E.g. a failed `KillSandboxee` for a timeout would already set the exit status code while there could be an external kill pending at the same time which would try to `KillSandboxee` again and thus set exit status code again.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 448464765
Change-Id: Ic5744a576c4255504bfb1d5c4f33253b5bb32b6f
This should make multithreaded sandboxees that exec (or send `SIGKILL`) behave more reliably.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 447458426
Change-Id: Ifdace340462199dc24c8cdf25d589ef6b24991e1
Instead of calling `google::InitGoogleLogging()` directly, introduce an
indirection via a new utility library. After this change, Sandboxed API
should consistently use `sapi::InitLogging()` everywhere.
For now, `sapi::InitLogging()` simply calls its glog equivalent. However,
this enables us to migrate away from the gflags dependency and use Abseil
flags. Once a follow-up change lands, `sapi::InitLogging()` will instead
initialize the google logging library with flags defined from Aseil.
Later still, once Abseil releases logging, we can then drop the glog
dependency entirely.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 445363592
Change-Id: Ia23a7dc88b8ffe65a422ea4d5233bba7bdd1303a
Internally, we rely on clang-tidy to warn about using deprecated declarations.
And for using deprecated declarations within SAPI itself, we should not warn.
Drive-by:
- Fix warning in `mounts_test.cc`
PiperOrigin-RevId: 443634512
Change-Id: I7ef66f0ba77201026490baab07766510c1c55c6a
`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
This fixes the main issue (#118) with stack traces on Fedora, which uses a
`/lib64` and `/usr/lib64`.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 437717858
Change-Id: I6986aa84c2be57ae1d9f8d0cb9b508768d27f1c1
The feature is pure optimization, but it requires
additional syscalls.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 432954277
Change-Id: I1f345f8a26c86e09611fd575cb6ee080f24cc717
munmap is widely used by sanitizer, but it
probably works for Asan/Msan because it's enabled
by unrelated Allow* call.
Move mprotect to shared part as well. It will be
needed for compress_stack_depot.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 431989551
Change-Id: I7695a2de81d8d0b2112d3308778b2e9a9c7cb596
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