commit | 29a3b8cd39904e17665279a4787a932f351739d8 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Wiktor Garbacz <wiktorg@google.com> | Thu Feb 01 02:51:09 2024 -0800 |
committer | Copybara-Service <copybara-worker@google.com> | Thu Feb 01 02:51:48 2024 -0800 |
tree | cc6fc52aa8d82aa43d0bfb1c164f00817474a271 | |
parent | b9c84a1f75d282ff38ebed068bebe9960af9eb71 [diff] |
Add AllowAccess to SAPI's default policy The syscalls are fairly common and low risk. PiperOrigin-RevId: 603312020 Change-Id: Id06bddc4e7fcc879cad567361ae5b0bad9533142
Copyright 2019-2023 Google LLC
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.
Developer documentation is available on the Google Developers site for Sandboxed API.
There is also a Getting Started guide.
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