The Fixed-X knockoff filter is a flexible framework for variable selection with false discovery rate (FDR) control in linear models with arbitrary (non-singular) design matrices and it allows for finite-sample selective inference via the LASSO estimates. In this paper, we extend the theory of the knockoff procedure to tests with composite null hypotheses, which are usually more relevant to real-world problems. The main technical challenge lies in handling composite nulls in tandem with dependent features from arbitrary designs. We develop two methods for composite inference with the knockoffs, namely, shifted ordinary least-squares (S-OLS) and feature-response product perturbation (FRPP), building on new structural properties of test statistics under composite nulls. We also propose two heuristic variants of the S-OLS method that outperform the celebrated Benjamini-Hochberg (BH) procedure for composite nulls, which serves as a heuristic baseline under dependent test statistics. Finally, we analyze the loss in FDR when the original knockoff procedure is naively applied on composite tests.