TaskExplorer supports Sandboxie, but this has to be enabled in its settings. If Sandboxie-Logon is enabled in Sandboxie, any task manager, including TaskExplorer, shows the box name as "Sandboxie\name_of_the_box" or just "name_of_the_box" as username. TaskExplorer can do more, when you check the required box in its settings.
Click on "Options" and then "Settings" from there you need to open the tab "Advanced" and check "Support Sandboxie".

Once restarted, the process tree highlights the processes with a green color and the status is labeled as "Sandboxed".
Within the properties of the process, there is a new tab labeled "Sandboxie"

If the process does not run sandboxed, the contents of that tab appear empty, as there is nothing to show.
If the process is sandboxed, it will show
Click on "Options" and then "Settings" from there you need to open the tab "Advanced" and check "Support Sandboxie".

Once restarted, the process tree highlights the processes with a green color and the status is labeled as "Sandboxed".
Within the properties of the process, there is a new tab labeled "Sandboxie"
If the process does not run sandboxed, the contents of that tab appear empty, as there is nothing to show.
If the process is sandboxed, it will show
- The name of the sandbox the process is in
- What User SID is assigned to that box
- The name of the process
- Information about the type and applied settings, like if it was forced into the box, or if rights are dropped
- Where the sandbox data is stored (The file root path)
- Where the registry hive is mounted to (The key root path)
- What the IPC root of the sandbox is (IPC root path)
- Files, shows applied file path settings, like "Write", "Open", "Normal", "Closed". Some of which come from defaults and the template file, while some are what the user had set them to.
- Keys, shows applied key path settings, like "Write", "Open", "Normal", "Closed". Some of which come from defaults and the template file, while some are what the user had set them to.
- IPC, shows the applied inter-process communication (IPC) settings, like "Read", "Open" or "Closed". This should be the defaults and templates, unless the user made changes to what the inter-process communication can do or not.
- WinClass, shows the WindowClasses settings, like "Open", "No Rename" for items like "SystemTray". Those are the default values or templates, unless the user had to allow some WinClass for a sandboxed process to interact with.
- Config, shows settings and templates, including their name and value. The column "type" shows why something is applied, like "Global" means there is a global setting, making Sandboxie apply that settings to this sandbox. "Template" means there is a template that contains the setting and is either active because it is enabled for the sandbox, or because the template applies globally.
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