Files
edx-platform/xmodule/capa/safe_exec
Tim McCormack d5a273ce2f feat!: Expand codejail darklaunch normalizers; append by default (#36682)
For darklaunch comparisons where the two sides have different Python
versions, we'll want a more comprehensive list of normalizers.

- Expand the default list to include patterns discovered during a Python
  3.8 vs. 3.12 comparison.
- Append the setting value by default, rather than replacing (but still
  allow replacing).
- Use default normalizers if custom ones can't be loaded.
- Add log message when loading normalizers fails.
- Validate the replacement pattern, not just the search pattern.
2025-05-08 13:43:53 -04:00
..

Configuring Capa sandboxed execution
====================================

Capa problems can contain code authored by the course author.  We need to
execute that code in a sandbox.  We use CodeJail as the sandboxing facility,
but it needs to be configured specifically for Capa's use.

As a developer, you don't have to do anything to configure sandboxing if you
don't want to, and everything will operate properly, you just won't have
protection on that code.

If you want to configure sandboxing, you're going to use the `README from
CodeJail`__, with a few customized tweaks.

__ https://github.com/openedx/codejail/blob/master/README.rst


1. At the instruction to install packages into the sandboxed code, you'll
   need to install the requirements from requirements/edx-sandbox::

    $ pip install -r requirements/edx-sandbox/base.txt

2. You can configure resource limits in settings.py.  A CODE_JAIL setting is
   available, a dictionary.  The "limits" key lets you adjust the limits for
   CPU time, real time, and memory use.  Setting any of them to zero disables
   that limit::

    # in settings.py...
    CODE_JAIL = {
        # Configurable limits.
        'limits': {
            # How many CPU seconds can jailed code use?
            'CPU': 1,
            # How many real-time seconds will a sandbox survive?
            'REALTIME': 1,
            # How much memory (in bytes) can a sandbox use?
            'VMEM': 30000000,
        },
    }


That's it.  Once you've finished the CodeJail configuration instructions,
your course-hosted Python code should be run securely.