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
This bug only manifests if a lot of fds are open when global forkserver is started.
If the allocated exec_fd number was equal Comms::kSandbox2ClientCommsFD then it would be replaced by the comms fd and result in EACCESS at execveat.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 380805414
Change-Id: I31427fa929abfc60890477b55790cc14c749f7f5
Recenly, Debian based distribution kernels started activating the Tomoyo Linux
Security Module by default. Even if it is not used, this changes the behavior
of `/dev/fd` (pointing to `/proc/self/fd` by default), which Sandbox2 needs during
`execveat()`.
As a result, Sandbox2 and Sandboxed API always fail without one of the following
conditions
- `/proc` mounted within the sandboxee
- `/dev` mounted
- `/dev/fd` symlinked to `/proc/self/fd` in the sandboxee's mount namespace
Some code pointers to upstream Linux 5.12.2:
- https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v5.12.2/source/fs/exec.c#L1775
- https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v5.12.2/source/security/tomoyo/tomoyo.c#L107
- https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v5.12.2/source/security/tomoyo/domain.c#L729
To find out whether your system has Tomoyo enabled, use this command, similar to
what this change does in code:
```
$ cat /sys/kernel/security/lsm | grep tomoyo && echo "Tomoyo active"
capability,yama,apparmor,tomoyo
Tomoyo active
```
The config setting `CONFIG_DEFAULT_SECURITY` controls which LSMs are built into
the kernel by default.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 372919524
Change-Id: I2181819c04f15f57d96c44ea9977d0def4a1b623
Using C++17 means we can get rid of many `#ifdef`s by using `if constexpr`.
This way, we ensure that both branches compile and still retain zero runtime
overhead.
Note that open source builds of Sandboxed API do not ship with sanitizer
configurations yet. This will be added in follow-up changes.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 354932160
Change-Id: I3678dffc47ea873919f0a8c01f3a7d999fc29a5b
Also accept `absl::string_view` and `absl::Span<const std::string>` arguments.
Drive-by:
- Move using declaration into namespace
PiperOrigin-RevId: 354271016
Change-Id: Iadd873377e51cac7fa3800aab1f9e85ff94bd4e9
Only externally visible changes should be a few changed includes as well as
some formatting changes.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 353226662
Change-Id: Iebf5be13774efcbd94c5d5a17b9b27e47275b229
This change should make it less confusing where utility code comes from.
Having it in two places made sense when we were debating whether to publish
Sandbox2 separately, but not any longer.
Follow-up changes will move `sandbox2/util.h` and rename the remaining
`sandbox2/util` folder.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 351601640
Change-Id: I6256845261f610e590c25e2c59851cc51da2d778
The lookup is not on the hot path and this removes the SYSCALLS_UNUSED macros.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 344240762
Change-Id: I324bd798945851ac0b92e257206525eab4ec36e5
This allows us to remove some uses of macros.
Related changes:
- Make it clear that we support hosting sandboxed binaries from 64-bit
processes only. CPU architectures are x86-64 and POWER64 (little endian).
- Introduced CPU architecture macros, abstracting away compiler specifics
PiperOrigin-RevId: 330918134
Change-Id: Ife7ad5f14723eec9f68055127b0583b8aecd38dd