RLBox sandboxing framework. This code has been tested on 64-bit versions of Linux, Mac OSX, and Windows.
If you find a security bug, please do not create a public issue. Instead, file a security bug on bugzilla using the following template link.
RLBox is a general purpose sandboxing API that can be used to interact with library sandboxed with different backends --- WebAssembly, Native Client, OS processess, etc. Support for each backend is provided by a separate plugin that must also be downloaded separately.
See the online docs for more details.
The RLBox library is a header only library, so you can directly download this repo and use include the contents of code/include/
in your application. On Linux/Mac machines, you can optionally install the headers as well with make install
.
Support for cmake's find_package
API is also included (see this example).
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Setup a build folder and then build.
cmake -S . -B ./build -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
You can build with cmake:
cmake --build ./build --config Release --parallel
or make:
cd build && make -j
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To test:
With cmake:
cd build && ctest -V
or with make (on Linux/Mac):
cd build && make test
When running with ASAN and UBSAN:
cd build && cmake -E env LSAN_OPTIONS=suppressions=../leak_suppressions.txt UBSAN_OPTIONS=suppressions=../ub_suppressions.txt ctest -V
Currently RLBox has been tested and should work with gcc-7 or later and clang-5, Visual Studio 2019 (possibly previous versions as well) or later. If you are using other compilers/compiler versions (like mingw), these may also be supported. Simply run the test suite and check that everything passes.
If you want to disable building tests, you can add -DBUILD_TESTING=OFF
when invoking cmake the first time. This will also remove the Catch2 dependency.
cmake -S . -B ./build -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DBUILD_TESTING=OFF
The recommended use of RLBox is to make a copy of this library in your source tree. However, if you want to install the library, you can do so by following the below steps.
Configure the build with cmake in the same way that previous paragraph. Then simply run:
cd build
make install
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To contribute code, it is recommended you install clang-tidy which the build uses if available. Install using:
On Ubuntu:
sudo apt install clang-tidy
On Arch Linux:
sudo pacman -S clang-tidy
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It is recommended you use the dev mode for building during development. This treat warnings as errors, enables clang-tidy checks, runs address sanitizer etc. Also, you probably want to use the debug build. To do this, adjust your build settings as shown below
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug -DDEV=ON -S . -B ./build cd build make
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After making changes to the source, add any new required tests and run all tests (as described earlier).
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If you don't already have clang-format installed, install it:
On Ubuntu:
sudo apt install clang-format
On Arch Linux:
sudo pacman -S clang-format
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Format code with the format-source target:
cmake --build ./build --target format-source
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Submit the pull request!