11.40. Safe Haskell¶
Safe Haskell is an extension to the Haskell language that is implemented in GHC as of version 7.2. It allows for unsafe code to be securely included in a trusted code base by restricting the features of GHC Haskell the code is allowed to use. Put simply, it makes the types of programs trustable.
While a primary use case of Safe Haskell is running untrusted code, Safe Haskell doesn’t provide this directly. Instead, Safe Haskell provides strict type safety. Without Safe Haskell, GHC allows many exceptions to the type system which can subvert any abstractions. By providing strict type safety, Safe Haskell enables developers to build their own library level sandbox mechanisms to run untrusted code.
While Safe Haskell is an extension, it actually runs in the background for every compilation with GHC. It does this to track the type violations of modules to infer their safety, even when they aren’t explicitly using Safe Haskell. Please refer to section Safe Haskell Inference for more details of this.
The design of Safe Haskell covers the following aspects:
- A safe language dialect of Haskell that provides stricter guarantees about the code. It allows types and module boundaries to be trusted.
- A safe import extension that specifies that the module being imported must be trusted.
- A definition of trust (or safety) and how it operates, along with ways of defining and changing the trust of modules and packages.
Safe Haskell, however, does not offer compilation safety. During compilation time it is possible for arbitrary processes to be launched, using for example the custom pre-processor flag. This can be manipulated to either compromise a user’s system at compilation time, or to modify the source code just before compilation to try to alter Safe Haskell flags. This is discussed further in section Safe Compilation.
11.40.1. Uses of Safe Haskell¶
Safe Haskell has been designed with two use cases in mind:
- Enforcing strict type safety at compile time
- Compiling and executing untrusted code
11.40.1.1. Strict type-safety (good style)¶
Haskell offers a powerful type system and separation of pure and effectual
functions through the IO
monad. However, there are several loop holes in the
type system, the most obvious being the unsafePerformIO :: IO a -> a
function. The safe language dialect of Safe Haskell disallows the use of such
functions. This can be useful restriction as it makes Haskell code easier to
analyse and reason about. It also codifies the existing culture in the Haskell
community of trying to avoid unsafe functions unless absolutely necessary. As
such, using the safe language (through the -XSafe
flag) can be thought of as
a way of enforcing good style, similar to the function of -Wall
.
11.40.1.2. Building secure systems (restricted IO Monads)¶
Systems such as information flow control security, capability based
security systems and DSLs for working with encrypted data.. etc can be
built in the Haskell language as a library. However they require
guarantees about the properties of Haskell that aren’t true in general
due to the presence of functions like unsafePerformIO
. Safe Haskell
gives users enough guarantees about the type system to allow them to
build such secure systems.
As an example, let’s define an interface for a plugin system where the
plugin authors are untrusted, possibly malicious third-parties. We do
this by restricting the plugin interface to pure functions or to a
restricted IO
monad that we have defined. The restricted IO
monad will only allow a safe subset of IO
actions to be executed. We
define the plugin interface so that it requires the plugin module,
Danger
, to export a single computation, Danger.runMe
, of type
RIO ()
, where RIO
is a monad defined as follows:
-- While we use `Safe', the `Trustworthy' pragma would also be
-- fine. We simply want to ensure that:
-- 1) The module exports an interface that untrusted code can't
-- abuse.
-- 2) Untrusted code can import this module.
--
{-# LANGUAGE Safe #-}
module RIO (RIO(), runRIO, rioReadFile, rioWriteFile) where
-- Notice that symbol UnsafeRIO is not exported from this module!
newtype RIO a = UnsafeRIO { runRIO :: IO a }
instance Monad RIO where
return = UnsafeRIO . return
(UnsafeRIO m) >>= k = UnsafeRIO $ m >>= runRIO . k
-- Returns True iff access is allowed to file name
pathOK :: FilePath -> IO Bool
pathOK file = {- Implement some policy based on file name -}
rioReadFile :: FilePath -> RIO String
rioReadFile file = UnsafeRIO $ do
ok <- pathOK file
if ok then readFile file else return ""
rioWriteFile :: FilePath -> String -> RIO ()
rioWriteFile file contents = UnsafeRIO $ do
ok <- pathOK file
if ok then writeFile file contents else return ()
We then compile the Danger
plugin using the new Safe Haskell
-XSafe
flag:
{-# LANGUAGE Safe #-}
module Danger ( runMe ) where
runMe :: RIO ()
runMe = ...
Before going into the Safe Haskell details, let’s point out some of the reasons this security mechanism would fail without Safe Haskell:
- The design attempts to restrict the operations that
Danger
can perform by using types, specifically theRIO
type wrapper aroundIO
. The author ofDanger
can subvert this though by simply writing arbitraryIO
actions and usingunsafePerformIO :: IO a -> a
to execute them as pure functions. - The design also relies on
Danger
not being able to access theUnsafeRIO
constructor. Unfortunately Template Haskell can be used to subvert module boundaries and so could be used to gain access to this constructor. - There is no way to place restrictions on the modules that
Danger
can import. This gives the author ofDanger
a very large attack surface, essentially any package currently installed on the system. Should any of these packages have a vulnerability, then theDanger
module can exploit it.
Safe Haskell prevents all these attacks. This is done by compiling the
RIO module with the Safe
or Trustworthy
flag and compiling
Danger
with the Safe
flag. We explain each below.
The use of Safe
to compile Danger
restricts the features of
Haskell that can be used to a safe subset. This
includes disallowing unsafePerformIO
, Template Haskell, pure FFI
functions, RULES and restricting the operation of Overlapping Instances.
The Safe
flag also restricts the modules can be imported by
Danger
to only those that are considered trusted. Trusted modules
are those compiled with Safe
, where GHC provides a mechanical
guarantee that the code is safe. Or those modules compiled with
Trustworthy
, where the module author claims that the module is
Safe.
This is why the RIO module is compiled with Safe
or
Trustworthy
>, to allow the Danger
module to import it. The
Trustworthy
flag doesn’t place any restrictions on the module like
Safe
does (expect to restrict overlapping instances to safe
overlapping instances). Instead the
module author claims that while code may use unsafe features internally,
it only exposes an API that can used in a safe manner.
However, the unrestricted use of Trustworthy
is a problem as an
arbitrary module can use it to mark themselves as trusted, yet
Trustworthy
doesn’t offer any guarantees about the module, unlike
Safe
. To control the use of trustworthy modules it is recommended
to use the -fpackage-trust
flag. This flag adds an extra requirement
to the trust check for trustworthy modules. It requires that for a
trustworthy modules to be considered trusted, and allowed to be used in
Safe
compiled code, the client C compiling the code must tell GHC
that they trust the package the trustworthy module resides in. This is
essentially a way of for C to say, while this package contains
trustworthy modules that can be used by untrusted modules compiled with
Safe
, I trust the author(s) of this package and trust the modules
only expose a safe API. The trust of a package can be changed at any
time, so if a vulnerability found in a package, C can declare that
package untrusted so that any future compilation against that package
would fail. For a more detailed overview of this mechanism see
Trust and Safe Haskell Modes.
In the example, Danger
can import module RIO
because RIO
is
compiled with Safe
. Thus, Danger
can make use of the
rioReadFile
and rioWriteFile
functions to access permitted file
names. The main application then imports both RIO
and Danger
. To
run the plugin, it calls RIO.runRIO Danger.runMe
within the IO
monad. The application is safe in the knowledge that the only IO
to
ensue will be to files whose paths were approved by the pathOK
test.
The Safe Haskell checks can be disabled for a module by passing the
-fno-safe-haskell
flag. This is useful in particular when compiling
with source plugins as running a plugin marks the module as unsafe and can then
cause downstream modules to fail the safety checks.
11.40.2. Safe Language¶
The Safe Haskell safe language (enabled by -XSafe
) guarantees the
following properties:
- Referential transparency — The types can be trusted. Any pure function, is
guaranteed to be pure. Evaluating them is deterministic and won’t cause any
side effects. Functions in the
IO
monad are still allowed and behave as usual. So, for example, theunsafePerformIO :: IO a -> a
function is disallowed in the safe language to enforce this property. - Module boundary control — Only symbols that are publicly available through
other module export lists can be accessed in the safe language. Values using
data constructors not exported by the defining module, cannot be examined or
created. As such, if a module
M
establishes some invariants through careful use of its export list, then code written in the safe language that importsM
is guaranteed to respect those invariants. - Semantic consistency — For any module that imports a module written in the safe language, expressions that compile both with and without the safe import have the same meaning in both cases. That is, importing a module written in the safe language cannot change the meaning of existing code that isn’t dependent on that module. So, for example, there are some restrictions placed on the use of OverlappingInstances, as these can violate this property.
- Strict subset — The safe language is strictly a subset of Haskell as implemented by GHC. Any expression that compiles in the safe language has the same meaning as it does when compiled in normal Haskell.
These four properties guarantee that in the safe language you can trust the types, can trust that module export lists are respected, and can trust that code that successfully compiles has the same meaning as it normally would.
To achieve these properties, in the safe language dialect we disable completely the following features:
TemplateHaskell
— Can be used to gain access to constructors and abstract data types that weren’t exported by a module, subverting module boundaries.
Furthermore, we restrict the following features:
ForeignFunctionInterface
— Foreign import declarations that import a function with a non-IO
type are disallowed.RULES
— Rewrite rules defined in a module M compiled withSafe
are dropped. Rules defined in Trustworthy modules thatM
imports are still valid and will fire as usual.OverlappingInstances
— There is no restriction on the creation of overlapping instances, but we do restrict their use at a particular call site. This is a detailed restriction, please refer to Safe Overlapping Instances for details.GeneralisedNewtypeDeriving
— GND is not allowed in the safe language. This is due to the ability of it to violate module boundaries when module authors forget to put nominal role annotations on their types as appropriate. For this reason, theData.Coerce
module is also considered unsafe. We are hoping to find a better solution here in the future.GHC.Generics
— Hand crafted instances of theGeneric
type class are not allowed in Safe Haskell. Such instances aren’t strictly unsafe, but there is an important invariant that aGeneric
instance should adhere to the structure of the data type for which the instance is defined, and allowing manually implementedGeneric
instances would break that invariant. Derived instances (through theDeriveGeneric
extension) are still allowed. Note that the only allowed deriving strategy for derivingGeneric
under Safe Haskell isstock
, as another strategy (e.g.,anyclass
) would produce an instance that violates the invariant.Refer to the generic programming section for more details.
11.40.2.1. Safe Overlapping Instances¶
Due to the semantic consistency guarantee of Safe Haskell, we must
restrict the function of overlapping instances. We don’t restrict their
ability to be defined, as this is a global property and not something we
can determine by looking at a single module. Instead, when a module
calls a function belonging to a type-class, we check that the instance
resolution done is considered ‘safe’. This check is enforced for modules
compiled with both -XSafe
and -XTrustworthy
.
More specifically, consider the following modules:
{-# LANGUAGE Safe #-}
module Class (TC(..)) where
class TC a where { op :: a -> String }
{-# LANGUAGE Safe #-}
module Dangerous (TC(..)) where
import Class
instance
{-# OVERLAPS #-}
TC [Int] where { op _ = "[Int]" }
{-# LANGUAGE Safe #-}
module TCB_Runner where
import Class
import Dangerous
instance
TC [a] where { op _ = "[a]" }
f :: String
f = op ([1,2,3,4] :: [Int])
Both module Class
and module Dangerous
will compile under Safe
without issue. However, in module TCB_Runner
, we must check if the call
to op
in function f
is safe.
What does it mean to be Safe? That importing a module compiled with
Safe
shouldn’t change the meaning of code that compiles fine
without importing the module. This is the Safe Haskell property known as
semantic consistency.
In our situation, module TCB_Runner
compiles fine without importing
module Dangerous
. So when deciding which instance to use for the call to
op
, if we determine the instance TC [Int]
from module Dangerous
is the most specific, this is unsafe. This prevents code written by
third-parties we don’t trust (which is compiled using -XSafe
in Safe
Haskell) from changing the behaviour of our existing code.
Specifically, we apply the following rule to determine if a type-class method call is unsafe when overlapping instances are involved:
- Most specific instance,
Ix
, defined in an-XSafe
compiled module. Ix
is an orphan instance or a multi-parameter-type-class.- At least one overlapped instance,
Iy
, is both:- From a different module than
Ix
Iy
is not markedOVERLAPPABLE
- From a different module than
This is a slightly involved heuristic, but captures the situation of an
imported module N
changing the behaviour of existing code. For example,
if the second condition isn’t violated, then the module author M
must
depend either on a type-class or type defined in N
.
When a particular type-class method call is considered unsafe due to
overlapping instances, and the module being compiled is using Safe
or Trustworthy
, then compilation will fail. For Unsafe
, no
restriction is applied, and for modules using safe inference, they will
be inferred unsafe.
11.40.3. Safe Imports¶
Safe Haskell enables a small extension to the usual import syntax of
Haskell, adding a safe
keyword:
impdecl -> import [safe] [qualified] modid [as modid] [impspec]
When used, the module being imported with the safe keyword must be a
trusted module, otherwise a compilation error will occur. The safe
import extension is enabled by either of the -XSafe
, -XTrustworthy
, or
-XUnsafe
flags. When the -XSafe
flag is used, the safe
keyword is
allowed but meaningless, as every import is treated as a safe import.
11.40.4. Trust and Safe Haskell Modes¶
Safe Haskell introduces the following three language flags:
Safe
— Enables the safe language dialect, asking GHC to guarantee trust. The safe language dialect requires that all imports be trusted or a compilation error will occur. Safe Haskell will also infer this safety type for modules automatically when possible. Please refer to section Safe Haskell Inference for more details of this.Trustworthy
— Means that while this module may invoke unsafe functions internally, the module’s author claims that it exports an API that can’t be used in an unsafe way. This doesn’t enable the safe language. It does however restrict the resolution of overlapping instances to only allow safe overlapping instances. The trust guarantee is provided by the module author, not GHC. An import statement with thesafe
keyword results in a compilation error if the imported module is not trusted. An import statement without the keyword behaves as usual and can import any module whether trusted or not.Unsafe
— Marks the module being compiled as unsafe so that modules compiled usingSafe
can’t import it. You may want to explicitly mark a module unsafe when it exports internal constructors that can be used to violate invariants.
While these are flags, they also correspond to Safe Haskell module types that a module can have. You can think of using these as declaring an explicit contract (or type) that a module must have. If it is invalid, then compilation will fail. GHC will also infer the correct type for Safe Haskell, please refer to section Safe Haskell Inference for more details.
The procedure to check if a module is trusted or not depends on if the
-fpackage-trust
flag is present. The check is similar in both cases
with the -fpackage-trust
flag enabling an extra requirement for
trustworthy modules to be regarded as trusted.
11.40.4.1. Trust check (-fpackage-trust
disabled)¶
A module M
in a package P
is trusted by a client C if and only if:
Both of these hold:
- The module was compiled with
Safe
- All of M’s direct imports are trusted by C
- The module was compiled with
or all of these hold:
- The module was compiled with
Trustworthy
- All of
M
‘s direct safe imports are trusted by C
- The module was compiled with
The above definition of trust has an issue. Any module can be compiled
with Trustworthy
and it will be trusted. To control this, there is
an additional definition of package trust (enabled with the
-fpackage-trust
flag). The point of package trust is to require that
the client C explicitly say which packages are allowed to contain
trustworthy modules. Trustworthy packages are only trusted if they
reside in a package trusted by C.
11.40.4.2. Trust check (-fpackage-trust
enabled)¶
When the -fpackage-trust
flag is enabled, whether or not a module is
trusted depends on if certain packages are trusted. Package trust is
determined by the client C invoking GHC (i.e. you).
Specifically, a package P is trusted when one of these hold:
- C’s package database records that
P
is trusted (and no command-line arguments override this) - C’s command-line flags say to trust
P
regardless of what is recorded in the package database.
In either case, C is the only authority on package trust. It is up to the client to decide which packages they trust.
When the -fpackage-trust
flag is used a module M from package P is
trusted by a client C if and only if:
- Both of these hold:
- The module was compiled with
Safe
- All of
M
‘s direct imports are trusted by C
- The module was compiled with
- or all of these hold:
- The module was compiled with
Trustworthy
- All of
M
‘s direct safe imports are trusted by C - Package
P
is trusted by C
- The module was compiled with
For the first trust definition the trust guarantee is provided by GHC
through the restrictions imposed by the safe language. For the second
definition of trust, the guarantee is provided initially by the module
author. The client C then establishes that they trust the module author
by indicating they trust the package the module resides in. This trust
chain is required as GHC provides no guarantee for Trustworthy
compiled modules.
The reason there are two modes of checking trust is that the extra
requirement enabled by -fpackage-trust
causes the design of Safe
Haskell to be invasive. Packages using Safe Haskell when the flag is
enabled may or may not compile depending on the state of trusted
packages on a user’s machine. This is both fragile, and causes
compilation failures for everyone, even if they aren’t trying to use any
of the guarantees provided by Safe Haskell. Disabling
-fpackage-trust
by default and turning it into a flag makes Safe
Haskell an opt-in extension rather than an always on feature.
11.40.4.3. Example¶
Package Wuggle:
{-# LANGUAGE Safe #-}
module Buggle where
import Prelude
f x = ...blah...
Package P:
{-# LANGUAGE Trustworthy #-}
module M where
import System.IO.Unsafe
import safe Buggle
Suppose a client C decides to trust package P
and package base
. Then
does C trust module M
? Well M
is marked Trustworthy
, so we don’t
restrict the language. However, we still must check M
‘s imports:
- First,
M
importsSystem.IO.Unsafe
. This is an unsafe module, howeverM
was compiled withTrustworthy
, soP
‘s author takes responsibility for that import.C
trustsP
‘s author, so this import is fine. - Second,
M
safe importsBuggle
. For this importP
‘s author takes no responsibility for the safety, instead asking GHC to check whetherBuggle
is trusted byC
. Is it? Buggle
, is compiled with-XSafe
, so the code is machine-checked to be OK, but again under the assumption that all ofBuggle
‘s imports are trusted byC
. We must recursively check all imports!- Buggle only imports
Prelude
, which is compiled withTrustworthy
.Prelude
resides in thebase
package, whichC
trusts, and (we’ll assume) all ofPrelude
‘s imports are trusted. SoC
trustsPrelude
, and soC
also trusts Buggle. (WhilePrelude
is typically imported implicitly, it still obeys the same rules outlined here).
Notice that C didn’t need to trust package Wuggle; the machine checking
is enough. C only needs to trust packages that contain Trustworthy
modules.
11.40.4.4. Trustworthy Requirements¶
Module authors using the Trustworthy
language extension for a
module M
should ensure that M
‘s public API (the symbols exposed by its
export list) can’t be used in an unsafe manner. This mean that symbols exported
should respect type safety and referential transparency.
11.40.4.5. Package Trust¶
Safe Haskell gives packages a new Boolean property, that of trust. Several new options are available at the GHC command-line to specify the trust property of packages:
-
-trust
⟨pkg⟩
¶ Exposes package ⟨pkg⟩ if it was hidden and considers it a trusted package regardless of the package database.
-
-distrust
⟨pkg⟩
¶ Exposes package ⟨pkg⟩ if it was hidden and considers it an untrusted package regardless of the package database.
-
-distrust-all-packages
¶ Considers all packages distrusted unless they are explicitly set to be trusted by subsequent command-line options.
To set a package’s trust property in the package database please refer to Packages.
11.40.5. Safe Haskell Inference¶
In the case where a module is compiled without one of Safe
,
Trustworthy
or Unsafe
being used, GHC will try to figure out
itself if the module can be considered safe. This safety inference will
never mark a module as trustworthy, only as either unsafe or as safe.
GHC uses a simple method to determine this for a module M: If M would
compile without error under the Safe
flag, then M is marked as
safe. Otherwise, it is marked as unsafe.
When should you use Safe Haskell inference and when should you use an
explicit Safe
flag? The later case should be used when you have a
hard requirement that the module be safe. This is most useful for the
Uses of Safe Haskell of Safe Haskell: running untrusted code. Safe
inference is meant to be used by ordinary Haskell programmers. Users who
probably don’t care about Safe Haskell.
Haskell library authors have a choice. Most should just use Safe inference. Assuming you avoid any unsafe features of the language then your modules will be marked safe. Inferred vs. Explicit has the following trade-offs:
- Inferred — This works well and adds no dependencies on the Safe Haskell type of any modules in other packages. It does mean that the Safe Haskell type of your own modules could change without warning if a dependency changes. One way to deal with this is through the use of Safe Haskell warning flags that will warn if GHC infers a Safe Haskell type different from expected.
- Explicit — This gives your library a stable Safe Haskell type that others can depend on. However, it will increase the chance of compilation failure when your package dependencies change.
11.40.6. Safe Haskell Flag Summary¶
In summary, Safe Haskell consists of the following three language flags:
-
Safe
¶ Since: 7.2.1 Restricts the module to the safe language. All of the module’s direct imports must be trusted, but the module itself need not reside in a trusted package, because the compiler vouches for its trustworthiness. The “safe” keyword is allowed but meaningless in import statements, as regardless, every import is required to be safe.
- Module Trusted — Yes
- Haskell Language — Restricted to Safe Language
- Imported Modules — All forced to be safe imports, all must be trusted.
-
Trustworthy
¶ Since: 7.2.1 This establishes that the module is trusted, but the guarantee is provided by the module’s author. A client of this module then specifies that they trust the module author by specifying they trust the package containing the module.
Trustworthy
doesn’t restrict the module to the safe language. It does however restrict the resolution of overlapping instances to only allow safe overlapping instances. It also allows the use of the safe import keyword.- Module Trusted — Yes.
- Module Trusted (
-fpackage-trust
enabled) — Yes but only if the package the module resides in is also trusted. - Haskell Language — Unrestricted, except only safe overlapping instances allowed.
- Imported Modules — Under control of module author which ones must be trusted.
-
Unsafe
¶ Since: 7.4.1 Mark a module as unsafe so that it can’t be imported by code compiled with
Safe
. Also enable the Safe Import extension so that a module can require a dependency to be trusted.- Module Trusted — No
- Haskell Language — Unrestricted
- Imported Modules — Under control of module author which ones must be trusted.
A flag to disable Safe Haskell checks:
-
-fno-safe-haskell
¶ This flag can be enabled to override any declared safety property of the module (Safe, Unsafe, Trustworthy) so compilation proceeds as if none of these flags were specified. This is particularly useful when compiling using plugins, which usually results in the compiled modules being marked as unsafe.
And one general flag:
-
-fpackage-trust
¶ When enabled, turn on an extra check for a trustworthy module
M
, requiring the package thatM
resides in be considered trusted, forM
to be considered trusted.
And three warning flags:
-
-Wunsafe
¶ Issue a warning if the module being compiled is regarded to be unsafe. Should be used to check the safety type of modules when using safe inference.
-
-Wsafe
¶ Issue a warning if the module being compiled is regarded to be safe. Should be used to check the safety type of modules when using safe inference.
-
-Wtrustworthy-safe
¶ Issue a warning if the module being compiled is marked as -XTrustworthy but it could instead be marked as -XSafe , a more informative bound. Can be used to detect once a Safe Haskell bound can be improved as dependencies are updated.
11.40.7. Safe Compilation¶
GHC includes a variety of flags that allow arbitrary processes to be run at compilation time. One such example is the custom pre-processor flag. Another is the ability of Template Haskell to execute Haskell code at compilation time, including IO actions. Safe Haskell does not address this danger (although, Template Haskell is a disallowed feature).
Due to this, it is suggested that when compiling untrusted source code that has had no manual inspection done, the following precautions be taken:
- Compile in a sandbox, such as a chroot or similar container technology. Or simply as a user with very reduced system access.
- Compile untrusted code with the
-XSafe
flag being specified on the command line. This will ensure that modifications to the source being compiled can’t disable the use of the Safe Language as the command line flag takes precedence over a source level pragma. - Ensure that all untrusted code is imported as a
safe import and that the
-fpackage-trust
flag (see flag) is used with packages from untrusted sources being marked as untrusted.
There is a more detailed discussion of the issues involved in compilation safety and some potential solutions on the GHC Wiki.
Additionally, the use of annotations is forbidden, as that would allow bypassing Safe Haskell restrictions. See Issue #10826 for details.