193 lines
5.4 KiB
Markdown
193 lines
5.4 KiB
Markdown
## Piston
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Piston is a high performance general purpose code execution engine. It excels at running untrusted and
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possibly malicious code without fear from any harmful effects.
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It's used in numerous places including
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[EMKC Challenges](https://emkc.org/challenges),
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[EMKC Weekly Contests](https://emkc.org/contests), the
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[Engineer Man Discord Server](https://discord.gg/engineerman) via
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[I Run Code](https://github.com/engineer-man/piston-bot) bot as well as 1300+ other servers
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and 100+ direct integrations. To get it in your own server, go here: https://emkc.org/run.
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#### Use Public API
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Requires no installation and you can use it immediately. Reference the Versions/Execute sections
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below to learn about the request and response formats.
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- `GET` `https://emkc.org/api/v1/piston/versions`
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- `POST` `https://emkc.org/api/v1/piston/execute`
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Important Note: The Piston API is rate limited to 5 requests per second. If you have a need for more requests than that
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and it's for a good cause, please reach out to me (EngineerMan#0001) on [Discord](https://discord.gg/engineerman)
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so we can discuss potentially getting you an unlimited key.
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#### Cloning and System Dependencies
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```
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# clone and enter repo
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git clone https://github.com/engineer-man/piston
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cd piston/lxc
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# centos/rhel dependencies:
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yum install -y epel-release
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yum install -y lxc lxc-templates debootstrap libvirt
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systemctl start libvirtd
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# ubuntu server 18.04 dependencies:
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apt install lxc lxc-templates debootstrap libvirt0
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# arch dependencies:
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sudo pacman -S lxc libvirt unzip
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# everything else:
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# not documented, please open pull requests with commands for debian/arch/macos/etc
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```
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#### Installation (simple)
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Coming soon.
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#### Installation (advanced/manual)
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See `var/install.txt` for how to create a new LXC container and install all of the required
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software.
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#### CLI Usage
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- `cli/execute [language] [file path] [args]`
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#### API Usage
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To use the API, it must first be started. Please note that if root is required to access
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LXC then the API must also be running as root. To start the API, run the following:
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```
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cd api
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./start
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```
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#### Base URLs
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When using the public Piston API, use:
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```
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https://emkc.org/api/v1/piston
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```
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For your own local installation, use:
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```
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http://127.0.0.1:2000
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```
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#### Versions Endpoint
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`GET /versions`
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This endpoint takes no input and returns a JSON array of the currently installed languages.
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Truncated response sample:
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```json
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HTTP/1.1 200 OK
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Content-Type: application/json
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[
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{
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"name": "awk",
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"aliases": ["awk"],
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"version": "1.3.3"
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},
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{
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"name": "bash",
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"aliases": ["bash"],
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"version": "4.4.20"
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},
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{
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"name": "c",
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"aliases": ["c"],
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"version": "7.5.0"
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}
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]
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```
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#### Execute Endpoint
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`POST /execute`
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This endpoint takes the following JSON payload and expects at least the language and source. If
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source is not provided, a blank file is passed as the source. If no `args` are desired, it can either
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be an empty array or left out entirely.
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```json
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{
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"language": "js",
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"source": "console.log(process.argv)",
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"args": [
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"1",
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"2",
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"3"
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]
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}
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```
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A typical response upon successful execution will contain the `language`, `version`, `output` which
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is a combination of both `stdout` and `stderr` but in chronological order according to program output,
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as well as separate `stdout` and `stderr`.
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```json
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HTTP/1.1 200 OK
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Content-Type: application/json
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{
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"ran": true,
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"language": "js",
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"version": "12.13.0",
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"output": "[ '/usr/bin/node',\n '/tmp/code.code',\n '1',\n '2',\n '3' ]",
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"stdout": "[ '/usr/bin/node',\n '/tmp/code.code',\n '1',\n '2',\n '3' ]",
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"stderr": ""
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}
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```
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If an invalid language is supplied, a typical response will look like the following:
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```json
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HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
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Content-Type: application/json
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{
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"message": "Provided language is not supported by Piston"
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}
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```
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#### Supported Languages
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- awk
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- bash
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- brainfuck
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- c
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- cpp
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- csharp
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- deno
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- erlang
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- elixir
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- emacs
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- elisp
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- go
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- haskell
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- java
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- jelly
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- julia
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- kotlin
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- lua
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- nasm
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- node
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- paradoc
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- perl
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- php
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- python2
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- python3
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- ruby
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- rust
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- swift
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- typescript
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#### Principle of Operation
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Piston utilizes LXC as the primary mechanism for sandboxing. There is a small API written in Node which takes
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in execution requests and executes them in the container. High level, the API writes
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a temporary source and args file to `/tmp` and that gets mounted read-only along with the execution scripts into the container.
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The source file is either ran or compiled and ran (in the case of languages like c, c++, c#, go, etc.).
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#### Security
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LXC provides a great deal of security out of the box in that it's separate from the system.
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Piston takes additional steps to make it resistant to
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various privilege escalation, denial-of-service, and resource saturation threats. These steps include:
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- Disabling outgoing network interaction
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- Capping max processes at 64 (resists `:(){ :|: &}:;`, `while True: os.fork()`, etc.)
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- Capping max files at 2048 (resists various file based attacks)
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- Mounting all resources read-only (resists `sudo rm -rf --no-preserve-root /`)
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- Cleaning up all temp space after each execution (resists out of drive space attacks)
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- Running as a variety of unprivileged users
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- Capping runtime execution at 3 seconds
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- Capping stdout to 65536 characters (resists yes/no bombs and runaway output)
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- SIGKILLing misbehaving code
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#### License
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Piston is licensed under the MIT license.
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