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A lightweight, embeddable Python sandbox for LLM tool execution

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Littrs

A lightweight, embeddable Python sandbox for LLM tool execution.

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Littrs is a Python sandbox that you embed directly into your Rust or Python application. There's no container to start, no runtime to boot, no network call to make — just a library that executes LLM-generated Python safely, with only the tools you give it.

It was built for a specific workflow: an LLM writes Python code that calls your functions, and you need to run that code without giving it access to anything else. Littrs compiles Python to bytecode and runs it on a stack-based VM with zero ambient capabilities. The only way sandboxed code can interact with the outside world is through tools you explicitly register.

Installation

pip install littrs

Quick Start

from littrs import Sandbox

sandbox = Sandbox()

@sandbox.tool
def get_weather(city: str, units: str = "celsius") -> dict:
    """Get current weather for a city."""
    return {"city": city, "temp": 22, "units": units}

result = sandbox("get_weather('London')")
# result == {"city": "London", "temp": 22, "units": "celsius"}

The @sandbox.tool decorator registers your function with its full signature — the LLM code calls it like a normal Python function. The sandbox is also callable: sandbox(code) is shorthand for sandbox.run(code).

Variables persist across calls, and you can inject values directly:

sandbox["user_id"] = 42
sandbox("name = get_weather('London')['city']")
sandbox("name")  # "London"

Resource Limits

Prevent runaway code from consuming unbounded resources:

sandbox.limit(max_instructions=10_000, max_recursion_depth=50)

try:
    sandbox.run("while True: pass")
except RuntimeError as e:
    print(e)  # "Instruction limit exceeded (limit: 10000)"

Resource limit errors are uncatchabletry/except in the sandbox code cannot suppress them. This is by design: the host must always be able to regain control.

Capturing Print Output

capture() returns both the result and everything that was print()-ed:

result, printed = sandbox.capture("""
for i in range(5):
    print(i)
"done"
""")
# result  == "done"
# printed == ["0", "1", "2", "3", "4"]

Tool Documentation for LLM Prompts

describe() auto-generates Python-style signatures and docstrings from registered tools, ready to embed in a system prompt:

print(sandbox.describe())
# def get_weather(city: str, units: str = 'celsius') -> dict:
#     """Get current weather for a city."""

Low-level Registration

If you need to bypass the decorator (e.g. registering a function that takes raw positional args):

def fetch_data(args):
    return {"id": args[0], "name": "Example"}

sandbox.register("fetch_data", fetch_data)

WASM Sandbox (Stronger Isolation)

For stronger isolation, Littrs can run the interpreter inside a WebAssembly guest module with memory isolation and fuel-based computation limits:

from littrs import WasmSandbox, WasmSandboxConfig

config = WasmSandboxConfig().with_fuel(1_000_000).with_max_memory(32 * 1024 * 1024)
sandbox = WasmSandbox(config)

result = sandbox.run("sum(range(100))")
assert result == 4950

Littrs does not support import, third-party packages, classes, closures, async/await, finally, or match. See the full list of supported Python features.

Citation

If you use Littrs in your research, please cite it as:

@software{littrs,
  title = {Littrs: A Minimal, Secure Python Sandbox for AI Agents},
  author = {Chonkie Inc.},
  url = {https://github.com/chonkie-inc/littrs},
  license = {Apache-2.0},
  year = {2025}
}

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