landstrip 0.9.8

Sandbox for coding agents with parametrized state
landstrip-0.9.8 is not a library.

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

npm install --save-dev @jarkkojs/landstrip
npx landstrip -p policy.json cargo test

The npm package installs a small Node.js wrapper and a platform-specific native binary package.

Platforms

Area macOS Linux Windows
Policy path based rules file based rules access control list (ACL)
Timing dynamic subset of paths file based static ruleset persistent ACLs
TCP localhost proxy ports loopback proxy ports unsupported
Unix sockets allowlist allowlist via seccomp broker unsupported

Windows uses an AppContainer. The platform grants the generated AppContainer SID access to the lowered read and write roots, so Windows policies must use explicit read allowlists. Fine-grained TCP and Unix socket policies are rejected until Windows enforcement exists.

Policy Format

JSON is the default policy format. Use --format yml for YAML policy files or YAML read from standard input.

landstrip --format yml -p policy.yml cargo test

YAML path fields can use normal lists or one statement per line:

filesystem:
  allowWrite: |
    .
    ~/.cargo
  denyRead: |
    ~/.ssh
  allowRead: |
    ~/.ssh/config
network:
  allowNetwork: true

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:

{
  "network": {
    "allowNetwork": true
  }
}

On Linux and macOS, allowNetwork disables landstrip network enforcement while leaving filesystem policy enforcement in place. Windows rejects unrestricted network policies until Windows network support exists.

JSON Output

Failures reported by landstrip are printed as one compact JSON object on standard error. This covers policy, tool launch, platform, and system errors. Usage errors are not JSON responses; they remain on standard error and exit with status 2.

{"category":"policy","file":"policy.json","message":"expected value at line 1 column 1"}
{"category":"tool","program":"cargo","type":"launch","message":"No such file or directory"}

The category field is one of policy, tool, platform, or system. The file field is present when a policy error is tied to a policy file. The program field is present when landstrip could not start or encode a tool. The type field is present for policy or tool errors and is either filesystem, network, or platform for policy errors, or launch (failed to start the tool) or encoding (failed to encode the command line) for tool errors.

Logs and sandboxed tool output are not part of the JSON response. Normal successful tool execution does not print a landstrip JSON response because standard error belongs to landstrip; standard output belongs to the sandboxed tool.

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.