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authorDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>2015-03-15 22:02:35 -0400
committerDavid S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>2015-03-15 22:02:35 -0400
commit70006af955151042aa62958b92b53f4296030fe5 (patch)
tree3c294086671617614f672aeb0d14bd2496fdb23c /lib/rhashtable.c
parenta498cfe990f569dd3766bfc9bfd2a5ee04468cd2 (diff)
parent614cd3bd3758a806cea497d493b584e6157561f7 (diff)
Merge branch 'ebpf_skb_fields'
Alexei Starovoitov says: ==================== bpf: allow eBPF access skb fields V1->V2: - refactored field access converter into common helper convert_skb_access() used in both classic and extended BPF - added missing build_bug_on for field 'len' - added comment to uapi/linux/bpf.h as suggested by Daniel - dropped exposing 'ifindex' field for now classic BPF has a way to access skb fields, whereas extended BPF didn't. This patch introduces this ability. Classic BPF can access fields via negative SKF_AD_OFF offset. Positive bpf_ld_abs N is treated as load from packet, whereas bpf_ld_abs -0x1000 + N is treated as skb fields access. Many offsets were hard coded over years: SKF_AD_PROTOCOL, SKF_AD_PKTTYPE, etc. The problem with this approach was that for every new field classic bpf assembler had to be tweaked. I've considered doing the same for extended, but for every new field LLVM compiler would have to be modifed. Since it would need to add a new intrinsic. It could be done with single intrinsic and magic offset or use of inline assembler, but neither are clean from compiler backend point of view, since they look like calls but shouldn't scratch caller-saved registers. Another approach was to introduce a new helper functions like bpf_get_pkt_type() for every field that we want to access, but that is equally ugly for kernel and slow, since helpers are calls and they are slower then just loads. In theory helper calls can be 'inlined' inside kernel into direct loads, but since they were calls for user space, compiler would have to spill registers around such calls anyway. Teaching compiler to treat such helpers differently is even uglier. They were few other ideas considered. At the end the best seems to be to introduce a user accessible mirror of in-kernel sk_buff structure: struct __sk_buff { __u32 len; __u32 pkt_type; __u32 mark; __u32 queue_mapping; }; bpf programs will do: int bpf_prog1(struct __sk_buff *skb) { __u32 var = skb->pkt_type; which will be compiled to bpf assembler as: dst_reg = *(u32 *)(src_reg + 4) // 4 == offsetof(struct __sk_buff, pkt_type) bpf verifier will check validity of access and will convert it to: dst_reg = *(u8 *)(src_reg + offsetof(struct sk_buff, __pkt_type_offset)) dst_reg &= 7 since 'pkt_type' is a bitfield. No new instructions added. LLVM doesn't need to be modified. JITs don't change and verifier already knows when it accesses 'ctx' pointer. The only thing needed was to convert user visible offset within __sk_buff to kernel internal offset within sk_buff. For 'len' and other fields conversion is trivial. Converting 'pkt_type' takes 2 or 3 instructions depending on endianness. More fields can be exposed by adding to the end of the 'struct __sk_buff'. Like vlan_tci and others can be added later. When pkt_type field is moved around, goes into different structure, removed or its size changes, the function convert_skb_access() would need to updated and it will cover both classic and extended. Patch 2 updates examples to demonstrates how fields are accessed and adds new tests for verifier, since it needs to detect a corner case when attacker is using single bpf instruction in two branches with different register types. The 4 fields of __sk_buff are already exposed to user space via classic bpf and I believe they're useful in extended as well. ==================== Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/rhashtable.c')
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