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Diffstat (limited to 'tools/lib/bpf/bpf_helpers.h')
-rw-r--r-- | tools/lib/bpf/bpf_helpers.h | 402 |
1 files changed, 402 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tools/lib/bpf/bpf_helpers.h b/tools/lib/bpf/bpf_helpers.h new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..bbab9ad9dc --- /dev/null +++ b/tools/lib/bpf/bpf_helpers.h @@ -0,0 +1,402 @@ +/* SPDX-License-Identifier: (LGPL-2.1 OR BSD-2-Clause) */ +#ifndef __BPF_HELPERS__ +#define __BPF_HELPERS__ + +/* + * Note that bpf programs need to include either + * vmlinux.h (auto-generated from BTF) or linux/types.h + * in advance since bpf_helper_defs.h uses such types + * as __u64. + */ +#include "bpf_helper_defs.h" + +#define __uint(name, val) int (*name)[val] +#define __type(name, val) typeof(val) *name +#define __array(name, val) typeof(val) *name[] + +/* + * Helper macro to place programs, maps, license in + * different sections in elf_bpf file. Section names + * are interpreted by libbpf depending on the context (BPF programs, BPF maps, + * extern variables, etc). + * To allow use of SEC() with externs (e.g., for extern .maps declarations), + * make sure __attribute__((unused)) doesn't trigger compilation warning. + */ +#if __GNUC__ && !__clang__ + +/* + * Pragma macros are broken on GCC + * https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=55578 + * https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=90400 + */ +#define SEC(name) __attribute__((section(name), used)) + +#else + +#define SEC(name) \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic push") \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic ignored \"-Wignored-attributes\"") \ + __attribute__((section(name), used)) \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic pop") \ + +#endif + +/* Avoid 'linux/stddef.h' definition of '__always_inline'. */ +#undef __always_inline +#define __always_inline inline __attribute__((always_inline)) + +#ifndef __noinline +#define __noinline __attribute__((noinline)) +#endif +#ifndef __weak +#define __weak __attribute__((weak)) +#endif + +/* + * Use __hidden attribute to mark a non-static BPF subprogram effectively + * static for BPF verifier's verification algorithm purposes, allowing more + * extensive and permissive BPF verification process, taking into account + * subprogram's caller context. + */ +#define __hidden __attribute__((visibility("hidden"))) + +/* When utilizing vmlinux.h with BPF CO-RE, user BPF programs can't include + * any system-level headers (such as stddef.h, linux/version.h, etc), and + * commonly-used macros like NULL and KERNEL_VERSION aren't available through + * vmlinux.h. This just adds unnecessary hurdles and forces users to re-define + * them on their own. So as a convenience, provide such definitions here. + */ +#ifndef NULL +#define NULL ((void *)0) +#endif + +#ifndef KERNEL_VERSION +#define KERNEL_VERSION(a, b, c) (((a) << 16) + ((b) << 8) + ((c) > 255 ? 255 : (c))) +#endif + +/* + * Helper macros to manipulate data structures + */ + +/* offsetof() definition that uses __builtin_offset() might not preserve field + * offset CO-RE relocation properly, so force-redefine offsetof() using + * old-school approach which works with CO-RE correctly + */ +#undef offsetof +#define offsetof(type, member) ((unsigned long)&((type *)0)->member) + +/* redefined container_of() to ensure we use the above offsetof() macro */ +#undef container_of +#define container_of(ptr, type, member) \ + ({ \ + void *__mptr = (void *)(ptr); \ + ((type *)(__mptr - offsetof(type, member))); \ + }) + +/* + * Compiler (optimization) barrier. + */ +#ifndef barrier +#define barrier() asm volatile("" ::: "memory") +#endif + +/* Variable-specific compiler (optimization) barrier. It's a no-op which makes + * compiler believe that there is some black box modification of a given + * variable and thus prevents compiler from making extra assumption about its + * value and potential simplifications and optimizations on this variable. + * + * E.g., compiler might often delay or even omit 32-bit to 64-bit casting of + * a variable, making some code patterns unverifiable. Putting barrier_var() + * in place will ensure that cast is performed before the barrier_var() + * invocation, because compiler has to pessimistically assume that embedded + * asm section might perform some extra operations on that variable. + * + * This is a variable-specific variant of more global barrier(). + */ +#ifndef barrier_var +#define barrier_var(var) asm volatile("" : "+r"(var)) +#endif + +/* + * Helper macro to throw a compilation error if __bpf_unreachable() gets + * built into the resulting code. This works given BPF back end does not + * implement __builtin_trap(). This is useful to assert that certain paths + * of the program code are never used and hence eliminated by the compiler. + * + * For example, consider a switch statement that covers known cases used by + * the program. __bpf_unreachable() can then reside in the default case. If + * the program gets extended such that a case is not covered in the switch + * statement, then it will throw a build error due to the default case not + * being compiled out. + */ +#ifndef __bpf_unreachable +# define __bpf_unreachable() __builtin_trap() +#endif + +/* + * Helper function to perform a tail call with a constant/immediate map slot. + */ +#if __clang_major__ >= 8 && defined(__bpf__) +static __always_inline void +bpf_tail_call_static(void *ctx, const void *map, const __u32 slot) +{ + if (!__builtin_constant_p(slot)) + __bpf_unreachable(); + + /* + * Provide a hard guarantee that LLVM won't optimize setting r2 (map + * pointer) and r3 (constant map index) from _different paths_ ending + * up at the _same_ call insn as otherwise we won't be able to use the + * jmpq/nopl retpoline-free patching by the x86-64 JIT in the kernel + * given they mismatch. See also d2e4c1e6c294 ("bpf: Constant map key + * tracking for prog array pokes") for details on verifier tracking. + * + * Note on clobber list: we need to stay in-line with BPF calling + * convention, so even if we don't end up using r0, r4, r5, we need + * to mark them as clobber so that LLVM doesn't end up using them + * before / after the call. + */ + asm volatile("r1 = %[ctx]\n\t" + "r2 = %[map]\n\t" + "r3 = %[slot]\n\t" + "call 12" + :: [ctx]"r"(ctx), [map]"r"(map), [slot]"i"(slot) + : "r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", "r4", "r5"); +} +#endif + +enum libbpf_pin_type { + LIBBPF_PIN_NONE, + /* PIN_BY_NAME: pin maps by name (in /sys/fs/bpf by default) */ + LIBBPF_PIN_BY_NAME, +}; + +enum libbpf_tristate { + TRI_NO = 0, + TRI_YES = 1, + TRI_MODULE = 2, +}; + +#define __kconfig __attribute__((section(".kconfig"))) +#define __ksym __attribute__((section(".ksyms"))) +#define __kptr_untrusted __attribute__((btf_type_tag("kptr_untrusted"))) +#define __kptr __attribute__((btf_type_tag("kptr"))) + +#define bpf_ksym_exists(sym) ({ \ + _Static_assert(!__builtin_constant_p(!!sym), #sym " should be marked as __weak"); \ + !!sym; \ +}) + +#ifndef ___bpf_concat +#define ___bpf_concat(a, b) a ## b +#endif +#ifndef ___bpf_apply +#define ___bpf_apply(fn, n) ___bpf_concat(fn, n) +#endif +#ifndef ___bpf_nth +#define ___bpf_nth(_, _1, _2, _3, _4, _5, _6, _7, _8, _9, _a, _b, _c, N, ...) N +#endif +#ifndef ___bpf_narg +#define ___bpf_narg(...) \ + ___bpf_nth(_, ##__VA_ARGS__, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0) +#endif + +#define ___bpf_fill0(arr, p, x) do {} while (0) +#define ___bpf_fill1(arr, p, x) arr[p] = x +#define ___bpf_fill2(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill1(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill3(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill2(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill4(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill3(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill5(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill4(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill6(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill5(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill7(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill6(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill8(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill7(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill9(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill8(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill10(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill9(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill11(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill10(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill12(arr, p, x, args...) arr[p] = x; ___bpf_fill11(arr, p + 1, args) +#define ___bpf_fill(arr, args...) \ + ___bpf_apply(___bpf_fill, ___bpf_narg(args))(arr, 0, args) + +/* + * BPF_SEQ_PRINTF to wrap bpf_seq_printf to-be-printed values + * in a structure. + */ +#define BPF_SEQ_PRINTF(seq, fmt, args...) \ +({ \ + static const char ___fmt[] = fmt; \ + unsigned long long ___param[___bpf_narg(args)]; \ + \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic push") \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic ignored \"-Wint-conversion\"") \ + ___bpf_fill(___param, args); \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic pop") \ + \ + bpf_seq_printf(seq, ___fmt, sizeof(___fmt), \ + ___param, sizeof(___param)); \ +}) + +/* + * BPF_SNPRINTF wraps the bpf_snprintf helper with variadic arguments instead of + * an array of u64. + */ +#define BPF_SNPRINTF(out, out_size, fmt, args...) \ +({ \ + static const char ___fmt[] = fmt; \ + unsigned long long ___param[___bpf_narg(args)]; \ + \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic push") \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic ignored \"-Wint-conversion\"") \ + ___bpf_fill(___param, args); \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic pop") \ + \ + bpf_snprintf(out, out_size, ___fmt, \ + ___param, sizeof(___param)); \ +}) + +#ifdef BPF_NO_GLOBAL_DATA +#define BPF_PRINTK_FMT_MOD +#else +#define BPF_PRINTK_FMT_MOD static const +#endif + +#define __bpf_printk(fmt, ...) \ +({ \ + BPF_PRINTK_FMT_MOD char ____fmt[] = fmt; \ + bpf_trace_printk(____fmt, sizeof(____fmt), \ + ##__VA_ARGS__); \ +}) + +/* + * __bpf_vprintk wraps the bpf_trace_vprintk helper with variadic arguments + * instead of an array of u64. + */ +#define __bpf_vprintk(fmt, args...) \ +({ \ + static const char ___fmt[] = fmt; \ + unsigned long long ___param[___bpf_narg(args)]; \ + \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic push") \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic ignored \"-Wint-conversion\"") \ + ___bpf_fill(___param, args); \ + _Pragma("GCC diagnostic pop") \ + \ + bpf_trace_vprintk(___fmt, sizeof(___fmt), \ + ___param, sizeof(___param)); \ +}) + +/* Use __bpf_printk when bpf_printk call has 3 or fewer fmt args + * Otherwise use __bpf_vprintk + */ +#define ___bpf_pick_printk(...) \ + ___bpf_nth(_, ##__VA_ARGS__, __bpf_vprintk, __bpf_vprintk, __bpf_vprintk, \ + __bpf_vprintk, __bpf_vprintk, __bpf_vprintk, __bpf_vprintk, \ + __bpf_vprintk, __bpf_vprintk, __bpf_printk /*3*/, __bpf_printk /*2*/,\ + __bpf_printk /*1*/, __bpf_printk /*0*/) + +/* Helper macro to print out debug messages */ +#define bpf_printk(fmt, args...) ___bpf_pick_printk(args)(fmt, ##args) + +struct bpf_iter_num; + +extern int bpf_iter_num_new(struct bpf_iter_num *it, int start, int end) __weak __ksym; +extern int *bpf_iter_num_next(struct bpf_iter_num *it) __weak __ksym; +extern void bpf_iter_num_destroy(struct bpf_iter_num *it) __weak __ksym; + +#ifndef bpf_for_each +/* bpf_for_each(iter_type, cur_elem, args...) provides generic construct for + * using BPF open-coded iterators without having to write mundane explicit + * low-level loop logic. Instead, it provides for()-like generic construct + * that can be used pretty naturally. E.g., for some hypothetical cgroup + * iterator, you'd write: + * + * struct cgroup *cg, *parent_cg = <...>; + * + * bpf_for_each(cgroup, cg, parent_cg, CG_ITER_CHILDREN) { + * bpf_printk("Child cgroup id = %d", cg->cgroup_id); + * if (cg->cgroup_id == 123) + * break; + * } + * + * I.e., it looks almost like high-level for each loop in other languages, + * supports continue/break, and is verifiable by BPF verifier. + * + * For iterating integers, the difference betwen bpf_for_each(num, i, N, M) + * and bpf_for(i, N, M) is in that bpf_for() provides additional proof to + * verifier that i is in [N, M) range, and in bpf_for_each() case i is `int + * *`, not just `int`. So for integers bpf_for() is more convenient. + * + * Note: this macro relies on C99 feature of allowing to declare variables + * inside for() loop, bound to for() loop lifetime. It also utilizes GCC + * extension: __attribute__((cleanup(<func>))), supported by both GCC and + * Clang. + */ +#define bpf_for_each(type, cur, args...) for ( \ + /* initialize and define destructor */ \ + struct bpf_iter_##type ___it __attribute__((aligned(8), /* enforce, just in case */, \ + cleanup(bpf_iter_##type##_destroy))), \ + /* ___p pointer is just to call bpf_iter_##type##_new() *once* to init ___it */ \ + *___p __attribute__((unused)) = ( \ + bpf_iter_##type##_new(&___it, ##args), \ + /* this is a workaround for Clang bug: it currently doesn't emit BTF */ \ + /* for bpf_iter_##type##_destroy() when used from cleanup() attribute */ \ + (void)bpf_iter_##type##_destroy, (void *)0); \ + /* iteration and termination check */ \ + (((cur) = bpf_iter_##type##_next(&___it))); \ +) +#endif /* bpf_for_each */ + +#ifndef bpf_for +/* bpf_for(i, start, end) implements a for()-like looping construct that sets + * provided integer variable *i* to values starting from *start* through, + * but not including, *end*. It also proves to BPF verifier that *i* belongs + * to range [start, end), so this can be used for accessing arrays without + * extra checks. + * + * Note: *start* and *end* are assumed to be expressions with no side effects + * and whose values do not change throughout bpf_for() loop execution. They do + * not have to be statically known or constant, though. + * + * Note: similarly to bpf_for_each(), it relies on C99 feature of declaring for() + * loop bound variables and cleanup attribute, supported by GCC and Clang. + */ +#define bpf_for(i, start, end) for ( \ + /* initialize and define destructor */ \ + struct bpf_iter_num ___it __attribute__((aligned(8), /* enforce, just in case */ \ + cleanup(bpf_iter_num_destroy))), \ + /* ___p pointer is necessary to call bpf_iter_num_new() *once* to init ___it */ \ + *___p __attribute__((unused)) = ( \ + bpf_iter_num_new(&___it, (start), (end)), \ + /* this is a workaround for Clang bug: it currently doesn't emit BTF */ \ + /* for bpf_iter_num_destroy() when used from cleanup() attribute */ \ + (void)bpf_iter_num_destroy, (void *)0); \ + ({ \ + /* iteration step */ \ + int *___t = bpf_iter_num_next(&___it); \ + /* termination and bounds check */ \ + (___t && ((i) = *___t, (i) >= (start) && (i) < (end))); \ + }); \ +) +#endif /* bpf_for */ + +#ifndef bpf_repeat +/* bpf_repeat(N) performs N iterations without exposing iteration number + * + * Note: similarly to bpf_for_each(), it relies on C99 feature of declaring for() + * loop bound variables and cleanup attribute, supported by GCC and Clang. + */ +#define bpf_repeat(N) for ( \ + /* initialize and define destructor */ \ + struct bpf_iter_num ___it __attribute__((aligned(8), /* enforce, just in case */ \ + cleanup(bpf_iter_num_destroy))), \ + /* ___p pointer is necessary to call bpf_iter_num_new() *once* to init ___it */ \ + *___p __attribute__((unused)) = ( \ + bpf_iter_num_new(&___it, 0, (N)), \ + /* this is a workaround for Clang bug: it currently doesn't emit BTF */ \ + /* for bpf_iter_num_destroy() when used from cleanup() attribute */ \ + (void)bpf_iter_num_destroy, (void *)0); \ + bpf_iter_num_next(&___it); \ + /* nothing here */ \ +) +#endif /* bpf_repeat */ + +#endif |