Roughly ten years after the original question, Python 3.8.0 comes with auditing. Can it help? Let's limit the discussion to hard-drive writing for simplicity - and see:
from sys import addaudithook
def block_mischief(event,arg):
if 'WRITE_LOCK' in globals() and ((event=='open' and arg[1]!='r')
or event.split('.')[0] in ['subprocess', 'os', 'shutil', 'winreg']): raise IOError('file write forbidden')
addaudithook(block_mischief)
So far exec
could easily write to disk:
exec("open('/tmp/FILE','w').write('pwned by l33t h4xx0rz')", dict(locals()))
But we can forbid it at will, so that no wicked user can access the disk from the code supplied to exec()
. Pythonic modules like numpy
or pickle
eventually use the Python's file access, so they are banned from disk write, too. External program calls have been explicitly disabled, too.
WRITE_LOCK = True
exec("open('/tmp/FILE','w').write('pwned by l33t h4xx0rz')", dict(locals()))
exec("open('/tmp/FILE','a').write('pwned by l33t h4xx0rz')", dict(locals()))
exec("numpy.savetxt('/tmp/FILE', numpy.eye(3))", dict(locals()))
exec("import subprocess; subprocess.call('echo PWNED >> /tmp/FILE', shell=True)", dict(locals()))
An attempt of removing the lock from within exec()
seems to be futile, since the auditing hook uses a different copy of locals
that is not accessible for the code ran by exec
. Please prove me wrong.
exec("print('muhehehe'); del WRITE_LOCK; open('/tmp/FILE','w')", dict(locals()))
...
OSError: file write forbidden
Of course, the top-level code can enable file I/O again.
del WRITE_LOCK
exec("open('/tmp/FILE','w')", dict(locals()))
Sandboxing within Cpython has proven extremely hard and many previous attempts have failed. This approach is also not entirely secure e.g. for public web access:
perhaps hypothetical compiled modules that use direct OS calls cannot be audited by Cpython - whitelisting the safe pure pythonic modules is recommended.
Definitely there is still the possibility of crashing or overloading the Cpython interpreter.
Maybe there remain even some loopholes to write the files on the harddrive, too. But I could not use any of the usual sandbox-evasion tricks to write a single byte. We can say the "attack surface" of Python ecosystem reduces to rather a narrow list of events to be (dis)allowed: https://docs.python.org/3/library/audit_events.html
I would be thankful to anybody pointing me to the flaws of this approach.
EDIT: So this is not safe either! I am very thankful to @Emu for his clever hack using exception catching and introspection:
#!/usr/bin/python3.8
from sys import addaudithook
def block_mischief(event,arg):
if 'WRITE_LOCK' in globals() and ((event=='open' and arg[1]!='r') or event.split('.')[0] in ['subprocess', 'os', 'shutil', 'winreg']):
raise IOError('file write forbidden')
addaudithook(block_mischief)
WRITE_LOCK = True
exec("""
import sys
def r(a, b):
try:
raise Exception()
except:
del sys.exc_info()[2].tb_frame.f_back.f_globals['WRITE_LOCK']
import sys
w = type('evil',(object,),{'__ne__':r})()
sys.audit('open', None, w)
open('/tmp/FILE','w').write('pwned by l33t h4xx0rz')""", dict(locals()))
I guess that auditing+subprocessing is the way to go, but do not use it on production machines:
https://bitbucket.org/fdominec/experimental_sandbox_in_cpython38/src/master/sandbox_experiment.py