sandboxed-api/oss-internship-2020/sapi_lodepng
2020-08-29 18:54:08 +00:00
..
examples added more error/warning messages. 2020-08-29 18:54:08 +00:00
lodepng@aa6cc42db7 added submodules, modified the tests to use the current path 2020-08-12 13:59:17 +00:00
.gitignore moved .gitmodules to lodepng project folder 2020-08-12 14:09:26 +00:00
CMakeLists.txt modified readme 2020-08-28 18:00:52 +00:00
README.md modified readme 2020-08-28 18:00:52 +00:00

LodePNG Sandboxed API

Sandboxed version of the LodePNG library, using Sandboxed API

Details

With Sandboxed API, many of the library's functions can be sandboxed. However, they need the extern "C" keyword defined so that name mangling does not happen, which is why a fork of the LodePNG library is used. The only differences are found in the header file. An alternative to this is to define another library that wraps every needed function, specifying the required keyword.

Even if many of the functions from the library can be sandboxed, there are some that are not supported (those which have std::vector parameters, overloaded functions etc.). If you really need these functions, a solution is to implement a custom library that wraps around these functions in order to make them compatible.

Build

First, run git submodule update --init --recursive to update submodules. After this, run the following commands: mkdir -p build && cd build cmake .. -G Ninja ninja The example binary files can be found in build/examples

Examples

The code found in the examples folder features a basic use case of the library. An image is generated, encoded into a file and then decoded to check that the values are the same. The encoding part was based on this example while decoding was based on this.

This example code is structured as:

  • main_unsandboxed.cc - unsandboxed example
  • main_sandboxed.cc - sandboxed version of the example
  • main_unit_test.cc - tests(using Google Test).

On top of those files, there are other files used by all three of the examples:

  • sandbox.h - custom sandbox policy
  • helpers.h and helpers.cc - constants and functions used in the main files.

The executables generated from these files will create a temporary directory in the current working path. Inside that directory the two generated png files will be created. At the end, the directory is deleted. If those programs do not stop midway or return a failure code, then everything works fine.