthetic numbers suggest. It is
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not zero. The biggest remaining gaps are deep pointer aliasing and function
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pointers, both of which are pervasive in real C/C++ code. Treat a clean
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report as a starting point, not an audit. Pair Nyx with clang-tidy, the
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Clang Static Analyzer, or Infer for production use.
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**What works:**
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- STL container flow. `vec.push_back(tainted)` followed by
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`vec.front().c_str()` carries taint into a downstream `system()` sink.
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`std::map::insert_or_assign`, `find`, `count`, `at`, and `data` all
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participate in the container store/load model.
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- Inline class member functions. `class C { void run(...) { ... } };`
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bodies are now extracted as their own functions, so an intra-file call
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like `inner.run(input)` resolves to the body summary. Same fix covers
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`struct_specifier`, `union_specifier`, `enum_specifier`,
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`template_declaration`, and `extern "C"` blocks.
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- Lambda passthrough. `auto echo = [](const char* s) { return s; };` carries
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argument taint into the result via the engine's default call-argument
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propagation.
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- Builder chains. `Socket::builder().host(user).port(8080).connect()`
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resolves the chained returns and fires on `.connect()` when `user` is
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tainted; the safe variant with a hardcoded host stays quiet.
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- Wider numeric sanitizer family. The full `std::sto*` set (including
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`stoll`, `stoull`, `stold`) and the C-stdlib forms (`atoi`, `atof`,
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`strtol`, etc.) clear all caps when they're called.
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- More header / source extensions. `.cc`, `.cxx`, `.hpp`, `.hxx`, `.hh`,
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and `.h++` are recognized as C++ on top of `.cpp` and `.c++`. `.h` is
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intentionally still routed to C since it's ambiguous without a build
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system.
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**Still not modeled** (common to both C and C++):
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- Deep pointer aliasing. Taint through `*p`, `p->field`, and arbitrary
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pointer arithmetic is not tracked through arbitrary aliased writes.
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Field-sensitive points-to (see [Advanced analysis](advanced-analysis.md))
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handles the "lock on a sub-field" case but is not a general escape
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analysis.
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- Function pointers and callback dispatch. An indirect call through
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`void (*fn)(char *)` resolves to no callee, so cross-pointer flows are
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invisible.
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- Array-element taint by index. Writes to `buf[i]` do not always propagate
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taint to `buf` as a whole; subscript-handling helps the general case but
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doesn't make `buf` an alias for every element.
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- Nested classes beyond one level (C++ only).
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#### C: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(30-case corpus)*
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- **Rule depth**: 3 source families, **2** sanitizer families (the
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`sanitize_*` prefix and numeric-parse functions), 5 sink matchers spanning
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Shell, File, SSRF, and Format-String.
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- **Known gaps**: no framework rules, no gated sinks. The structural
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limitations listed above are the dominant concern; rule additions alone
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will not lift this language out of the Preview tier.
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#### C++: 100% P / 100% R / 100% F1 *(33-case corpus, plus 6 new fixtures for STL / builder / inline-method flows)*
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- **Rule depth**: Builds on the C ruleset with `std::cin` / `std::getline`
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sources and a wider numeric-sanitizer set covering the full `std::sto*`
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family (3 sources, 3 sanitizer families, 5 sinks).
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- **Known gaps**: still no framework rules and no gated sinks. The
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structural blind spots are now narrower than they were a release ago
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(see "What now works" above), but function pointers and the harder
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pointer-aliasing patterns still produce false negatives.
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---
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## How the tiers were assigned
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Because rule-level F1 has saturated for nine of ten languages, the tier
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boundaries are drawn primarily on **rule depth** and **engine coverage of
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real-world idioms** rather than on benchmark scores alone.
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A language lands in **Stable** when all three hold:
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- Rule set covers ≥ 8 vulnerability classes with both source and sink
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matchers, and at least one class has argument-role-aware **gated-sink**
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modeling (e.g. `setAttribute("href", url)` only flags href-like attrs).
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- Benchmark F1 ≥ 95% on a corpus of ≥ 25 cases.
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- Advanced analysis (SSA lowering, context-sensitivity, symbolic execution,
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abstract interpretation) is exercised by fixtures for the language.
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A language lands in **Beta** when benchmark F1 is in the mid-90s or higher
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on a meaningful corpus but at least one Stable criterion fails. Typical
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gaps: absence of gated sinks, or sanitizer rule depth narrow enough that
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the engine compensates structurally rather than via the ruleset.
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A language lands in **Preview** when the engine has documented structural
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blind spots for constructs that are pervasive in typical codebases for that
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language. For C and C++ that means deep pointer aliasing, function
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pointers, and array-element taint; STL container flow and builder chains
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have moved out of the blind-spot list. Synthetic-corpus F1 is not a
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reliable signal for Preview-tier languages: a clean report can coexist
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with structural gaps.
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(No language currently sits in the **Experimental** tier; it is reserved
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for future additions whose corpus has not yet stabilised.)
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---
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## What this means for you
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- **CI gates**: safe to set strict `--fail-on HIGH` gates on Stable-tier
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languages. On Beta-tier, expect occasional FP triage on production code
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(the synthetic corpus does not cover every framework idiom); the
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weak-spot lists above tell you what to skim for. On Preview-tier, treat
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Nyx findings as a starting point for manual review rather than
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authoritative. STL container flow and builder chains are tracked now,
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but deep pointer aliasing and function pointers are not, so a clean
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report does not tell you what the engine could not see.
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- **Rule contributions**: the shortest path to raising a language's tier is
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contributing sink matchers and gated-sink registrations. Label files live
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at `src/labels/<lang>.rs`; benchmark cases live at
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`tests/benchmark/corpus/<lang>/`.
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- **Scope planning**: if your primary stack is C or C++, Nyx will surface
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real findings on obvious unsafe-API uses, but budget for review time and
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combine Nyx with `clang-tidy` or the Clang Static Analyzer. Rust is now
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Beta-tier and suitable as a CI gate; pair with `cargo-audit` for
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dependency CVEs.
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The benchmark thresholds in `tests/benchmark_test.rs` are deliberately set
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~5 pp below current baselines so any drop in a language's F1 fails CI. Tier
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promotions require sustained benchmark performance, not just rule additions.
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