Christian Blichmann d7fe6cd334 clang_generator: Use fully qualified names
Use locally unqualified types to filter ordered type declarations in
`TypeCollector::GetTypeDeclarations()`. This is necessary, as
`clang::TypeName::getFullyQualifiedName()` and
`TypeDecl::getQualifiedNameAsString()` have different ideas which
qualifiers belong to the name. The former works on `QualType`s, while
the latter deals with the declaration directly. This change decays a
`TypeDecl` into its locally unqualified `QualType`.

PiperOrigin-RevId: 490500091
Change-Id: Ie2f4eece4e673f8b06ab6661d7b6611daf34fba9
2022-11-23 07:54:48 -08:00
2022-03-31 05:18:50 -07:00
2022-02-10 01:41:12 -08:00
2019-03-18 19:00:48 +01:00
2022-01-28 01:39:09 -08:00
2022-01-31 07:54:57 -08:00
2022-04-24 23:51:33 -07:00

Sandbox

Copyright 2019-2022 Google LLC

Bazel build status CMake build status

What is Sandboxed API?

The Sandboxed API project (SAPI) makes sandboxing of C/C++ libraries less burdensome: after initial setup of security policies and generation of library interfaces, a stub API is generated, transparently forwarding calls using a custom RPC layer to the real library running inside a sandboxed environment.

Additionally, each SAPI library utilizes a tightly defined security policy, in contrast to the typical sandboxed project, where security policies must cover the total syscall/resource footprint of all its libraries.

Documentation

Developer documentation is available on the Google Developers site for Sandboxed API.

There is also a Getting Started guide.

Getting Involved

If you want to contribute, please read CONTRIBUTING.md and send us pull requests. You can also report bugs or file feature requests.

If you'd like to talk to the developers or get notified about major product updates, you may want to subscribe to our mailing list or sign up with this link.

Description
Generates sandboxes for C/C++ libraries automatically
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