Skip to content

Haspamelodica/Charon

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Charon

A library for securely executing automated tests of Java code in a didactic context.

Work-in-progress.

What is Charon for?

Suppose some programming exercise where students are to submit Java code, which then should be tested automatically by some test code written by the exercise creator.

However, student code is not trustworthy in general. There are many motivations for students to submit malicious code, for example to fake test results, to read other student's submissions, or to extract and then sell details about the test cases (in settings where these are not known to students).

Charon solves this problem by executing student code in a different, sandboxed JVM than exercise code. It provides an easy-to-use interface to invoke methods or read fields from classes submitted by the student across the boundary between the two JVMs. This interface has almost the same look and feel as directly calling student code. Security is achieved by never serializing or deserializing any objects.

What is Charon not for?

Charon doesn't assist in creating test code or receiving student submissions.

Also, the code in this repository assumes both JVMs are invoked externally, with certain requirements about their environment (classpath, isolation, command-line arguments, environment variables). In a production environment, it's usually best to use Charon-CI to invoke a test which uses Charon.

Usage

See docs/USAGE.md.

Building from source

Docker

See Charon-CI-Images for Dockerfiles.

Maven

Charon consists of multiple Maven plugins, so Maven can be used to compile Charon. Charon also depends on exchanges, which unfortunately is not available from the Maven Central Hub, so you will have to build that project from source as well to build Charon.

Compiling, running, and debugging in Eclipse

Import and set up launch configurations

For the Rationals example, follow these steps. The Maze, Sorter, and Performance examples work analogously.

  1. Clone this repository and exchanges.

  2. In Eclipse, import all pom.xml files from both repositories as "Existing Maven projects":

    Go to "File" -> "Import...", select "Existing Maven projects" from the group "Maven". Then click "Browse..." and select the folder you cloned the repositories in. Then select all pom.xml files and click "Finish".

  3. Create a launch configuration for the student side:

    Go to "Run" -> "Run Configurations...". Double-click on "Java Application" to create a new Java Application launch configuration. Assign the launch configuration a sensible name, for example "Rationals Student side only".

    Set the launch configuration's project to examples.rationals.studentrunner, and set the main class to net.haspamelodica.charon.StudentSideRunner. (This class can't be found in the "Search..." dialog because it isn't declared in the launch configuration's main project; its name has to be entered by hand.)

    Switch to the "Arguments" tab and set the "Program arguments" to listen 1337. This means the student side will open a server socket on port 1337 upon launch, waiting for a connection from the exercise side.

    When starting this launch configuration once, it should run indefinitely without giving any output. Starting it a second time while another instance is still running should immediately crash with the error java.net.BindException: Address already in use: bind or similar.

  4. Create a launch configuration for the exercise side:

    Create a new "JUnit" launch configuration and assign it a sensible name like "Rationals Exercise side only".

    Set its mode to "Run all tests in the selected project" and select the project examples.rationals.studentrunner. Set the test runner to JUnit 5.

    Switch to the "Arguments" tab and add a line in the "VM arguments" text box saying -Dnet.haspamelodica.charon.communicationargs="socket localhost 1337". (There should already be a line saying -ea.) This means that CharonExtension will try to connect with the student side on port 1337 when creating the StudentSide instance.

    Starting this launch configuration while the student side is running should result in both launches terminating without output, and the JUnit view of Eclipse should show all tests being successful. Starting it without the student side running should result in an error similar to Failed to resolve parameter: [...] java.net.ConnectException: Connection refused: connect.

  5. Create a launch group starting both sides for convenience:

    Create a new "Launch Group" launch configuration and give it a name like "Rationals".

    Add both the student-side and exercise-side launch configurations to the list, with the student side coming first. For both, the launch mode should be "Inherit" and the post launch action "None".

Running

Running the launch group should execute both sides. The JUnit tab should report the exercise-side test results. Keep in mind that only one instance of these tests can run at a time.

Debugging

Debugging the exercise or student side works as usual: just set some breakpoints and launch the launch group from the Debug button instead of the Run button.

Unfortunately, "Step Into" and "Step Return" don't work across the boundary between student and exercise code. (If you try to Step Into or Step Return across the boundary, you'll end up in code dynamically generated by Charon.) To work around this, set a breakpoint where the Step Into or Step Return would end up, then let the paused JVM resume, which should cause the other JVM to suspend at the newly created breakpoint.

Also, the stack visualization in the Debugger view of Eclipse for one of the JVMs won't show the stack frames of the other JVM.

Troubleshooting

Projects fail to build due to release 19 is not found in the system.

Install a JDK for Java 19, and set it as the default JRE in Eclipse: Go to "Window" -> "Preferences" -> "Java" -> "Installed JREs", add the JDK19, and select its checkbox to make it the default JRE.

On Linux, tests are extremely slow.

Consider switching from sockets to named pipes: Create two named pipes (FIFOs) and adjust the communication arguments in both the student-side and exercise-side launch configurations accordingly; for this, see CommunicationArgsParser, and take inspiration from how Charon-CI invokes tests: exercise side, student side.

If both the student side and exercise freeze without doing anything, make sure the pipes are specified in the same order for both the student and exercise side, like documented, and make sure no other instances using these pipes are running.

The exercise side sometimes crashes with Connection refused: connect when invoking the tests via the launch group.

This happens if the exercise side tries to connect to the student-side socket before the student side has finished opening it.

On Linux, switching from sockets to named pipes (see troubleshooting step above) resolves this issue because for pipes it doesn't matter whether the reading or writing end opens a pipe first.

Alternatively, in the launch group, set the post launch action of the student side to "Delay" with some empirically determined number of seconds.

Name

Charon is named after the ferryman over the river Acheron in Greek mythology. This name was chosen because it is his duty to only allow souls to cross Acheron from the world of the living into the world of the dead, but not back, which is similar to what this framework does: it only allows commands from the exercise side to the student side, but not back.

About

A library for securely executing automated tests of Java code in a didactic context.

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published