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- .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
- ===================================
- Running BPF programs from userspace
- ===================================
- This document describes the ``BPF_PROG_RUN`` facility for running BPF programs
- from userspace.
- .. contents::
- :local:
- :depth: 2
- Overview
- --------
- The ``BPF_PROG_RUN`` command can be used through the ``bpf()`` syscall to
- execute a BPF program in the kernel and return the results to userspace. This
- can be used to unit test BPF programs against user-supplied context objects, and
- as way to explicitly execute programs in the kernel for their side effects. The
- command was previously named ``BPF_PROG_TEST_RUN``, and both constants continue
- to be defined in the UAPI header, aliased to the same value.
- The ``BPF_PROG_RUN`` command can be used to execute BPF programs of the
- following types:
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_SOCKET_FILTER``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_SCHED_CLS``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_SCHED_ACT``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_XDP``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_SK_LOOKUP``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_CGROUP_SKB``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_LWT_IN``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_LWT_OUT``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_LWT_XMIT``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_LWT_SEG6LOCAL``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_FLOW_DISSECTOR``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_STRUCT_OPS``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_RAW_TRACEPOINT``
- - ``BPF_PROG_TYPE_SYSCALL``
- When using the ``BPF_PROG_RUN`` command, userspace supplies an input context
- object and (for program types operating on network packets) a buffer containing
- the packet data that the BPF program will operate on. The kernel will then
- execute the program and return the results to userspace. Note that programs will
- not have any side effects while being run in this mode; in particular, packets
- will not actually be redirected or dropped, the program return code will just be
- returned to userspace. A separate mode for live execution of XDP programs is
- provided, documented separately below.
- Running XDP programs in "live frame mode"
- -----------------------------------------
- The ``BPF_PROG_RUN`` command has a separate mode for running live XDP programs,
- which can be used to execute XDP programs in a way where packets will actually
- be processed by the kernel after the execution of the XDP program as if they
- arrived on a physical interface. This mode is activated by setting the
- ``BPF_F_TEST_XDP_LIVE_FRAMES`` flag when supplying an XDP program to
- ``BPF_PROG_RUN``.
- The live packet mode is optimised for high performance execution of the supplied
- XDP program many times (suitable for, e.g., running as a traffic generator),
- which means the semantics are not quite as straight-forward as the regular test
- run mode. Specifically:
- - When executing an XDP program in live frame mode, the result of the execution
- will not be returned to userspace; instead, the kernel will perform the
- operation indicated by the program's return code (drop the packet, redirect
- it, etc). For this reason, setting the ``data_out`` or ``ctx_out`` attributes
- in the syscall parameters when running in this mode will be rejected. In
- addition, not all failures will be reported back to userspace directly;
- specifically, only fatal errors in setup or during execution (like memory
- allocation errors) will halt execution and return an error. If an error occurs
- in packet processing, like a failure to redirect to a given interface,
- execution will continue with the next repetition; these errors can be detected
- via the same trace points as for regular XDP programs.
- - Userspace can supply an ifindex as part of the context object, just like in
- the regular (non-live) mode. The XDP program will be executed as though the
- packet arrived on this interface; i.e., the ``ingress_ifindex`` of the context
- object will point to that interface. Furthermore, if the XDP program returns
- ``XDP_PASS``, the packet will be injected into the kernel networking stack as
- though it arrived on that ifindex, and if it returns ``XDP_TX``, the packet
- will be transmitted *out* of that same interface. Do note, though, that
- because the program execution is not happening in driver context, an
- ``XDP_TX`` is actually turned into the same action as an ``XDP_REDIRECT`` to
- that same interface (i.e., it will only work if the driver has support for the
- ``ndo_xdp_xmit`` driver op).
- - When running the program with multiple repetitions, the execution will happen
- in batches. The batch size defaults to 64 packets (which is same as the
- maximum NAPI receive batch size), but can be specified by userspace through
- the ``batch_size`` parameter, up to a maximum of 256 packets. For each batch,
- the kernel executes the XDP program repeatedly, each invocation getting a
- separate copy of the packet data. For each repetition, if the program drops
- the packet, the data page is immediately recycled (see below). Otherwise, the
- packet is buffered until the end of the batch, at which point all packets
- buffered this way during the batch are transmitted at once.
- - When setting up the test run, the kernel will initialise a pool of memory
- pages of the same size as the batch size. Each memory page will be initialised
- with the initial packet data supplied by userspace at ``BPF_PROG_RUN``
- invocation. When possible, the pages will be recycled on future program
- invocations, to improve performance. Pages will generally be recycled a full
- batch at a time, except when a packet is dropped (by return code or because
- of, say, a redirection error), in which case that page will be recycled
- immediately. If a packet ends up being passed to the regular networking stack
- (because the XDP program returns ``XDP_PASS``, or because it ends up being
- redirected to an interface that injects it into the stack), the page will be
- released and a new one will be allocated when the pool is empty.
- When recycling, the page content is not rewritten; only the packet boundary
- pointers (``data``, ``data_end`` and ``data_meta``) in the context object will
- be reset to the original values. This means that if a program rewrites the
- packet contents, it has to be prepared to see either the original content or
- the modified version on subsequent invocations.
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