On Wed, Dec 9, 2020 at 8:29 PM Mickaël Salaün <m...@digikod.net> wrote:
> Add a basic sandbox tool to launch a command which can only access a
> whitelist of file hierarchies in a read-only or read-write way.

I have to admit that I didn't really look at this closely before
because it's just sample code... but I guess I should. You can add

Reviewed-by: Jann Horn <ja...@google.com>

if you fix the following nits:

[...]
> diff --git a/samples/Kconfig b/samples/Kconfig
[...]
> +config SAMPLE_LANDLOCK
> +       bool "Build Landlock sample code"
> +       depends on HEADERS_INSTALL
> +       help
> +         Build a simple Landlock sandbox manager able to launch a process
> +         restricted by a user-defined filesystem access control.

nit: s/filesystem access control/filesystem access control policy/

[...]
> diff --git a/samples/landlock/sandboxer.c b/samples/landlock/sandboxer.c
[...]
> +/*
> + * Simple Landlock sandbox manager able to launch a process restricted by a
> + * user-defined filesystem access control.

nit: s/filesystem access control/filesystem access control policy/

[...]
> +int main(const int argc, char *const argv[], char *const *const envp)
> +{
[...]
> +       if (argc < 2) {
[...]
> +               fprintf(stderr, "* %s: list of paths allowed to be used in a 
> read-only way.\n",
> +                               ENV_FS_RO_NAME);
> +               fprintf(stderr, "* %s: list of paths allowed to be used in a 
> read-write way.\n",
> +                               ENV_FS_RO_NAME);

s/ENV_FS_RO_NAME/ENV_FS_RW_NAME/

> +               fprintf(stderr, "\nexample:\n"
> +                               
> "%s=\"/bin:/lib:/usr:/proc:/etc:/dev/urandom\" "
> +                               
> "%s=\"/dev/null:/dev/full:/dev/zero:/dev/pts:/tmp\" "
> +                               "%s bash -i\n",
> +                               ENV_FS_RO_NAME, ENV_FS_RW_NAME, argv[0]);
> +               return 1;
> +       }
> +
> +       ruleset_fd = landlock_create_ruleset(&ruleset_attr, 
> sizeof(ruleset_attr), 0);
> +       if (ruleset_fd < 0) {
> +               perror("Failed to create a ruleset");
> +               switch (errno) {

(Just as a note: In theory perror() can change the value of errno, as
far as I know - so AFAIK you'd theoretically have to do something
like:

int errno_ = errno;
perror("...");
switch (errno_) {
 ...
}

I'll almost certainly work fine as-is in practice though.)

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