Alan Maguire says:
====================
This series attempts to provide a simple way for BPF programs (and in
future other consumers) to utilize BPF Type Format (BTF) information
to display kernel data structures in-kernel. The use case this
functionality is applied to here is to support a snprintf()-like
helper to copy a BTF representation of kernel data to a string,
and a BPF seq file helper to display BTF data for an iterator.
There is already support in kernel/bpf/btf.c for "show" functionality;
the changes here generalize that support from seq-file specific
verifier display to the more generic case and add another specific
use case; rather than seq_printf()ing the show data, it is copied
to a supplied string using a snprintf()-like function. Other future
consumers of the show functionality could include a bpf_printk_btf()
function which printk()ed the data instead. Oops messaging in
particular would be an interesting application for such functionality.
The above potential use case hints at a potential reply to
a reasonable objection that such typed display should be
solved by tracing programs, where the in-kernel tracing records
data and the userspace program prints it out. While this
is certainly the recommended approach for most cases, I
believe having an in-kernel mechanism would be valuable
also. Critically in BPF programs it greatly simplifies
debugging and tracing of such data to invoking a simple
helper.
One challenge raised in an earlier iteration of this work -
where the BTF printing was implemented as a printk() format
specifier - was that the amount of data printed per
printk() was large, and other format specifiers were far
simpler. Here we sidestep that concern by printing
components of the BTF representation as we go for the
seq file case, and in the string case the snprintf()-like
operation is intended to be a basis for perf event or
ringbuf output. The reasons for avoiding bpf_trace_printk
are that
1. bpf_trace_printk() strings are restricted in size and
cannot display anything beyond trivial data structures; and
2. bpf_trace_printk() is for debugging purposes only.
As Alexei suggested, a bpf_trace_puts() helper could solve
this in the future but it still would be limited by the
1000 byte limit for traced strings.
Default output for an sk_buff looks like this (zeroed fields
are omitted):
(struct sk_buff){
.transport_header = (__u16)65535,
.mac_header = (__u16)65535,
.end = (sk_buff_data_t)192,
.head = (unsigned char *)0x000000007524fd8b,
.data = (unsigned char *)0x000000007524fd8b,
.truesize = (unsigned int)768,
.users = (refcount_t){
.refs = (atomic_t){
.counter = (int)1,
},
},
}
Flags can modify aspects of output format; see patch 3
for more details.
Changes since v6:
- Updated safe data size to 32, object name size to 80.
This increases the number of safe copies done, but performance is
not a key goal here. WRT name size the largest type name length
in bpf-next according to "pahole -s" is 64 bytes, so that still gives
room for additional type qualifiers, parens etc within the name limit
(Alexei, patch 2)
- Remove inlines and converted as many #defines to functions as was
possible. In a few cases - btf_show_type_value[s]() specifically -
I left these as macros as btf_show_type_value[s]() prepends and
appends format strings to the format specifier (in order to include
indentation, delimiters etc so a macro makes that simpler (Alexei,
patch 2)
- Handle btf_resolve_size() error in btf_show_obj_safe() (Alexei, patch 2)
- Removed clang loop unroll in BTF snprintf test (Alexei)
- switched to using bpf_core_type_id_kernel(type) as suggested by Andrii,
and Alexei noted that __builtin_btf_type_id(,1) should be used (patch 4)
- Added skip logic if __builtin_btf_type_id is not available (patches 4,8)
- Bumped limits on bpf iters to support printing larger structures (Alexei,
patch 5)
- Updated overflow bpf_iter tests to reflect new iter max size (patch 6)
- Updated seq helper to use type id only (Alexei, patch 7)
- Updated BTF task iter test to use task struct instead of struct fs_struct
since new limits allow a task_struct to be displayed (patch 8)
- Fixed E2BIG handling in iter task (Alexei, patch 8)
Changes since v5:
- Moved btf print prepare into patch 3, type show seq
with flags into patch 2 (Alexei, patches 2,3)
- Fixed build bot warnings around static declarations
and printf attributes
- Renamed functions to snprintf_btf/seq_printf_btf
(Alexei, patches 3-6)
Changes since v4:
- Changed approach from a BPF trace event-centric design to one
utilizing a snprintf()-like helper and an iter helper (Alexei,
patches 3,5)
- Added tests to verify BTF output (patch 4)
- Added support to tests for verifying BTF type_id-based display
as well as type name via __builtin_btf_type_id (Andrii, patch 4).
- Augmented task iter tests to cover the BTF-based seq helper.
Because a task_struct's BTF-based representation would overflow
the PAGE_SIZE limit on iterator data, the "struct fs_struct"
(task->fs) is displayed for each task instead (Alexei, patch 6).
Changes since v3:
- Moved to RFC since the approach is different (and bpf-next is
closed)
- Rather than using a printk() format specifier as the means
of invoking BTF-enabled display, a dedicated BPF helper is
used. This solves the issue of printk() having to output
large amounts of data using a complex mechanism such as
BTF traversal, but still provides a way for the display of
such data to be achieved via BPF programs. Future work could
include a bpf_printk_btf() function to invoke display via
printk() where the elements of a data structure are printk()ed
one at a time. Thanks to Petr Mladek, Andy Shevchenko and
Rasmus Villemoes who took time to look at the earlier printk()
format-specifier-focused version of this and provided feedback
clarifying the problems with that approach.
- Added trace id to the bpf_trace_printk events as a means of
separating output from standard bpf_trace_printk() events,
ensuring it can be easily parsed by the reader.
- Added bpf_trace_btf() helper tests which do simple verification
of the various display options.
Changes since v2:
- Alexei and Yonghong suggested it would be good to use
probe_kernel_read() on to-be-shown data to ensure safety
during operation. Safe copy via probe_kernel_read() to a
buffer object in "struct btf_show" is used to support
this. A few different approaches were explored
including dynamic allocation and per-cpu buffers. The
downside of dynamic allocation is that it would be done
during BPF program execution for bpf_trace_printk()s using
%pT format specifiers. The problem with per-cpu buffers
is we'd have to manage preemption and since the display
of an object occurs over an extended period and in printk
context where we'd rather not change preemption status,
it seemed tricky to manage buffer safety while considering
preemption. The approach of utilizing stack buffer space
via the "struct btf_show" seemed like the simplest approach.
The stack size of the associated functions which have a
"struct btf_show" on their stack to support show operation
(btf_type_snprintf_show() and btf_type_seq_show()) stays
under 500 bytes. The compromise here is the safe buffer we
use is small - 256 bytes - and as a result multiple
probe_kernel_read()s are needed for larger objects. Most
objects of interest are smaller than this (e.g.
"struct sk_buff" is 224 bytes), and while task_struct is a
notable exception at ~8K, performance is not the priority for
BTF-based display. (Alexei and Yonghong, patch 2).
- safe buffer use is the default behaviour (and is mandatory
for BPF) but unsafe display - meaning no safe copy is done
and we operate on the object itself - is supported via a
'u' option.
- pointers are prefixed with 0x for clarity (Alexei, patch 2)
- added additional comments and explanations around BTF show
code, especially around determining whether objects such
zeroed. Also tried to comment safe object scheme used. (Yonghong,
patch 2)
- added late_initcall() to initialize vmlinux BTF so that it would
not have to be initialized during printk operation (Alexei,
patch 5)
- removed CONFIG_BTF_PRINTF config option as it is not needed;
CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF can be used to gate test behaviour and
determining behaviour of type-based printk can be done via
retrieval of BTF data; if it's not there BTF was unavailable
or broken (Alexei, patches 4,6)
- fix bpf_trace_printk test to use vmlinux.h and globals via
skeleton infrastructure, removing need for perf events
(Andrii, patch 8)
Changes since v1:
- changed format to be more drgn-like, rendering indented type info
along with type names by default (Alexei)
- zeroed values are omitted (Arnaldo) by default unless the '0'
modifier is specified (Alexei)
- added an option to print pointer values without obfuscation.
The reason to do this is the sysctls controlling pointer display
are likely to be irrelevant in many if not most tracing contexts.
Some questions on this in the outstanding questions section below...
- reworked printk format specifer so that we no longer rely on format
%pT<type> but instead use a struct * which contains type information
(Rasmus). This simplifies the printk parsing, makes use more dynamic
and also allows specification by BTF id as well as name.
- removed incorrect patch which tried to fix dereferencing of resolved
BTF info for vmlinux; instead we skip modifiers for the relevant
case (array element type determination) (Alexei).
- fixed issues with negative snprintf format length (Rasmus)
- added test cases for various data structure formats; base types,
typedefs, structs, etc.
- tests now iterate through all typedef, enum, struct and unions
defined for vmlinux BTF and render a version of the target dummy
value which is either all zeros or all 0xff values; the idea is this
exercises the "skip if zero" and "print everything" cases.
- added support in BPF for using the %pT format specifier in
bpf_trace_printk()
- added BPF tests which ensure %pT format specifier use works (Alexei).
====================
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>