| name | iii-sandbox |
| description | Ephemeral microVM sandboxes for running untrusted or agent-generated code in isolation — a one-call run path, a create/exec/stop lifecycle, and a set of filesystem operations. |
iii-sandbox
The iii-sandbox worker boots ephemeral libkrun microVMs and runs code inside them, isolated from the host. Each sandbox boots in a few hundred milliseconds, runs commands or file operations scoped to the engine it lives on, and is reaped when idle; the overlay filesystem is discarded on stop. Its sandbox::* functions are called like any other iii function.
There are two ways in. sandbox::run is the fast path: it boots a VM, runs a code snippet, captures stdout/stderr, and tears the VM down in a single call. For multi-step work — several commands, multiple files, or inspecting a VM between steps — use the sandbox::create → sandbox::exec / sandbox::fs::* → sandbox::stop lifecycle and carry the returned sandbox id across calls.
Prerequisites: the worker is enabled by adding iii-sandbox to config.yaml, and the host needs hardware virtualization (Apple Silicon, or /dev/kvm on Linux) — Intel Macs and Windows cannot boot sandboxes.
Get the contract from the engine
This page tells you WHEN and HOW to use the sandbox; the engine is the source of truth for every function's exact arguments and responses. Before you call any sandbox::* function, fetch its contract and build your payload from that — do not guess field names, types, or formats from memory:
engine::functions::info { function_id: "sandbox::<fn>" }
(e.g. { function_id: "sandbox::fs::write" }). The returned schema is authoritative; this skill never restates it.
Running an iii worker inside a sandbox
To author an iii worker (read the iii skill first), you write the worker code into the sandbox, install its deps, and run it as a process there — but the worker must still join the HOST engine bus to be useful.
- Reaching the host engine: enable networking when you create the sandbox (the field is in the
sandbox::create contract — fetch it), AND set the worker's engine-URL env (III_ENGINE_URL, e.g. ws://localhost:49134) IN THE sandbox::create env — NOT later at exec/run time. The localhost→host rewrite happens ONLY for the create-time env: a localhost / 127.0.0.1 engine URL set there is rewritten to the per-sandbox gateway so the worker reaches the host bus. The same localhost URL passed at sandbox::exec time is NOT rewritten — it points at the sandbox's own loopback, the worker silently fails to connect, and you will waste turns debugging TCP. So: put the engine URL in the create env; the worker process inherits it already rewritten.
- Run it backgrounded, never as a foreground
exec: starting the worker with sandbox::exec "node index.mjs" blocks and times out (S200 exec timed out), because the process never returns. Launch it detached (… &, nohup, or sandbox::run shell mode) so the exec call returns while the worker keeps running — see the serialized-exec boundary below.
- Find the result: once the worker connects, its functions appear in
engine::functions::list and any http trigger it binds is served by the iii-http worker; verify endpoints with web::fetch, not curl.
- EPHEMERAL by nature: a worker hosted in a sandbox dies when the sandbox is stopped or reaped (the overlay is discarded). That is fine for a demo, test, or one-off. For a worker that must stay up, install it as a managed worker (
worker::add, see the iii skill) instead of hosting it in a sandbox.
When to Use
- Execute untrusted or LLM-generated code without exposing the host.
- One-shot "code in, stdout out" — reach for
sandbox::run.
- Spin up an ephemeral build worker, integration-test fixture, or throwaway iii worker.
- Read, write, search, or edit files inside an isolated filesystem.
Boundaries
- A sandbox is for running code and build steps, NOT for hosting a long-lived server. To expose an HTTP API or any always-on endpoint, author an iii worker and register a trigger for it (an
http trigger is served by the iii-http worker) — do NOT start a server process (express, http.createServer, a framework listen()) inside the sandbox. A server you start here is not routed by iii, is unreachable as an iii endpoint, and as a foreground process hangs the exec slot until it times out. If the task is "build an iii worker," the deliverable is registered functions plus a trigger, not a running server.
- Not for long-lived services or durable state — the overlay is wiped on stop. Use a regular worker for daemons and
iii-state for persistence.
- Bootable images are catalog NAMES (
node, python, or an operator-registered custom image), never arbitrary OCI references. Discover the live set with sandbox::catalog::list; an unknown name fails fast.
sandbox::exec runs one command at a time per sandbox (serialized). A concurrent call is rejected, and waiting does NOT free the slot when the in-flight command is long-running or foreground (a server, npm install, a build) — it holds the slot until it exits. Run those in the background, or use sandbox::run in shell mode, or recover by replacing the sandbox (sandbox::stop then sandbox::create).
sandbox::exec is not a shell — for pipes, &&, redirects, or variable expansion use sandbox::run in shell mode, or wrap the command in sh -c.
- Requires host virtualization; boot failures on unsupported hosts are reported as errors, not silent hangs.
- Sandboxes are network-isolated by default; reaching host services is opt-in at create time — see
engine::functions::info on sandbox::create for how to enable it.
Functions
A map of what exists. For the arguments and response of any one, call engine::functions::info { function_id: "<id>" }.
sandbox::run — boot a VM, run a code snippet, capture output, and auto-stop, in one call.
sandbox::create — boot a microVM you then drive with the lifecycle ops; returns the id every other op uses.
sandbox::exec — run a single command inside a running sandbox.
sandbox::stop — destroy a sandbox and reclaim its resources.
sandbox::list — enumerate sandboxes currently running on this engine.
sandbox::catalog::list — list bootable image names (bundled presets plus operator custom images).
sandbox::fs::write — write a file into a sandbox.
sandbox::fs::read — read a file out of a sandbox.
sandbox::fs::ls — list the entries of a directory.
sandbox::fs::stat — read metadata for a single path.
sandbox::fs::mkdir — create a directory.
sandbox::fs::rm — remove a file or directory.
sandbox::fs::mv — move or rename a path.
sandbox::fs::chmod — change a path's permissions (and optionally owner).
sandbox::fs::grep — recursive regex search across files.
sandbox::fs::sed — regex find-and-replace across files.
Every error comes back structured with a machine-readable hint describing how to fix it — read it and apply the fix before retrying, rather than re-sending the same call.