# landstrip
`landstrip` runs a tool in an OS-level sandbox using Landlock LSM on Linux,
Seatbelt on macOS, and LPAC AppContainer on Windows. It accepts the Anthropic
Sandbox Runtime JSON subset as the policy, in JSON or YAML syntax.
## Installation
### npm
```sh
npm install --save-dev @landstrip/landstrip
```
```sh
npx landstrip -p policy.json cargo test
```
The npm package installs a small Node.js wrapper and a platform-specific native
binary package.
### Agent extensions
The bundled extensions integrate Landstrip with Pi and OpenCode:
```sh
pi install npm:pi-landstrip
opencode plugin install opencode-landstrip
```
See [pi-landstrip](packages/pi-landstrip/README.md) and
[opencode-landstrip](packages/opencode-landstrip/README.md) for configuration
details.
## Platforms
| Policy | path based rules | file based rules | per-run AppContainer ACLs |
| Timing | dynamic subset of paths | file based static ruleset | per-run ACL grants |
| TCP | localhost proxy ports | loopback proxy ports | allow all or deny all |
| Unix sockets | allowlist | allowlist via seccomp broker | allow all or deny all |
### Linux
Landlock carves the denied subtrees out of the allowed roots, and then grants
`PATH_BENEATH` rules only for the surviving fragments. The denied path is never
added to the ruleset, and the kernel enforces the path in-process.
Seccomp is applied when a policy needs more than Landlock can express
statically, e.g. for many filesystem mutator syscalls, or when denials must be
reported back to the launcher. The broker intercepts `openat`/`openat2` via
seccomp user-notifications, resolves the real path, and validates it
Landlock and seccomp cover mostly disjoint filesystem operations: Landlock
handles kernel-enforced path access, while seccomp mediates unsupported mutators
and reports broker decisions.
### Windows
Win32 API provides AppContainer for application level sandboxing. The platform
creates a per-run LPAC AppContainer profile, grants its SID access to the lowered
read and write roots, and removes those grants after the sandboxed process tree
exits. Windows policies must use explicit read allowlists.
Landstrip assigns the sandboxed process to a Job Object with
`KILL_ON_JOB_CLOSE`, so child processes are kept in the sandbox process tree and
are terminated when the launcher exits.
`allowNetwork` grants the internet and private-network AppContainer
capabilities, while the default container holds none and denies all network
access.
AppContainer capabilities are coarse: fine-grained TCP policies by host or port
require Windows Filtering Platform rules keyed by the AppContainer SID. I.e.,
this would require elevated privileges, which is not sustainable for a agent
sandbox runtime, which should rely on unprivileged tools and techniques.
## Policy Format
JSON is the default policy format. Use `--format yaml` for YAML policy files or
YAML read from standard input.
```sh
landstrip --format yaml -p policy.yaml cargo test
```
YAML path fields can use normal lists or one statement per line:
```yaml
filesystem:
allowWrite: |
.
~/.cargo
denyRead: |
~/.ssh
allowRead: |
~/.ssh/config
network:
allowNetwork: true
```
## Filesystem Policy
Write access is denied by default. `allowWrite` paths grant write access and
`denyWrite` paths subtract from them, with the most specific rule winning where
an allow and a deny overlap. Read access is unrestricted by default; setting
`denyRead` lowers it to an allowlist, and `allowRead` adds paths back.
### Write Denial Semantics
Concrete (non-glob) `denyWrite` paths are canonicalized and enforced
eagerly on all platforms.
Glob `denyWrite` patterns (`**/.env`, `**/*.pem`, etc.) behave differently
by platform:
- **Linux**: Globs are evaluated dynamically by the seccomp broker at each write
attempt. Files created after sandbox startup that match a denyWrite glob are
blocked. The glob is never walked at startup, so large trees do not cause
startup latency.
- **macOS**: Globs are snapshot-expanded when the Seatbelt profile is compiled.
Files created after `sandbox_init` are not protected by glob denies — use
concrete paths for those. A warning is logged when glob deny patterns are
used.
- **Windows**: Glob denyWrite entries are not enforced by the AppContainer
backend.
## Network Policy
Sandbox mode denies direct network access by default. Proxy ports, local binding,
and Unix sockets can be allowed with the Anthropic Sandbox Runtime network fields.
For a filesystem-only sandbox with unrestricted direct network access, set:
```json
{
"network": {
"allowNetwork": true
}
}
```
`allowNetwork` disables landstrip network enforcement while leaving filesystem
policy enforcement in place. On Windows this grants the AppContainer its network
capabilities; without it the container denies all network access.
## Traps
Every landstrip event — a sandbox denial, and every failure that keeps the tool
from running — is reported as a JSON object, one per line, with a fixed `kind`
discriminant and a stable `code`. Consumers route on `kind` for the shape of the
record and on `code` for what happened. Failure traps and completed denial traps
go to standard error by default. On Linux, pending query traps go only to
`--trap-fd FD`, which writes them to an already-open descriptor.
```sh
landstrip --trap-fd 3 -p policy.json cargo test 3>landstrip-traps.txt
```
The trap kinds are:
- `filesystem` (`code` `FILESYSTEM_DENIED`): `operation` is `read` or `write`,
`path` is the resolved path, `requested_path` is the tool's original path when
available, and `syscall`, `errno`, `flags`, `reason`, `suggested_grant`, and
`process` carry routing context.
- `network` (`code` `NETWORK_DENIED`): `operation` is `connect` or `bind` and
`target` is `address:port`, with `syscall`, `errno`, and `process` context.
- `launch` (`code` `LAUNCH_FAILED`): the sandbox was installed but the tool did
not start. `program` is the tool, `errno` its symbolic errno where the platform
has one, and `message` the system's text.
- `usage` (`code` `USAGE_ERROR`): the command line was rejected. Exits with
status 2, and reaches standard error only — the trap descriptor is part of the
arguments that failed to parse.
- `internal`: everything that fails before the tool runs. `code` names the stage:
`POLICY_PARSE_FAILED`, `POLICY_IO_FAILED`, `SANDBOX_SETUP_FAILED`,
`SUPERVISE_FAILED`, `PLATFORM_UNSUPPORTED`, `INTEGER_TOO_LARGE`, a
`POLICY_*` validation rejection (`POLICY_UNRESTRICTED_READ`,
`POLICY_TCP_BIND_UNSUPPORTED`, `POLICY_UNIX_SOCKET_UNSUPPORTED`,
`POLICY_UNIX_SOCKET_PATH`, `POLICY_DENY_WRITE_SYMLINK_ANCESTOR`,
`POLICY_INVALID_PORT`, `POLICY_EMPTY_PATH`, `POLICY_HOME_UNAVAILABLE`,
`POLICY_TRAVERSAL_DEPTH`), or `INTERNAL_ERROR` for a failure the code space
does not name.
A code names the stage that failed, not the operating system that reported it:
the same `LAUNCH_FAILED` or `SANDBOX_SETUP_FAILED` is raised by every backend
that has that stage. The platform detail rides along in the record instead.
`mechanism` records the kernel layer an event is attributed to: `landlock`,
`seccomp`, `seatbelt`, or `appcontainer`. Per-denial traps are always `seccomp`,
the only layer with a per-denial callback; Landlock enforces in-kernel without
one. `SANDBOX_SETUP_FAILED` carries the mechanism that could not be installed.
`reason` is a platform-independent classification of a filesystem decision,
derived from the policy and the requested path:
- `allow_miss`: the path matched no allow root and was denied by default.
- `deny_match`: the path matched an explicit deny root that overrides an allow.
```json
{
"kind": "filesystem",
"code": "FILESYSTEM_DENIED",
"state": "info",
"query_id": "0",
"operation": "write",
"path": "/repo/out",
"requested_path": "out",
"syscall": "openat",
"errno": "EACCES",
"flags": ["O_WRONLY", "O_CREAT", "O_TRUNC"],
"reason": "allow_miss",
"suggested_grant": { "allowWrite": "/repo/out" },
"mechanism": "seccomp",
"process": { "pid": 1234, "exe": "/usr/bin/sh", "cwd": "/repo" }
}
{
"kind": "network",
"code": "NETWORK_DENIED",
"state": "info",
"query_id": "0",
"operation": "connect",
"target": "127.0.0.1:9999",
"syscall": "connect",
"errno": "EACCES",
"mechanism": "seccomp",
"process": { "pid": 1234, "exe": "/usr/bin/nc", "cwd": "/repo" }
}
{
"kind": "launch",
"code": "LAUNCH_FAILED",
"program": "/usr/bin/cargo",
"errno": "ENOENT",
"message": "No such file or directory (os error 2)"
}
{
"kind": "internal",
"code": "SANDBOX_SETUP_FAILED",
"mechanism": "landlock",
"message": "not enforced by the kernel (Linux 5.13+ with CONFIG_SECURITY_LANDLOCK required, and not disabled via the lsm= boot parameter)"
}
```
Denial traps are informational; the configured policy always applies. landstrip
is otherwise quiet on success — standard error belongs to landstrip, standard
output to the sandboxed tool. Failure traps are accompanied by a human-readable
log line; the JSON is what machines should read. Usage errors exit with status 2,
every other landstrip failure with 1; the tool's own status is passed through
otherwise.
Writing to `--trap-fd` is best-effort: it needs an already-open descriptor (3 or
greater; 0-2 are reserved), and if the write fails the trap is dropped while the
policy stays in effect. On Linux, a broker launch failure also reaches
`--trap-fd` while the descriptor remains open.
## Development
### Commit messages
- **`<subsystem>: <message>`**
- Long description for non-trivial changes.
- Kernel style commit messages.
- **`Signed-off-by`**
### Documenting errors
The following snippet demonstrates the recommended pattern for documenting
the return values on error:
```
/// # Errors
///
/// Returns [`<variant's unqualified name>`](<variant's unqualified name>)
/// Returns ...
```
## Licensing
The JavaScript npm wrapper is licensed under `Apache-2.0`. The Rust source and
native binaries are licensed under `LGPL-2.1-or-later`.
Corresponding source for each published native binary is available from the
GitHub repository tag that matches the package version.