# This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public # License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this # file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. r"""Python sandbox implementation for build files. This module contains classes for Python sandboxes that execute in a highly-controlled environment. The main class is `Sandbox`. This provides an execution environment for Python code and is used to fill a Context instance for the takeaway information from the execution. Code in this module takes a different approach to exception handling compared to what you'd see elsewhere in Python. Arguments to built-in exceptions like KeyError are machine parseable. This machine-friendly data is used to present user-friendly error messages in the case of errors. """ from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function, unicode_literals import os import six import sys import weakref from mozbuild.util import ( exec_, ReadOnlyDict, ) from .context import Context from mozpack.files import FileFinder default_finder = FileFinder("/") def alphabetical_sorted(iterable, key=lambda x: x.lower(), reverse=False): """sorted() replacement for the sandbox, ordering alphabetically by default. """ return sorted(iterable, key=key, reverse=reverse) class SandboxError(Exception): def __init__(self, file_stack): self.file_stack = file_stack class SandboxExecutionError(SandboxError): """Represents errors encountered during execution of a Sandbox. This is a simple container exception. It's purpose is to capture state so something else can report on it. """ def __init__(self, file_stack, exc_type, exc_value, trace): SandboxError.__init__(self, file_stack) self.exc_type = exc_type self.exc_value = exc_value self.trace = trace class SandboxLoadError(SandboxError): """Represents errors encountered when loading a file for execution. This exception represents errors in a Sandbox that occurred as part of loading a file. The error could have occurred in the course of executing a file. If so, the file_stack will be non-empty and the file that caused the load will be on top of the stack. """ def __init__(self, file_stack, trace, illegal_path=None, read_error=None): SandboxError.__init__(self, file_stack) self.trace = trace self.illegal_path = illegal_path self.read_error = read_error class Sandbox(dict): """Represents a sandbox for executing Python code. This class provides a sandbox for execution of a single mozbuild frontend file. The results of that execution is stored in the Context instance given as the ``context`` argument. Sandbox is effectively a glorified wrapper around compile() + exec(). You point it at some Python code and it executes it. The main difference from executing Python code like normal is that the executed code is very limited in what it can do: the sandbox only exposes a very limited set of Python functionality. Only specific types and functions are available. This prevents executed code from doing things like import modules, open files, etc. Sandbox instances act as global namespace for the sandboxed execution itself. They shall not be used to access the results of the execution. Those results are available in the given Context instance after execution. The Sandbox itself is responsible for enforcing rules such as forbidding reassignment of variables. Implementation note: Sandbox derives from dict because exec() insists that what it is given for namespaces is a dict. """ # The default set of builtins. BUILTINS = ReadOnlyDict( { # Only real Python built-ins should go here. "None": None, "False": False, "True": True, "sorted": alphabetical_sorted, "int": int, "set": set, "tuple": tuple, } ) def __init__(self, context, finder=default_finder): """Initialize a Sandbox ready for execution.""" self._builtins = self.BUILTINS dict.__setitem__(self, "__builtins__", self._builtins) assert isinstance(self._builtins, ReadOnlyDict) assert isinstance(context, Context) # Contexts are modeled as a stack because multiple context managers # may be active. self._active_contexts = [context] # Seen sub-contexts. Will be populated with other Context instances # that were related to execution of this instance. self.subcontexts = [] # We need to record this because it gets swallowed as part of # evaluation. self._last_name_error = None # Current literal source being executed. self._current_source = None self._finder = finder @property def _context(self): return self._active_contexts[-1] def exec_file(self, path): """Execute code at a path in the sandbox. The path must be absolute. """ assert os.path.isabs(path) try: source = six.ensure_text(self._finder.get(path).read()) except Exception: raise SandboxLoadError( self._context.source_stack, sys.exc_info()[2], read_error=path ) self.exec_source(source, path) def exec_source(self, source, path=""): """Execute Python code within a string. The passed string should contain Python code to be executed. The string will be compiled and executed. You should almost always go through exec_file() because exec_source() does not perform extra path normalization. This can cause relative paths to behave weirdly. """ def execute(): # compile() inherits the __future__ from the module by default. We # do want Unicode literals. code = compile(source, path, "exec") # We use ourself as the global namespace for the execution. There # is no need for a separate local namespace as moz.build execution # is flat, namespace-wise. old_source = self._current_source self._current_source = source try: exec_(code, self) finally: self._current_source = old_source self.exec_function(execute, path=path) def exec_function( self, func, args=(), kwargs={}, path="", becomes_current_path=True ): """Execute function with the given arguments in the sandbox.""" if path and becomes_current_path: self._context.push_source(path) old_sandbox = self._context._sandbox self._context._sandbox = weakref.ref(self) # We don't have to worry about bytecode generation here because we are # too low-level for that. However, we could add bytecode generation via # the marshall module if parsing performance were ever an issue. old_source = self._current_source self._current_source = None try: func(*args, **kwargs) except SandboxError as e: raise e except NameError as e: # A NameError is raised when a variable could not be found. # The original KeyError has been dropped by the interpreter. # However, we should have it cached in our instance! # Unless a script is doing something wonky like catching NameError # itself (that would be silly), if there is an exception on the # global namespace, that's our error. actual = e if self._last_name_error is not None: actual = self._last_name_error source_stack = self._context.source_stack if not becomes_current_path: # Add current file to the stack because it wasn't added before # sandbox execution. source_stack.append(path) raise SandboxExecutionError( source_stack, type(actual), actual, sys.exc_info()[2] ) except Exception: # Need to copy the stack otherwise we get a reference and that is # mutated during the finally. exc = sys.exc_info() source_stack = self._context.source_stack if not becomes_current_path: # Add current file to the stack because it wasn't added before # sandbox execution. source_stack.append(path) raise SandboxExecutionError(source_stack, exc[0], exc[1], exc[2]) finally: self._current_source = old_source self._context._sandbox = old_sandbox if path and becomes_current_path: self._context.pop_source() def push_subcontext(self, context): """Push a SubContext onto the execution stack. When called, the active context will be set to the specified context, meaning all variable accesses will go through it. We also record this SubContext as having been executed as part of this sandbox. """ self._active_contexts.append(context) if context not in self.subcontexts: self.subcontexts.append(context) def pop_subcontext(self, context): """Pop a SubContext off the execution stack. SubContexts must be pushed and popped in opposite order. This is validated as part of the function call to ensure proper consumer API use. """ popped = self._active_contexts.pop() assert popped == context def __getitem__(self, key): if key.isupper(): try: return self._context[key] except Exception as e: self._last_name_error = e raise return dict.__getitem__(self, key) def __setitem__(self, key, value): if key in self._builtins or key == "__builtins__": raise KeyError("Cannot reassign builtins") if key.isupper(): # Forbid assigning over a previously set value. Interestingly, when # doing FOO += ['bar'], python actually does something like: # foo = namespace.__getitem__('FOO') # foo.__iadd__(['bar']) # namespace.__setitem__('FOO', foo) # This means __setitem__ is called with the value that is already # in the dict, when doing +=, which is permitted. if key in self._context and self._context[key] is not value: raise KeyError("global_ns", "reassign", key) if ( key not in self._context and isinstance(value, (list, dict)) and not value ): raise KeyError("Variable %s assigned an empty value." % key) self._context[key] = value else: dict.__setitem__(self, key, value) def get(self, key, default=None): raise NotImplementedError("Not supported") def __iter__(self): raise NotImplementedError("Not supported") def __contains__(self, key): if key.isupper(): return key in self._context return dict.__contains__(self, key)