Unotify based monitor should bring big performance wins
if the sandboxee heavily uses threading or signals.
Some of the features are not supported in that mode:
- execveat is always allowed instead of just the initial one
- stack traces are not collected on normal exit or if the process is terminated by signal
PiperOrigin-RevId: 515040101
Change-Id: Ia5574d34b4ff7e91e3601edb8c9cb913e011fbf6
Running with a permissive test policy should not interfere with sanitizers
or coverage.
Most tests should run with such a permissive policy.
The exception are tests which actually tests policy enforcement.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 513548936
Change-Id: I9a4c2cc8074997cff08cc22d15f4736219ce4d63
This allows to split monitor & stack_trace related targets.
Also move stack traces related functionality into MonitorBase.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 510112916
Change-Id: I60eabf9c9b3204dc369713edd8ae05fded306875
Follow-up changes might be required to fully fix up the contrib sandboxes.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 482475998
Change-Id: Iff631eb838a024b2f047a1be61bb27e35a8ff2f4
`BUILD_TESTING` is a CMake provided option and we should use similar naming,
just like how Abseil does it.
- `SAPI_ENABLE_TESTS` -> `SAPI_BUILD_TESTING`
- `SAPI_ENABLE_CONTRIB_TESTS` -> `SAPI_CONTRIB_BUILD_TESTING`
- `SAPI_ENABLE_EXAMPLES` -> `SAPI_BUILD_EXAMPLES`
Drive-by:
- Fix option name in GitHub action
PiperOrigin-RevId: 443305932
Change-Id: Ice2b42be1229a0f9ae7c2ceda9ce87187baf22c4
Including the `CTest` modules ensures that the `BUILD_TESTING` option is
defined and automatically calls `enable_testing()` if needed. It does not
change the default or introduce any dependencies on its own.
This follows what Abseil already does in their top-level `CMakeLists.txt`.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 443305646
Change-Id: If067c17470f497437c7748aab4aab5227c26e84f
The feature is pure optimization, but it requires
additional syscalls.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 432954277
Change-Id: I1f345f8a26c86e09611fd575cb6ee080f24cc717
Linking glibc in fully static mode is mostly unsupported. While such binaries
can easily be produced, conflicting symbols will often make them crash at
runtime. This happens because glibc will always (try to) load some dynamically
linked libraries, even when statically linked. This includes things like the
resolver, unicode/locale handling and others.
Internally at Google, this is not a concern due to the way glibc is being built
there. But in order to make all of our tests run in the open-source version of
this code, we need to change strategy a bit.
As a rule of thumb, glibc can safely be linked statically if a program is
resonably simple and does not use any networking of locale dependent
facilities. Calling syscalls directly instead of the corresponding libc
wrappers works as well, of course.
This change adjusts linker flags and sandbox policies to be more compatible
with regular Linux distributions.
Tested:
- `ctest -R '[A-Z].*'` (all SAPI/Sandbox2 tests)
PiperOrigin-RevId: 429025901
Change-Id: I46b677d9eb61080a8fe868002a34a77de287bf2d
Move VecStringToCharPtrArr before fork, so that it cannot deadlock when other thread holds allocation lock.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 414661912
Change-Id: Ie8aa5c36693e6f86c69d67a1da51b7e7ff1ec30b