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
- Allow to specify multiple syscalls with `BlockSyscallsWithErrno()`
- Add functions to allow `unlink()` and `rename()` in all their spellings
PiperOrigin-RevId: 414987303
Change-Id: Ic0e680b785e8e3a3498f20e6a7403737e63fe876
Generate syscall jump table without using bpf_helper.
Check that any jump in the user provided policy is within the provided policy.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 409362089
Change-Id: I31493e52cf868e4b184ff79fcb26beeb75f49773
Note: This change allows `MAP_NORESERVE` generally, not just for MSAN. This follows
what we do for `AllowTcMalloc()/AllowSystemMalloc()`
PiperOrigin-RevId: 402231980
Change-Id: Ifa1c6b9f61f636dd6db231dde3765c3b4a40911b
For OSS, this change should be mostly a no-op. Visible edits are due to
changed order of code and/or includes.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 394177395
Change-Id: I1d32f9fd175579e8f05c051b1307953b249d139d
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
1. In many cases, sandboxes need to allow /proc/stat and /proc/cpuinfo so that
get_nprocs(3) will work; otherwise, per-CPU logic can't determine how many CPUs
there are. Unfortunately, some of those sandboxes also disable namespaces. The
solution is to provide two functions: AllowRestartableSequencesWithProcFiles(),
which allows syscalls and files; and AllowRestartableSequences(), which allows
syscalls only. Sandboxes should usually call the former; sandboxes that disable
namespaces should instead call the latter and are responsible for allowing the
files via the deprecated Fs mechanism.
2. Make the mmap(2) policy evaluate prot AND flags, not prot OR flags.
3. Order the code and the comments identically for better readability.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 386414028
Change-Id: I016b1854ed1da9c9bcff7b351c5e0041093b8193
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
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
This change enables support for 32-bit ARM, as used by embedded controllers and older phones.
Note: This does not support 32-bit sandboxees on AArch64. Both sandboxee and host code must have the same bitness.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 347835193
Change-Id: I6395882677530f9862f118d2dc10230a61049836
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