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
This is a preparatory step to introduce a Sandbox2 mode that does not use ptrace.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 503919613
Change-Id: I446adecc66e697c592ad938627fbfdbea12516e1
This mainly a debugging facility.
It makes diagnosing problems where sandboxed process just randomly exits whereas unsandboxed one runs to completion due to differences in the setup/environment much easier.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 391005548
Change-Id: Ia19fe6632748da93c1f4291bb55e895f50a4e2b0
The existing function signature took a `unique_ptr<>` owning a vector, and
took `nullptr` to mean an empty set of capabilities. This is more naturally
modeled by taking the vector directly and `std::move`-ing it.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 384214849
Change-Id: I177f04a06803ae00429b19a1f3f12e7be04d2908
- Assign to `*mutable_XXX()` instead of looping
- Use a const ref for capabilities
PiperOrigin-RevId: 384192675
Change-Id: I4db3d0c8ce0d7f6acc9fd486a2409962516b5fe7
The default policy causes immediate termination of a sandboxee that
calls `bpf`(2).
This does not allow for try-call use of `bpf()` to test for optional
features.
To support such try-call use cases, sandboxes would like to say:
```
sandbox2::PolicyBuilder builder;
builder.BlockSyscallWithErrno(__NR_bpf, EPERM);
```
but this doesn't work because the default policy unconditionally treats
`bpf()` as a sandbox violation.
Remove the bpf violation check from the policy if `bpf()` is explicitly
blocked with an errno.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 345239389
Change-Id: I7fcfd3a938c610c8679edf8e1fa0238b32cc9db4