integrate cfgperl contents into mainline
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / ext / Opcode / Safe.pm
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2ded1cc1 1package Safe;
2
5f05dabc 3use 5.003_11;
2ded1cc1 4use strict;
2ded1cc1 5
17f410f9 6our $VERSION = "2.06";
2ded1cc1 7
5f05dabc 8use Carp;
9
2ded1cc1 10use Opcode 1.01, qw(
11 opset opset_to_ops opmask_add
12 empty_opset full_opset invert_opset verify_opset
13 opdesc opcodes opmask define_optag opset_to_hex
14);
15
16*ops_to_opset = \&opset; # Temporary alias for old Penguins
17
18
19my $default_root = 0;
20my $default_share = ['*_']; #, '*main::'];
21
22sub new {
23 my($class, $root, $mask) = @_;
24 my $obj = {};
25 bless $obj, $class;
26
27 if (defined($root)) {
28 croak "Can't use \"$root\" as root name"
29 if $root =~ /^main\b/ or $root !~ /^\w[:\w]*$/;
30 $obj->{Root} = $root;
31 $obj->{Erase} = 0;
32 }
33 else {
34 $obj->{Root} = "Safe::Root".$default_root++;
35 $obj->{Erase} = 1;
36 }
37
38 # use permit/deny methods instead till interface issues resolved
39 # XXX perhaps new Safe 'Root', mask => $mask, foo => bar, ...;
40 croak "Mask parameter to new no longer supported" if defined $mask;
41 $obj->permit_only(':default');
42
43 # We must share $_ and @_ with the compartment or else ops such
44 # as split, length and so on won't default to $_ properly, nor
45 # will passing argument to subroutines work (via @_). In fact,
46 # for reasons I don't completely understand, we need to share
47 # the whole glob *_ rather than $_ and @_ separately, otherwise
48 # @_ in non default packages within the compartment don't work.
49 $obj->share_from('main', $default_share);
50 return $obj;
51}
52
53sub DESTROY {
54 my $obj = shift;
4d8e9581 55 $obj->erase('DESTROY') if $obj->{Erase};
2ded1cc1 56}
57
58sub erase {
4d8e9581 59 my ($obj, $action) = @_;
2ded1cc1 60 my $pkg = $obj->root();
61 my ($stem, $leaf);
62
63 no strict 'refs';
64 $pkg = "main::$pkg\::"; # expand to full symbol table name
65 ($stem, $leaf) = $pkg =~ m/(.*::)(\w+::)$/;
66
67 # The 'my $foo' is needed! Without it you get an
68 # 'Attempt to free unreferenced scalar' warning!
69 my $stem_symtab = *{$stem}{HASH};
70
71 #warn "erase($pkg) stem=$stem, leaf=$leaf";
72 #warn " stem_symtab hash ".scalar(%$stem_symtab)."\n";
73 # ", join(', ', %$stem_symtab),"\n";
74
4d8e9581 75# delete $stem_symtab->{$leaf};
2ded1cc1 76
4d8e9581 77 my $leaf_glob = $stem_symtab->{$leaf};
78 my $leaf_symtab = *{$leaf_glob}{HASH};
2ded1cc1 79# warn " leaf_symtab ", join(', ', %$leaf_symtab),"\n";
4d8e9581 80 %$leaf_symtab = ();
2ded1cc1 81 #delete $leaf_symtab->{'__ANON__'};
82 #delete $leaf_symtab->{'foo'};
83 #delete $leaf_symtab->{'main::'};
84# my $foo = undef ${"$stem\::"}{"$leaf\::"};
85
4d8e9581 86 if ($action and $action eq 'DESTROY') {
87 delete $stem_symtab->{$leaf};
88 } else {
89 $obj->share_from('main', $default_share);
90 }
2ded1cc1 91 1;
92}
93
94
95sub reinit {
96 my $obj= shift;
97 $obj->erase;
98 $obj->share_redo;
99}
100
101sub root {
102 my $obj = shift;
103 croak("Safe root method now read-only") if @_;
104 return $obj->{Root};
105}
106
107
108sub mask {
109 my $obj = shift;
110 return $obj->{Mask} unless @_;
111 $obj->deny_only(@_);
112}
113
114# v1 compatibility methods
115sub trap { shift->deny(@_) }
116sub untrap { shift->permit(@_) }
117
118sub deny {
119 my $obj = shift;
120 $obj->{Mask} |= opset(@_);
121}
122sub deny_only {
123 my $obj = shift;
124 $obj->{Mask} = opset(@_);
125}
126
127sub permit {
128 my $obj = shift;
129 # XXX needs testing
130 $obj->{Mask} &= invert_opset opset(@_);
131}
132sub permit_only {
133 my $obj = shift;
134 $obj->{Mask} = invert_opset opset(@_);
135}
136
137
138sub dump_mask {
139 my $obj = shift;
140 print opset_to_hex($obj->{Mask}),"\n";
141}
142
143
144
145sub share {
146 my($obj, @vars) = @_;
147 $obj->share_from(scalar(caller), \@vars);
148}
149
150sub share_from {
151 my $obj = shift;
152 my $pkg = shift;
153 my $vars = shift;
154 my $no_record = shift || 0;
155 my $root = $obj->root();
2ded1cc1 156 croak("vars not an array ref") unless ref $vars eq 'ARRAY';
157 no strict 'refs';
158 # Check that 'from' package actually exists
159 croak("Package \"$pkg\" does not exist")
160 unless keys %{"$pkg\::"};
3fe9a6f1 161 my $arg;
2ded1cc1 162 foreach $arg (@$vars) {
163 # catch some $safe->share($var) errors:
164 croak("'$arg' not a valid symbol table name")
165 unless $arg =~ /^[\$\@%*&]?\w[\w:]*$/
166 or $arg =~ /^\$\W$/;
3fe9a6f1 167 my ($var, $type);
168 $type = $1 if ($var = $arg) =~ s/^(\W)//;
169 # warn "share_from $pkg $type $var";
170 *{$root."::$var"} = (!$type) ? \&{$pkg."::$var"}
171 : ($type eq '&') ? \&{$pkg."::$var"}
172 : ($type eq '$') ? \${$pkg."::$var"}
173 : ($type eq '@') ? \@{$pkg."::$var"}
174 : ($type eq '%') ? \%{$pkg."::$var"}
175 : ($type eq '*') ? *{$pkg."::$var"}
176 : croak(qq(Can't share "$type$var" of unknown type));
2ded1cc1 177 }
178 $obj->share_record($pkg, $vars) unless $no_record or !$vars;
179}
180
181sub share_record {
182 my $obj = shift;
183 my $pkg = shift;
184 my $vars = shift;
185 my $shares = \%{$obj->{Shares} ||= {}};
186 # Record shares using keys of $obj->{Shares}. See reinit.
187 @{$shares}{@$vars} = ($pkg) x @$vars if @$vars;
188}
189sub share_redo {
190 my $obj = shift;
191 my $shares = \%{$obj->{Shares} ||= {}};
192 my($var, $pkg);
193 while(($var, $pkg) = each %$shares) {
194 # warn "share_redo $pkg\:: $var";
195 $obj->share_from($pkg, [ $var ], 1);
196 }
197}
198sub share_forget {
199 delete shift->{Shares};
200}
201
202sub varglob {
203 my ($obj, $var) = @_;
204 no strict 'refs';
205 return *{$obj->root()."::$var"};
206}
207
208
209sub reval {
210 my ($obj, $expr, $strict) = @_;
211 my $root = $obj->{Root};
212
213 # Create anon sub ref in root of compartment.
214 # Uses a closure (on $expr) to pass in the code to be executed.
215 # (eval on one line to keep line numbers as expected by caller)
216 my $evalcode = sprintf('package %s; sub { eval $expr; }', $root);
217 my $evalsub;
218
219 if ($strict) { use strict; $evalsub = eval $evalcode; }
220 else { no strict; $evalsub = eval $evalcode; }
221
222 return Opcode::_safe_call_sv($root, $obj->{Mask}, $evalsub);
223}
224
225sub rdo {
226 my ($obj, $file) = @_;
227 my $root = $obj->{Root};
228
229 my $evalsub = eval
230 sprintf('package %s; sub { do $file }', $root);
231 return Opcode::_safe_call_sv($root, $obj->{Mask}, $evalsub);
232}
233
234
2351;
236
3e92a254 237__END__
2ded1cc1 238
239=head1 NAME
240
241Safe - Compile and execute code in restricted compartments
242
243=head1 SYNOPSIS
244
245 use Safe;
246
247 $compartment = new Safe;
248
249 $compartment->permit(qw(time sort :browse));
250
251 $result = $compartment->reval($unsafe_code);
252
253=head1 DESCRIPTION
254
255The Safe extension module allows the creation of compartments
256in which perl code can be evaluated. Each compartment has
257
258=over 8
259
260=item a new namespace
261
262The "root" of the namespace (i.e. "main::") is changed to a
263different package and code evaluated in the compartment cannot
264refer to variables outside this namespace, even with run-time
265glob lookups and other tricks.
266
267Code which is compiled outside the compartment can choose to place
268variables into (or I<share> variables with) the compartment's namespace
269and only that data will be visible to code evaluated in the
270compartment.
271
272By default, the only variables shared with compartments are the
273"underscore" variables $_ and @_ (and, technically, the less frequently
274used %_, the _ filehandle and so on). This is because otherwise perl
275operators which default to $_ will not work and neither will the
276assignment of arguments to @_ on subroutine entry.
277
278=item an operator mask
279
280Each compartment has an associated "operator mask". Recall that
281perl code is compiled into an internal format before execution.
282Evaluating perl code (e.g. via "eval" or "do 'file'") causes
283the code to be compiled into an internal format and then,
284provided there was no error in the compilation, executed.
f610777f 285Code evaluated in a compartment compiles subject to the
286compartment's operator mask. Attempting to evaluate code in a
2ded1cc1 287compartment which contains a masked operator will cause the
288compilation to fail with an error. The code will not be executed.
289
290The default operator mask for a newly created compartment is
291the ':default' optag.
292
1fef88e7 293It is important that you read the Opcode(3) module documentation
294for more information, especially for detailed definitions of opnames,
2ded1cc1 295optags and opsets.
296
297Since it is only at the compilation stage that the operator mask
298applies, controlled access to potentially unsafe operations can
299be achieved by having a handle to a wrapper subroutine (written
300outside the compartment) placed into the compartment. For example,
301
302 $cpt = new Safe;
303 sub wrapper {
304 # vet arguments and perform potentially unsafe operations
305 }
306 $cpt->share('&wrapper');
307
308=back
309
310
311=head1 WARNING
312
313The authors make B<no warranty>, implied or otherwise, about the
314suitability of this software for safety or security purposes.
315
316The authors shall not in any case be liable for special, incidental,
317consequential, indirect or other similar damages arising from the use
318of this software.
319
320Your mileage will vary. If in any doubt B<do not use it>.
321
322
323=head2 RECENT CHANGES
324
325The interface to the Safe module has changed quite dramatically since
326version 1 (as supplied with Perl5.002). Study these pages carefully if
327you have code written to use Safe version 1 because you will need to
328makes changes.
329
330
331=head2 Methods in class Safe
332
333To create a new compartment, use
334
335 $cpt = new Safe;
336
337Optional argument is (NAMESPACE), where NAMESPACE is the root namespace
338to use for the compartment (defaults to "Safe::Root0", incremented for
339each new compartment).
340
341Note that version 1.00 of the Safe module supported a second optional
342parameter, MASK. That functionality has been withdrawn pending deeper
343consideration. Use the permit and deny methods described below.
344
345The following methods can then be used on the compartment
346object returned by the above constructor. The object argument
347is implicit in each case.
348
349
350=over 8
351
352=item permit (OP, ...)
353
354Permit the listed operators to be used when compiling code in the
355compartment (in I<addition> to any operators already permitted).
356
357=item permit_only (OP, ...)
358
359Permit I<only> the listed operators to be used when compiling code in
360the compartment (I<no> other operators are permitted).
361
362=item deny (OP, ...)
363
364Deny the listed operators from being used when compiling code in the
365compartment (other operators may still be permitted).
366
367=item deny_only (OP, ...)
368
369Deny I<only> the listed operators from being used when compiling code
370in the compartment (I<all> other operators will be permitted).
371
372=item trap (OP, ...)
373
374=item untrap (OP, ...)
375
376The trap and untrap methods are synonyms for deny and permit
377respectfully.
378
379=item share (NAME, ...)
380
381This shares the variable(s) in the argument list with the compartment.
382This is almost identical to exporting variables using the L<Exporter(3)>
383module.
384
385Each NAME must be the B<name> of a variable, typically with the leading
386type identifier included. A bareword is treated as a function name.
387
388Examples of legal names are '$foo' for a scalar, '@foo' for an
389array, '%foo' for a hash, '&foo' or 'foo' for a subroutine and '*foo'
390for a glob (i.e. all symbol table entries associated with "foo",
391including scalar, array, hash, sub and filehandle).
392
393Each NAME is assumed to be in the calling package. See share_from
394for an alternative method (which share uses).
395
396=item share_from (PACKAGE, ARRAYREF)
397
398This method is similar to share() but allows you to explicitly name the
399package that symbols should be shared from. The symbol names (including
400type characters) are supplied as an array reference.
401
402 $safe->share_from('main', [ '$foo', '%bar', 'func' ]);
403
404
405=item varglob (VARNAME)
406
407This returns a glob reference for the symbol table entry of VARNAME in
408the package of the compartment. VARNAME must be the B<name> of a
409variable without any leading type marker. For example,
410
411 $cpt = new Safe 'Root';
412 $Root::foo = "Hello world";
413 # Equivalent version which doesn't need to know $cpt's package name:
414 ${$cpt->varglob('foo')} = "Hello world";
415
416
417=item reval (STRING)
418
419This evaluates STRING as perl code inside the compartment.
420
421The code can only see the compartment's namespace (as returned by the
422B<root> method). The compartment's root package appears to be the
423C<main::> package to the code inside the compartment.
424
425Any attempt by the code in STRING to use an operator which is not permitted
426by the compartment will cause an error (at run-time of the main program
427but at compile-time for the code in STRING). The error is of the form
428"%s trapped by operation mask operation...".
429
430If an operation is trapped in this way, then the code in STRING will
431not be executed. If such a trapped operation occurs or any other
432compile-time or return error, then $@ is set to the error message, just
433as with an eval().
434
435If there is no error, then the method returns the value of the last
436expression evaluated, or a return statement may be used, just as with
437subroutines and B<eval()>. The context (list or scalar) is determined
438by the caller as usual.
439
440This behaviour differs from the beta distribution of the Safe extension
441where earlier versions of perl made it hard to mimic the return
442behaviour of the eval() command and the context was always scalar.
443
444Some points to note:
445
446If the entereval op is permitted then the code can use eval "..." to
447'hide' code which might use denied ops. This is not a major problem
448since when the code tries to execute the eval it will fail because the
449opmask is still in effect. However this technique would allow clever,
450and possibly harmful, code to 'probe' the boundaries of what is
451possible.
452
453Any string eval which is executed by code executing in a compartment,
454or by code called from code executing in a compartment, will be eval'd
455in the namespace of the compartment. This is potentially a serious
456problem.
457
458Consider a function foo() in package pkg compiled outside a compartment
459but shared with it. Assume the compartment has a root package called
1fef88e7 460'Root'. If foo() contains an eval statement like eval '$foo = 1' then,
2ded1cc1 461normally, $pkg::foo will be set to 1. If foo() is called from the
462compartment (by whatever means) then instead of setting $pkg::foo, the
463eval will actually set $Root::pkg::foo.
464
465This can easily be demonstrated by using a module, such as the Socket
466module, which uses eval "..." as part of an AUTOLOAD function. You can
467'use' the module outside the compartment and share an (autoloaded)
468function with the compartment. If an autoload is triggered by code in
469the compartment, or by any code anywhere that is called by any means
470from the compartment, then the eval in the Socket module's AUTOLOAD
471function happens in the namespace of the compartment. Any variables
472created or used by the eval'd code are now under the control of
473the code in the compartment.
474
475A similar effect applies to I<all> runtime symbol lookups in code
476called from a compartment but not compiled within it.
477
478
479
480=item rdo (FILENAME)
481
482This evaluates the contents of file FILENAME inside the compartment.
483See above documentation on the B<reval> method for further details.
484
485=item root (NAMESPACE)
486
487This method returns the name of the package that is the root of the
488compartment's namespace.
489
490Note that this behaviour differs from version 1.00 of the Safe module
491where the root module could be used to change the namespace. That
492functionality has been withdrawn pending deeper consideration.
493
494=item mask (MASK)
495
496This is a get-or-set method for the compartment's operator mask.
497
498With no MASK argument present, it returns the current operator mask of
499the compartment.
500
501With the MASK argument present, it sets the operator mask for the
502compartment (equivalent to calling the deny_only method).
503
504=back
505
506
507=head2 Some Safety Issues
508
509This section is currently just an outline of some of the things code in
510a compartment might do (intentionally or unintentionally) which can
511have an effect outside the compartment.
512
513=over 8
514
515=item Memory
516
517Consuming all (or nearly all) available memory.
518
519=item CPU
520
521Causing infinite loops etc.
522
523=item Snooping
524
525Copying private information out of your system. Even something as
526simple as your user name is of value to others. Much useful information
527could be gleaned from your environment variables for example.
528
529=item Signals
530
531Causing signals (especially SIGFPE and SIGALARM) to affect your process.
532
533Setting up a signal handler will need to be carefully considered
534and controlled. What mask is in effect when a signal handler
535gets called? If a user can get an imported function to get an
536exception and call the user's signal handler, does that user's
537restricted mask get re-instated before the handler is called?
538Does an imported handler get called with its original mask or
539the user's one?
540
541=item State Changes
542
543Ops such as chdir obviously effect the process as a whole and not just
544the code in the compartment. Ops such as rand and srand have a similar
545but more subtle effect.
546
547=back
548
549=head2 AUTHOR
550
551Originally designed and implemented by Malcolm Beattie,
552mbeattie@sable.ox.ac.uk.
553
554Reworked to use the Opcode module and other changes added by Tim Bunce
1fef88e7 555E<lt>F<Tim.Bunce@ig.co.uk>E<gt>.
2ded1cc1 556
557=cut
558