linux-stable/tools/testing/selftests/bpf/Makefile

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License cleanup: add SPDX GPL-2.0 license identifier to files with no license Many source files in the tree are missing licensing information, which makes it harder for compliance tools to determine the correct license. By default all files without license information are under the default license of the kernel, which is GPL version 2. Update the files which contain no license information with the 'GPL-2.0' SPDX license identifier. The SPDX identifier is a legally binding shorthand, which can be used instead of the full boiler plate text. This patch is based on work done by Thomas Gleixner and Kate Stewart and Philippe Ombredanne. How this work was done: Patches were generated and checked against linux-4.14-rc6 for a subset of the use cases: - file had no licensing information it it. - file was a */uapi/* one with no licensing information in it, - file was a */uapi/* one with existing licensing information, Further patches will be generated in subsequent months to fix up cases where non-standard license headers were used, and references to license had to be inferred by heuristics based on keywords. The analysis to determine which SPDX License Identifier to be applied to a file was done in a spreadsheet of side by side results from of the output of two independent scanners (ScanCode & Windriver) producing SPDX tag:value files created by Philippe Ombredanne. Philippe prepared the base worksheet, and did an initial spot review of a few 1000 files. The 4.13 kernel was the starting point of the analysis with 60,537 files assessed. Kate Stewart did a file by file comparison of the scanner results in the spreadsheet to determine which SPDX license identifier(s) to be applied to the file. She confirmed any determination that was not immediately clear with lawyers working with the Linux Foundation. Criteria used to select files for SPDX license identifier tagging was: - Files considered eligible had to be source code files. - Make and config files were included as candidates if they contained >5 lines of source - File already had some variant of a license header in it (even if <5 lines). All documentation files were explicitly excluded. The following heuristics were used to determine which SPDX license identifiers to apply. - when both scanners couldn't find any license traces, file was considered to have no license information in it, and the top level COPYING file license applied. For non */uapi/* files that summary was: SPDX license identifier # files ---------------------------------------------------|------- GPL-2.0 11139 and resulted in the first patch in this series. If that file was a */uapi/* path one, it was "GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note" otherwise it was "GPL-2.0". Results of that was: SPDX license identifier # files ---------------------------------------------------|------- GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note 930 and resulted in the second patch in this series. - if a file had some form of licensing information in it, and was one of the */uapi/* ones, it was denoted with the Linux-syscall-note if any GPL family license was found in the file or had no licensing in it (per prior point). Results summary: SPDX license identifier # files ---------------------------------------------------|------ GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note 270 GPL-2.0+ WITH Linux-syscall-note 169 ((GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note) OR BSD-2-Clause) 21 ((GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note) OR BSD-3-Clause) 17 LGPL-2.1+ WITH Linux-syscall-note 15 GPL-1.0+ WITH Linux-syscall-note 14 ((GPL-2.0+ WITH Linux-syscall-note) OR BSD-3-Clause) 5 LGPL-2.0+ WITH Linux-syscall-note 4 LGPL-2.1 WITH Linux-syscall-note 3 ((GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note) OR MIT) 3 ((GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note) AND MIT) 1 and that resulted in the third patch in this series. - when the two scanners agreed on the detected license(s), that became the concluded license(s). - when there was disagreement between the two scanners (one detected a license but the other didn't, or they both detected different licenses) a manual inspection of the file occurred. - In most cases a manual inspection of the information in the file resulted in a clear resolution of the license that should apply (and which scanner probably needed to revisit its heuristics). - When it was not immediately clear, the license identifier was confirmed with lawyers working with the Linux Foundation. - If there was any question as to the appropriate license identifier, the file was flagged for further research and to be revisited later in time. In total, over 70 hours of logged manual review was done on the spreadsheet to determine the SPDX license identifiers to apply to the source files by Kate, Philippe, Thomas and, in some cases, confirmation by lawyers working with the Linux Foundation. Kate also obtained a third independent scan of the 4.13 code base from FOSSology, and compared selected files where the other two scanners disagreed against that SPDX file, to see if there was new insights. The Windriver scanner is based on an older version of FOSSology in part, so they are related. Thomas did random spot checks in about 500 files from the spreadsheets for the uapi headers and agreed with SPDX license identifier in the files he inspected. For the non-uapi files Thomas did random spot checks in about 15000 files. In initial set of patches against 4.14-rc6, 3 files were found to have copy/paste license identifier errors, and have been fixed to reflect the correct identifier. Additionally Philippe spent 10 hours this week doing a detailed manual inspection and review of the 12,461 patched files from the initial patch version early this week with: - a full scancode scan run, collecting the matched texts, detected license ids and scores - reviewing anything where there was a license detected (about 500+ files) to ensure that the applied SPDX license was correct - reviewing anything where there was no detection but the patch license was not GPL-2.0 WITH Linux-syscall-note to ensure that the applied SPDX license was correct This produced a worksheet with 20 files needing minor correction. This worksheet was then exported into 3 different .csv files for the different types of files to be modified. These .csv files were then reviewed by Greg. Thomas wrote a script to parse the csv files and add the proper SPDX tag to the file, in the format that the file expected. This script was further refined by Greg based on the output to detect more types of files automatically and to distinguish between header and source .c files (which need different comment types.) Finally Greg ran the script using the .csv files to generate the patches. Reviewed-by: Kate Stewart <kstewart@linuxfoundation.org> Reviewed-by: Philippe Ombredanne <pombredanne@nexb.com> Reviewed-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de> Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman <gregkh@linuxfoundation.org>
2017-11-01 14:07:57 +00:00
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
include ../../../../scripts/Kbuild.include
include ../../../scripts/Makefile.arch
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
CURDIR := $(abspath .)
TOOLSDIR := $(abspath ../../..)
LIBDIR := $(TOOLSDIR)/lib
BPFDIR := $(LIBDIR)/bpf
TOOLSINCDIR := $(TOOLSDIR)/include
BPFTOOLDIR := $(TOOLSDIR)/bpf/bpftool
APIDIR := $(TOOLSINCDIR)/uapi
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
GENDIR := $(abspath ../../../../include/generated)
GENHDR := $(GENDIR)/autoconf.h
ifneq ($(wildcard $(GENHDR)),)
GENFLAGS := -DHAVE_GENHDR
endif
CLANG ?= clang
LLC ?= llc
LLVM_OBJCOPY ?= llvm-objcopy
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
BPF_GCC ?= $(shell command -v bpf-gcc;)
selftests/bpf: Add SAN_CFLAGS param to selftests build to allow sanitizers Add ability to specify extra compiler flags with SAN_CFLAGS for compilation of all user-space C files. This allows to build all of selftest programs with, e.g., custom sanitizer flags, without requiring support for such sanitizers from anyone compiling selftest/bpf. As an example, to compile everything with AddressSanitizer, one would do: $ make clean && make SAN_CFLAGS="-fsanitize=address" For AddressSanitizer to work, one needs appropriate libasan shared library installed in the system, with version of libasan matching what GCC links against. E.g., GCC8 needs libasan5, while GCC7 uses libasan4. For CentOS 7, to build everything successfully one would need to: $ sudo yum install devtoolset-8-gcc devtoolset-libasan-devel $ scl enable devtoolset-8 bash # set up environment For Arch Linux to run selftests, one would need to install gcc-libs package to get libasan.so.5: $ sudo pacman -S gcc-libs N.B. EXTRA_CFLAGS name wasn't used, because it's also used by libbpf's Makefile and this causes few issues: 1. default "-g -Wall" flags are overriden; 2. compiling shared library with AddressSanitizer generates a bunch of symbols like: "_GLOBAL__sub_D_00099_0_btf_dump.c", "_GLOBAL__sub_D_00099_0_bpf.c", etc, which screws up versioned symbols check. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Cc: Julia Kartseva <hex@fb.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200429012111.277390-3-andriin@fb.com
2020-04-29 01:21:02 +00:00
SAN_CFLAGS ?=
CFLAGS += -g -rdynamic -Wall -O2 $(GENFLAGS) $(SAN_CFLAGS) \
-I$(CURDIR) -I$(INCLUDE_DIR) -I$(GENDIR) -I$(LIBDIR) \
-I$(TOOLSINCDIR) -I$(APIDIR) \
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
-Dbpf_prog_load=bpf_prog_test_load \
selftests: bpf: enable hi32 randomization for all tests The previous libbpf patch allows user to specify "prog_flags" to bpf program load APIs. To enable high 32-bit randomization for a test, we need to set BPF_F_TEST_RND_HI32 in "prog_flags". To enable such randomization for all tests, we need to make sure all places are passing BPF_F_TEST_RND_HI32. Changing them one by one is not convenient, also, it would be better if a test could be switched to "normal" running mode without code change. Given the program load APIs used across bpf selftests are mostly: bpf_prog_load: load from file bpf_load_program: load from raw insns A test_stub.c is implemented for bpf seltests, it offers two functions for testing purpose: bpf_prog_test_load bpf_test_load_program The are the same as "bpf_prog_load" and "bpf_load_program", except they also set BPF_F_TEST_RND_HI32. Given *_xattr functions are the APIs to customize any "prog_flags", it makes little sense to put these two functions into libbpf. Then, the following CFLAGS are passed to compilations for host programs: -Dbpf_prog_load=bpf_prog_test_load -Dbpf_load_program=bpf_test_load_program They migrate the used load APIs to the test version, hence enable high 32-bit randomization for these tests without changing source code. Besides all these, there are several testcases are using "bpf_prog_load_attr" directly, their call sites are updated to pass BPF_F_TEST_RND_HI32. Signed-off-by: Jiong Wang <jiong.wang@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
2019-05-24 22:25:21 +00:00
-Dbpf_load_program=bpf_test_load_program
libbpf: Support libbpf-provided extern variables Add support for extern variables, provided to BPF program by libbpf. Currently the following extern variables are supported: - LINUX_KERNEL_VERSION; version of a kernel in which BPF program is executing, follows KERNEL_VERSION() macro convention, can be 4- and 8-byte long; - CONFIG_xxx values; a set of values of actual kernel config. Tristate, boolean, strings, and integer values are supported. Set of possible values is determined by declared type of extern variable. Supported types of variables are: - Tristate values. Are represented as `enum libbpf_tristate`. Accepted values are **strictly** 'y', 'n', or 'm', which are represented as TRI_YES, TRI_NO, or TRI_MODULE, respectively. - Boolean values. Are represented as bool (_Bool) types. Accepted values are 'y' and 'n' only, turning into true/false values, respectively. - Single-character values. Can be used both as a substritute for bool/tristate, or as a small-range integer: - 'y'/'n'/'m' are represented as is, as characters 'y', 'n', or 'm'; - integers in a range [-128, 127] or [0, 255] (depending on signedness of char in target architecture) are recognized and represented with respective values of char type. - Strings. String values are declared as fixed-length char arrays. String of up to that length will be accepted and put in first N bytes of char array, with the rest of bytes zeroed out. If config string value is longer than space alloted, it will be truncated and warning message emitted. Char array is always zero terminated. String literals in config have to be enclosed in double quotes, just like C-style string literals. - Integers. 8-, 16-, 32-, and 64-bit integers are supported, both signed and unsigned variants. Libbpf enforces parsed config value to be in the supported range of corresponding integer type. Integers values in config can be: - decimal integers, with optional + and - signs; - hexadecimal integers, prefixed with 0x or 0X; - octal integers, starting with 0. Config file itself is searched in /boot/config-$(uname -r) location with fallback to /proc/config.gz, unless config path is specified explicitly through bpf_object_open_opts' kernel_config_path option. Both gzipped and plain text formats are supported. Libbpf adds explicit dependency on zlib because of this, but this shouldn't be a problem, given libelf already depends on zlib. All detected extern variables, are put into a separate .extern internal map. It, similarly to .rodata map, is marked as read-only from BPF program side, as well as is frozen on load. This allows BPF verifier to track extern values as constants and perform enhanced branch prediction and dead code elimination. This can be relied upon for doing kernel version/feature detection and using potentially unsupported field relocations or BPF helpers in a CO-RE-based BPF program, while still having a single version of BPF program running on old and new kernels. Selftests are validating this explicitly for unexisting BPF helper. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191214014710.3449601-3-andriin@fb.com
2019-12-14 01:47:08 +00:00
LDLIBS += -lcap -lelf -lz -lrt -lpthread
# Order correspond to 'make run_tests' order
TEST_GEN_PROGS = test_verifier test_tag test_maps test_lru_map test_lpm_map test_progs \
selftests/bpf: Selftest for sys_bind post-hooks. Add selftest for attach types `BPF_CGROUP_INET4_POST_BIND` and `BPF_CGROUP_INET6_POST_BIND`. The main things tested are: * prog load behaves as expected (valid/invalid accesses in prog); * prog attach behaves as expected (load- vs attach-time attach types); * `BPF_CGROUP_INET_SOCK_CREATE` can be attached in a backward compatible way; * post-hooks return expected result and errno. Example: # ./test_sock Test case: bind4 load with invalid access: src_ip6 .. [PASS] Test case: bind4 load with invalid access: mark .. [PASS] Test case: bind6 load with invalid access: src_ip4 .. [PASS] Test case: sock_create load with invalid access: src_port .. [PASS] Test case: sock_create load w/o expected_attach_type (compat mode) .. [PASS] Test case: sock_create load w/ expected_attach_type .. [PASS] Test case: attach type mismatch bind4 vs bind6 .. [PASS] Test case: attach type mismatch bind6 vs bind4 .. [PASS] Test case: attach type mismatch default vs bind4 .. [PASS] Test case: attach type mismatch bind6 vs sock_create .. [PASS] Test case: bind4 reject all .. [PASS] Test case: bind6 reject all .. [PASS] Test case: bind6 deny specific IP & port .. [PASS] Test case: bind4 allow specific IP & port .. [PASS] Test case: bind4 allow all .. [PASS] Test case: bind6 allow all .. [PASS] Summary: 16 PASSED, 0 FAILED Signed-off-by: Andrey Ignatov <rdna@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2018-03-30 22:08:08 +00:00
test_align test_verifier_log test_dev_cgroup test_tcpbpf_user \
test_sock test_btf test_sockmap get_cgroup_id_user test_socket_cookie \
test_cgroup_storage \
test_netcnt test_tcpnotify_user test_sock_fields test_sysctl \
test_progs-no_alu32 \
test_current_pid_tgid_new_ns
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# Also test bpf-gcc, if present
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
ifneq ($(BPF_GCC),)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
TEST_GEN_PROGS += test_progs-bpf_gcc
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
endif
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
TEST_GEN_FILES =
TEST_FILES = test_lwt_ip_encap.o \
test_tc_edt.o
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# Order correspond to 'make run_tests' order
TEST_PROGS := test_kmod.sh \
test_xdp_redirect.sh \
test_xdp_meta.sh \
test_xdp_veth.sh \
selftests/bpf: Selftest for sys_connect hooks Add selftest for BPF_CGROUP_INET4_CONNECT and BPF_CGROUP_INET6_CONNECT attach types. Try to connect(2) to specified IP:port and test that: * remote IP:port pair is overridden; * local end of connection is bound to specified IP. All combinations of IPv4/IPv6 and TCP/UDP are tested. Example: # tcpdump -pn -i lo -w connect.pcap 2>/dev/null & [1] 478 # strace -qqf -e connect -o connect.trace ./test_sock_addr.sh Wait for testing IPv4/IPv6 to become available ... OK Load bind4 with invalid type (can pollute stderr) ... REJECTED Load bind4 with valid type ... OK Attach bind4 with invalid type ... REJECTED Attach bind4 with valid type ... OK Load connect4 with invalid type (can pollute stderr) libbpf: load bpf \ program failed: Permission denied libbpf: -- BEGIN DUMP LOG --- libbpf: 0: (b7) r2 = 23569 1: (63) *(u32 *)(r1 +24) = r2 2: (b7) r2 = 16777343 3: (63) *(u32 *)(r1 +4) = r2 invalid bpf_context access off=4 size=4 [ 1518.404609] random: crng init done libbpf: -- END LOG -- libbpf: failed to load program 'cgroup/connect4' libbpf: failed to load object './connect4_prog.o' ... REJECTED Load connect4 with valid type ... OK Attach connect4 with invalid type ... REJECTED Attach connect4 with valid type ... OK Test case #1 (IPv4/TCP): Requested: bind(192.168.1.254, 4040) .. Actual: bind(127.0.0.1, 4444) Requested: connect(192.168.1.254, 4040) from (*, *) .. Actual: connect(127.0.0.1, 4444) from (127.0.0.4, 56068) Test case #2 (IPv4/UDP): Requested: bind(192.168.1.254, 4040) .. Actual: bind(127.0.0.1, 4444) Requested: connect(192.168.1.254, 4040) from (*, *) .. Actual: connect(127.0.0.1, 4444) from (127.0.0.4, 56447) Load bind6 with invalid type (can pollute stderr) ... REJECTED Load bind6 with valid type ... OK Attach bind6 with invalid type ... REJECTED Attach bind6 with valid type ... OK Load connect6 with invalid type (can pollute stderr) libbpf: load bpf \ program failed: Permission denied libbpf: -- BEGIN DUMP LOG --- libbpf: 0: (b7) r6 = 0 1: (63) *(u32 *)(r1 +12) = r6 invalid bpf_context access off=12 size=4 libbpf: -- END LOG -- libbpf: failed to load program 'cgroup/connect6' libbpf: failed to load object './connect6_prog.o' ... REJECTED Load connect6 with valid type ... OK Attach connect6 with invalid type ... REJECTED Attach connect6 with valid type ... OK Test case #3 (IPv6/TCP): Requested: bind(face:b00c:1234:5678::abcd, 6060) .. Actual: bind(::1, 6666) Requested: connect(face:b00c:1234:5678::abcd, 6060) from (*, *) Actual: connect(::1, 6666) from (::6, 37458) Test case #4 (IPv6/UDP): Requested: bind(face:b00c:1234:5678::abcd, 6060) .. Actual: bind(::1, 6666) Requested: connect(face:b00c:1234:5678::abcd, 6060) from (*, *) Actual: connect(::1, 6666) from (::6, 39315) ### SUCCESS # egrep 'connect\(.*AF_INET' connect.trace | \ > egrep -vw 'htons\(1025\)' | fold -b -s -w 72 502 connect(7, {sa_family=AF_INET, sin_port=htons(4040), sin_addr=inet_addr("192.168.1.254")}, 128) = 0 502 connect(8, {sa_family=AF_INET, sin_port=htons(4040), sin_addr=inet_addr("192.168.1.254")}, 128) = 0 502 connect(9, {sa_family=AF_INET6, sin6_port=htons(6060), inet_pton(AF_INET6, "face:b00c:1234:5678::abcd", &sin6_addr), sin6_flowinfo=0, sin6_scope_id=0}, 128) = 0 502 connect(10, {sa_family=AF_INET6, sin6_port=htons(6060), inet_pton(AF_INET6, "face:b00c:1234:5678::abcd", &sin6_addr), sin6_flowinfo=0, sin6_scope_id=0}, 128) = 0 # fg tcpdump -pn -i lo -w connect.pcap 2> /dev/null # tcpdump -r connect.pcap -n tcp | cut -c 1-72 reading from file connect.pcap, link-type EN10MB (Ethernet) 17:57:40.383533 IP 127.0.0.4.56068 > 127.0.0.1.4444: Flags [S], seq 1333 17:57:40.383566 IP 127.0.0.1.4444 > 127.0.0.4.56068: Flags [S.], seq 112 17:57:40.383589 IP 127.0.0.4.56068 > 127.0.0.1.4444: Flags [.], ack 1, w 17:57:40.384578 IP 127.0.0.1.4444 > 127.0.0.4.56068: Flags [R.], seq 1, 17:57:40.403327 IP6 ::6.37458 > ::1.6666: Flags [S], seq 406513443, win 17:57:40.403357 IP6 ::1.6666 > ::6.37458: Flags [S.], seq 2448389240, ac 17:57:40.403376 IP6 ::6.37458 > ::1.6666: Flags [.], ack 1, win 342, opt 17:57:40.404263 IP6 ::1.6666 > ::6.37458: Flags [R.], seq 1, ack 1, win Signed-off-by: Andrey Ignatov <rdna@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2018-03-30 22:08:06 +00:00
test_offload.py \
test_sock_addr.sh \
test_tunnel.sh \
test_lwt_seg6local.sh \
test_lirc_mode2.sh \
test_skb_cgroup_id.sh \
test_flow_dissector.sh \
test_xdp_vlan_mode_generic.sh \
test_xdp_vlan_mode_native.sh \
test_lwt_ip_encap.sh \
test_tcp_check_syncookie.sh \
test_tc_tunnel.sh \
selftests/bpf: measure RTT from xdp using xdping xdping allows us to get latency estimates from XDP. Output looks like this: ./xdping -I eth4 192.168.55.8 Setting up XDP for eth4, please wait... XDP setup disrupts network connectivity, hit Ctrl+C to quit Normal ping RTT data [Ignore final RTT; it is distorted by XDP using the reply] PING 192.168.55.8 (192.168.55.8) from 192.168.55.7 eth4: 56(84) bytes of data. 64 bytes from 192.168.55.8: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.302 ms 64 bytes from 192.168.55.8: icmp_seq=2 ttl=64 time=0.208 ms 64 bytes from 192.168.55.8: icmp_seq=3 ttl=64 time=0.163 ms 64 bytes from 192.168.55.8: icmp_seq=8 ttl=64 time=0.275 ms 4 packets transmitted, 4 received, 0% packet loss, time 3079ms rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 0.163/0.237/0.302/0.054 ms XDP RTT data: 64 bytes from 192.168.55.8: icmp_seq=5 ttl=64 time=0.02808 ms 64 bytes from 192.168.55.8: icmp_seq=6 ttl=64 time=0.02804 ms 64 bytes from 192.168.55.8: icmp_seq=7 ttl=64 time=0.02815 ms 64 bytes from 192.168.55.8: icmp_seq=8 ttl=64 time=0.02805 ms The xdping program loads the associated xdping_kern.o BPF program and attaches it to the specified interface. If run in client mode (the default), it will add a map entry keyed by the target IP address; this map will store RTT measurements, current sequence number etc. Finally in client mode the ping command is executed, and the xdping BPF program will use the last ICMP reply, reformulate it as an ICMP request with the next sequence number and XDP_TX it. After the reply to that request is received we can measure RTT and repeat until the desired number of measurements is made. This is why the sequence numbers in the normal ping are 1, 2, 3 and 8. We XDP_TX a modified version of ICMP reply 4 and keep doing this until we get the 4 replies we need; hence the networking stack only sees reply 8, where we have XDP_PASSed it upstream since we are done. In server mode (-s), xdping simply takes ICMP requests and replies to them in XDP rather than passing the request up to the networking stack. No map entry is required. xdping can be run in native XDP mode (the default, or specified via -N) or in skb mode (-S). A test program test_xdping.sh exercises some of these options. Note that native XDP does not seem to XDP_TX for veths, hence -N is not tested. Looking at the code, it looks like XDP_TX is supported so I'm not sure if that's expected. Running xdping in native mode for ixgbe as both client and server works fine. Changes since v4 - close fds on cleanup (Song Liu) Changes since v3 - fixed seq to be __be16 (Song Liu) - fixed fd checks in xdping.c (Song Liu) Changes since v2 - updated commit message to explain why seq number of last ICMP reply is 8 not 4 (Song Liu) - updated types of seq number, raddr and eliminated csum variable in xdpclient/xdpserver functions as it was not needed (Song Liu) - added XDPING_DEFAULT_COUNT definition and usage specification of default/max counts (Song Liu) Changes since v1 - moved from RFC to PATCH - removed unused variable in ipv4_csum() (Song Liu) - refactored ICMP checks into icmp_check() function called by client and server programs and reworked client and server programs due to lack of shared code (Song Liu) - added checks to ensure that SKB and native mode are not requested together (Song Liu) Signed-off-by: Alan Maguire <alan.maguire@oracle.com> Acked-by: Song Liu <songliubraving@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
2019-05-31 17:47:14 +00:00
test_tc_edt.sh \
tools: bpftool: improve and check builds for different make invocations There are a number of alternative "make" invocations that can be used to compile bpftool. The following invocations are expected to work: - through the kbuild system, from the top of the repository (make tools/bpf) - by telling make to change to the bpftool directory (make -C tools/bpf/bpftool) - by building the BPF tools from tools/ (cd tools && make bpf) - by running make from bpftool directory (cd tools/bpf/bpftool && make) Additionally, setting the O or OUTPUT variables should tell the build system to use a custom output path, for each of these alternatives. The following patch fixes the following invocations: $ make tools/bpf $ make tools/bpf O=<dir> $ make -C tools/bpf/bpftool OUTPUT=<dir> $ make -C tools/bpf/bpftool O=<dir> $ cd tools/ && make bpf O=<dir> $ cd tools/bpf/bpftool && make OUTPUT=<dir> $ cd tools/bpf/bpftool && make O=<dir> After this commit, the build still fails for two variants when passing the OUTPUT variable: $ make tools/bpf OUTPUT=<dir> $ cd tools/ && make bpf OUTPUT=<dir> In order to remember and check what make invocations are supposed to work, and to document the ones which do not, a new script is added to the BPF selftests. Note that some invocations require the kernel to be configured, so the script skips them if no .config file is found. v2: - In make_and_clean(), set $ERROR to 1 when "make" returns non-zero, even if the binary was produced. - Run "make clean" from the correct directory (bpf/ instead of bpftool/, when relevant). Reported-by: Lorenz Bauer <lmb@cloudflare.com> Signed-off-by: Quentin Monnet <quentin.monnet@netronome.com> Reviewed-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-08-30 11:00:38 +00:00
test_xdping.sh \
test_bpftool_build.sh \
test_bpftool.sh
TEST_PROGS_EXTENDED := with_addr.sh \
with_tunnels.sh \
tcp_client.py \
tcp_server.py \
test_xdp_vlan.sh
# Compile but not part of 'make run_tests'
TEST_GEN_PROGS_EXTENDED = test_sock_addr test_skb_cgroup_id_user \
flow_dissector_load test_flow_dissector test_tcp_check_syncookie_user \
selftests/bpf: Add benchmark runner infrastructure While working on BPF ringbuf implementation, testing, and benchmarking, I've developed a pretty generic and modular benchmark runner, which seems to be generically useful, as I've already used it for one more purpose (testing fastest way to trigger BPF program, to minimize overhead of in-kernel code). This patch adds generic part of benchmark runner and sets up Makefile for extending it with more sets of benchmarks. Benchmarker itself operates by spinning up specified number of producer and consumer threads, setting up interval timer sending SIGALARM signal to application once a second. Every second, current snapshot with hits/drops counters are collected and stored in an array. Drops are useful for producer/consumer benchmarks in which producer might overwhelm consumers. Once test finishes after given amount of warm-up and testing seconds, mean and stddev are calculated (ignoring warm-up results) and is printed out to stdout. This setup seems to give consistent and accurate results. To validate behavior, I added two atomic counting tests: global and local. For global one, all the producer threads are atomically incrementing same counter as fast as possible. This, of course, leads to huge drop of performance once there is more than one producer thread due to CPUs fighting for the same memory location. Local counting, on the other hand, maintains one counter per each producer thread, incremented independently. Once per second, all counters are read and added together to form final "counting throughput" measurement. As expected, such setup demonstrates linear scalability with number of producers (as long as there are enough physical CPU cores, of course). See example output below. Also, this setup can nicely demonstrate disastrous effects of false sharing, if care is not taken to take those per-producer counters apart into independent cache lines. Demo output shows global counter first with 1 producer, then with 4. Both total and per-producer performance significantly drop. The last run is local counter with 4 producers, demonstrating near-perfect scalability. $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p1 count-global Setting up benchmark 'count-global'... Benchmark 'count-global' started. Iter 0 ( 24.822us): hits 148.179M/s (148.179M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 ( 37.939us): hits 149.308M/s (149.308M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 (-10.774us): hits 150.717M/s (150.717M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( 3.807us): hits 151.435M/s (151.435M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 150.488 ± 1.079M/s (150.488M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p4 count-global Setting up benchmark 'count-global'... Benchmark 'count-global' started. Iter 0 ( 60.659us): hits 53.910M/s ( 13.477M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 (-17.658us): hits 53.722M/s ( 13.431M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 ( 5.865us): hits 53.495M/s ( 13.374M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( 0.104us): hits 53.606M/s ( 13.402M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 53.608 ± 0.113M/s ( 13.402M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p4 count-local Setting up benchmark 'count-local'... Benchmark 'count-local' started. Iter 0 ( 23.388us): hits 640.450M/s (160.113M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 ( 2.291us): hits 605.661M/s (151.415M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 ( -6.415us): hits 607.092M/s (151.773M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( -1.361us): hits 601.796M/s (150.449M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 604.849 ± 2.739M/s (151.212M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s Benchmark runner supports setting thread affinity for producer and consumer threads. You can use -a flag for default CPU selection scheme, where first consumer gets CPU #0, next one gets CPU #1, and so on. Then producer threads pick up next CPU and increment one-by-one as well. But user can also specify a set of CPUs independently for producers and consumers with --prod-affinity 1,2-10,15 and --cons-affinity <set-of-cpus>. The latter allows to force producers and consumers to share same set of CPUs, if necessary. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200512192445.2351848-3-andriin@fb.com
2020-05-12 19:24:43 +00:00
test_lirc_mode2_user xdping test_cpp runqslower bench
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
TEST_CUSTOM_PROGS = urandom_read
# Emit succinct information message describing current building step
# $1 - generic step name (e.g., CC, LINK, etc);
# $2 - optional "flavor" specifier; if provided, will be emitted as [flavor];
# $3 - target (assumed to be file); only file name will be emitted;
# $4 - optional extra arg, emitted as-is, if provided.
ifeq ($(V),1)
Q =
msg =
else
Q = @
msg = @printf ' %-8s%s %s%s\n' "$(1)" "$(if $(2), [$(2)])" "$(notdir $(3))" "$(if $(4), $(4))";
MAKEFLAGS += --no-print-directory
submake_extras := feature_display=0
endif
# override lib.mk's default rules
OVERRIDE_TARGETS := 1
override define CLEAN
$(call msg,CLEAN)
$(RM) -r $(TEST_GEN_PROGS) $(TEST_GEN_PROGS_EXTENDED) $(TEST_GEN_FILES) $(EXTRA_CLEAN)
endef
include ../lib.mk
SCRATCH_DIR := $(OUTPUT)/tools
BUILD_DIR := $(SCRATCH_DIR)/build
INCLUDE_DIR := $(SCRATCH_DIR)/include
BPFOBJ := $(BUILD_DIR)/libbpf/libbpf.a
# Define simple and short `make test_progs`, `make test_sysctl`, etc targets
# to build individual tests.
# NOTE: Semicolon at the end is critical to override lib.mk's default static
# rule for binaries.
$(notdir $(TEST_GEN_PROGS) \
$(TEST_PROGS) \
$(TEST_PROGS_EXTENDED) \
$(TEST_GEN_PROGS_EXTENDED) \
$(TEST_CUSTOM_PROGS)): %: $(OUTPUT)/% ;
$(OUTPUT)/%:%.c
$(call msg,BINARY,,$@)
$(LINK.c) $^ $(LDLIBS) -o $@
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$(OUTPUT)/urandom_read: urandom_read.c
$(call msg,BINARY,,$@)
$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $< $(LDLIBS) -Wl,--build-id
$(OUTPUT)/test_stub.o: test_stub.c $(BPFOBJ)
$(call msg,CC,,$@)
$(CC) -c $(CFLAGS) -o $@ $<
VMLINUX_BTF_PATHS := $(if $(O),$(O)/vmlinux) \
$(if $(KBUILD_OUTPUT),$(KBUILD_OUTPUT)/vmlinux) \
../../../../vmlinux \
/sys/kernel/btf/vmlinux \
/boot/vmlinux-$(shell uname -r)
VMLINUX_BTF := $(abspath $(firstword $(wildcard $(VMLINUX_BTF_PATHS))))
$(OUTPUT)/runqslower: $(BPFOBJ)
$(Q)$(MAKE) $(submake_extras) -C $(TOOLSDIR)/bpf/runqslower \
OUTPUT=$(SCRATCH_DIR)/ VMLINUX_BTF=$(VMLINUX_BTF) \
BPFOBJ=$(BPFOBJ) BPF_INCLUDE=$(INCLUDE_DIR) && \
cp $(SCRATCH_DIR)/runqslower $@
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$(TEST_GEN_PROGS) $(TEST_GEN_PROGS_EXTENDED): $(OUTPUT)/test_stub.o $(BPFOBJ)
$(OUTPUT)/test_dev_cgroup: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_skb_cgroup_id_user: cgroup_helpers.c
selftests/bpf: Selftest for sys_bind post-hooks. Add selftest for attach types `BPF_CGROUP_INET4_POST_BIND` and `BPF_CGROUP_INET6_POST_BIND`. The main things tested are: * prog load behaves as expected (valid/invalid accesses in prog); * prog attach behaves as expected (load- vs attach-time attach types); * `BPF_CGROUP_INET_SOCK_CREATE` can be attached in a backward compatible way; * post-hooks return expected result and errno. Example: # ./test_sock Test case: bind4 load with invalid access: src_ip6 .. [PASS] Test case: bind4 load with invalid access: mark .. [PASS] Test case: bind6 load with invalid access: src_ip4 .. [PASS] Test case: sock_create load with invalid access: src_port .. [PASS] Test case: sock_create load w/o expected_attach_type (compat mode) .. [PASS] Test case: sock_create load w/ expected_attach_type .. [PASS] Test case: attach type mismatch bind4 vs bind6 .. [PASS] Test case: attach type mismatch bind6 vs bind4 .. [PASS] Test case: attach type mismatch default vs bind4 .. [PASS] Test case: attach type mismatch bind6 vs sock_create .. [PASS] Test case: bind4 reject all .. [PASS] Test case: bind6 reject all .. [PASS] Test case: bind6 deny specific IP & port .. [PASS] Test case: bind4 allow specific IP & port .. [PASS] Test case: bind4 allow all .. [PASS] Test case: bind6 allow all .. [PASS] Summary: 16 PASSED, 0 FAILED Signed-off-by: Andrey Ignatov <rdna@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2018-03-30 22:08:08 +00:00
$(OUTPUT)/test_sock: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_sock_addr: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_socket_cookie: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_sockmap: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_tcpbpf_user: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_tcpnotify_user: cgroup_helpers.c trace_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/get_cgroup_id_user: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_cgroup_storage: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_netcnt: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_sock_fields: cgroup_helpers.c
$(OUTPUT)/test_sysctl: cgroup_helpers.c
DEFAULT_BPFTOOL := $(SCRATCH_DIR)/sbin/bpftool
BPFTOOL ?= $(DEFAULT_BPFTOOL)
$(DEFAULT_BPFTOOL): $(wildcard $(BPFTOOLDIR)/*.[ch] $(BPFTOOLDIR)/Makefile) \
$(BPFOBJ) | $(BUILD_DIR)/bpftool
$(Q)$(MAKE) $(submake_extras) -C $(BPFTOOLDIR) \
OUTPUT=$(BUILD_DIR)/bpftool/ \
prefix= DESTDIR=$(SCRATCH_DIR)/ install
$(BPFOBJ): $(wildcard $(BPFDIR)/*.[ch] $(BPFDIR)/Makefile) \
../../../include/uapi/linux/bpf.h \
| $(INCLUDE_DIR) $(BUILD_DIR)/libbpf
$(Q)$(MAKE) $(submake_extras) -C $(BPFDIR) OUTPUT=$(BUILD_DIR)/libbpf/ \
DESTDIR=$(SCRATCH_DIR) prefix= all install_headers
$(BUILD_DIR)/libbpf $(BUILD_DIR)/bpftool $(INCLUDE_DIR):
$(call msg,MKDIR,,$@)
mkdir -p $@
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$(INCLUDE_DIR)/vmlinux.h: $(VMLINUX_BTF) | $(BPFTOOL) $(INCLUDE_DIR)
$(call msg,GEN,,$@)
$(BPFTOOL) btf dump file $(VMLINUX_BTF) format c > $@
# Get Clang's default includes on this system, as opposed to those seen by
# '-target bpf'. This fixes "missing" files on some architectures/distros,
# such as asm/byteorder.h, asm/socket.h, asm/sockios.h, sys/cdefs.h etc.
#
# Use '-idirafter': Don't interfere with include mechanics except where the
# build would have failed anyways.
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
define get_sys_includes
$(shell $(1) -v -E - </dev/null 2>&1 \
| sed -n '/<...> search starts here:/,/End of search list./{ s| \(/.*\)|-idirafter \1|p }')
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
endef
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# Determine target endianness.
IS_LITTLE_ENDIAN = $(shell $(CC) -dM -E - </dev/null | \
grep 'define __BYTE_ORDER__ __ORDER_LITTLE_ENDIAN__')
MENDIAN=$(if $(IS_LITTLE_ENDIAN),-mlittle-endian,-mbig-endian)
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
CLANG_SYS_INCLUDES = $(call get_sys_includes,$(CLANG))
BPF_CFLAGS = -g -D__TARGET_ARCH_$(SRCARCH) $(MENDIAN) \
-I$(INCLUDE_DIR) -I$(CURDIR) -I$(APIDIR) \
-I$(abspath $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include)
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
CLANG_CFLAGS = $(CLANG_SYS_INCLUDES) \
-Wno-compare-distinct-pointer-types
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
$(OUTPUT)/test_l4lb_noinline.o: BPF_CFLAGS += -fno-inline
$(OUTPUT)/test_xdp_noinline.o: BPF_CFLAGS += -fno-inline
$(OUTPUT)/flow_dissector_load.o: flow_dissector_load.h
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# Build BPF object using Clang
# $1 - input .c file
# $2 - output .o file
# $3 - CFLAGS
# $4 - LDFLAGS
define CLANG_BPF_BUILD_RULE
$(call msg,CLNG-LLC,$(TRUNNER_BINARY),$2)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
($(CLANG) $3 -O2 -target bpf -emit-llvm \
-c $1 -o - || echo "BPF obj compilation failed") | \
$(LLC) -mattr=dwarfris -march=bpf -mcpu=v3 $4 -filetype=obj -o $2
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
endef
# Similar to CLANG_BPF_BUILD_RULE, but with disabled alu32
define CLANG_NOALU32_BPF_BUILD_RULE
$(call msg,CLNG-LLC,$(TRUNNER_BINARY),$2)
($(CLANG) $3 -O2 -target bpf -emit-llvm \
-c $1 -o - || echo "BPF obj compilation failed") | \
$(LLC) -march=bpf -mcpu=v2 $4 -filetype=obj -o $2
endef
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# Similar to CLANG_BPF_BUILD_RULE, but using native Clang and bpf LLC
define CLANG_NATIVE_BPF_BUILD_RULE
$(call msg,CLNG-BPF,$(TRUNNER_BINARY),$2)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
($(CLANG) $3 -O2 -emit-llvm \
-c $1 -o - || echo "BPF obj compilation failed") | \
$(LLC) -march=bpf -mcpu=v3 $4 -filetype=obj -o $2
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
endef
# Build BPF object using GCC
define GCC_BPF_BUILD_RULE
$(call msg,GCC-BPF,$(TRUNNER_BINARY),$2)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$(BPF_GCC) $3 $4 -O2 -c $1 -o $2
endef
SKEL_BLACKLIST := btf__% test_pinning_invalid.c test_sk_assign.c
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# Set up extra TRUNNER_XXX "temporary" variables in the environment (relies on
# $eval()) and pass control to DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER_RULES.
# Parameters:
# $1 - test runner base binary name (e.g., test_progs)
# $2 - test runner extra "flavor" (e.g., no_alu32, gcc-bpf, etc)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
define DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER
TRUNNER_OUTPUT := $(OUTPUT)$(if $2,/)$2
TRUNNER_BINARY := $1$(if $2,-)$2
TRUNNER_TEST_OBJS := $$(patsubst %.c,$$(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/%.test.o, \
$$(notdir $$(wildcard $(TRUNNER_TESTS_DIR)/*.c)))
TRUNNER_EXTRA_OBJS := $$(patsubst %.c,$$(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/%.o, \
$$(filter %.c,$(TRUNNER_EXTRA_SOURCES)))
TRUNNER_EXTRA_HDRS := $$(filter %.h,$(TRUNNER_EXTRA_SOURCES))
TRUNNER_TESTS_HDR := $(TRUNNER_TESTS_DIR)/tests.h
TRUNNER_BPF_SRCS := $$(notdir $$(wildcard $(TRUNNER_BPF_PROGS_DIR)/*.c))
TRUNNER_BPF_OBJS := $$(patsubst %.c,$$(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/%.o, $$(TRUNNER_BPF_SRCS))
TRUNNER_BPF_SKELS := $$(patsubst %.c,$$(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/%.skel.h, \
$$(filter-out $(SKEL_BLACKLIST), \
$$(TRUNNER_BPF_SRCS)))
TEST_GEN_FILES += $$(TRUNNER_BPF_OBJS)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# Evaluate rules now with extra TRUNNER_XXX variables above already defined
$$(eval $$(call DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER_RULES,$1,$2))
endef
# Using TRUNNER_XXX variables, provided by callers of DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER and
# set up by DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER itself, create test runner build rules with:
# $1 - test runner base binary name (e.g., test_progs)
# $2 - test runner extra "flavor" (e.g., no_alu32, gcc-bpf, etc)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
define DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER_RULES
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
ifeq ($($(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)-dir),)
$(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)-dir := y
$(TRUNNER_OUTPUT):
$$(call msg,MKDIR,,$$@)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
mkdir -p $$@
endif
# ensure we set up BPF objects generation rule just once for a given
# input/output directory combination
ifeq ($($(TRUNNER_BPF_PROGS_DIR)$(if $2,-)$2-bpfobjs),)
$(TRUNNER_BPF_PROGS_DIR)$(if $2,-)$2-bpfobjs := y
$(TRUNNER_BPF_OBJS): $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/%.o: \
$(TRUNNER_BPF_PROGS_DIR)/%.c \
$(TRUNNER_BPF_PROGS_DIR)/*.h \
$$(INCLUDE_DIR)/vmlinux.h \
$$(BPFOBJ) | $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$$(call $(TRUNNER_BPF_BUILD_RULE),$$<,$$@, \
$(TRUNNER_BPF_CFLAGS), \
$(TRUNNER_BPF_LDFLAGS))
$(TRUNNER_BPF_SKELS): $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/%.skel.h: \
$(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/%.o \
| $(BPFTOOL) $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)
$$(call msg,GEN-SKEL,$(TRUNNER_BINARY),$$@)
$$(BPFTOOL) gen skeleton $$< > $$@
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
endif
# ensure we set up tests.h header generation rule just once
ifeq ($($(TRUNNER_TESTS_DIR)-tests-hdr),)
$(TRUNNER_TESTS_DIR)-tests-hdr := y
$(TRUNNER_TESTS_HDR): $(TRUNNER_TESTS_DIR)/*.c
$$(call msg,TEST-HDR,$(TRUNNER_BINARY),$$@)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$$(shell ( cd $(TRUNNER_TESTS_DIR); \
echo '/* Generated header, do not edit */'; \
ls *.c 2> /dev/null | \
sed -e 's@\([^\.]*\)\.c@DEFINE_TEST(\1)@'; \
) > $$@)
endif
# compile individual test files
# Note: we cd into output directory to ensure embedded BPF object is found
$(TRUNNER_TEST_OBJS): $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/%.test.o: \
$(TRUNNER_TESTS_DIR)/%.c \
$(TRUNNER_EXTRA_HDRS) \
$(TRUNNER_BPF_OBJS) \
$(TRUNNER_BPF_SKELS) \
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$$(BPFOBJ) | $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)
$$(call msg,TEST-OBJ,$(TRUNNER_BINARY),$$@)
cd $$(@D) && $$(CC) -I. $$(CFLAGS) -c $(CURDIR)/$$< $$(LDLIBS) -o $$(@F)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$(TRUNNER_EXTRA_OBJS): $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/%.o: \
%.c \
$(TRUNNER_EXTRA_HDRS) \
$(TRUNNER_TESTS_HDR) \
$$(BPFOBJ) | $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)
$$(call msg,EXT-OBJ,$(TRUNNER_BINARY),$$@)
$$(CC) $$(CFLAGS) -c $$< $$(LDLIBS) -o $$@
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# only copy extra resources if in flavored build
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$(TRUNNER_BINARY)-extras: $(TRUNNER_EXTRA_FILES) | $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)
ifneq ($2,)
$$(call msg,EXT-COPY,$(TRUNNER_BINARY),$(TRUNNER_EXTRA_FILES))
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
cp -a $$^ $(TRUNNER_OUTPUT)/
endif
$(OUTPUT)/$(TRUNNER_BINARY): $(TRUNNER_TEST_OBJS) \
$(TRUNNER_EXTRA_OBJS) $$(BPFOBJ) \
| $(TRUNNER_BINARY)-extras
$$(call msg,BINARY,,$$@)
$$(CC) $$(CFLAGS) $$(filter %.a %.o,$$^) $$(LDLIBS) -o $$@
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
endef
# Define test_progs test runner.
TRUNNER_TESTS_DIR := prog_tests
TRUNNER_BPF_PROGS_DIR := progs
TRUNNER_EXTRA_SOURCES := test_progs.c cgroup_helpers.c trace_helpers.c \
network_helpers.c testing_helpers.c \
flow_dissector_load.h
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
TRUNNER_EXTRA_FILES := $(OUTPUT)/urandom_read \
$(wildcard progs/btf_dump_test_case_*.c)
TRUNNER_BPF_BUILD_RULE := CLANG_BPF_BUILD_RULE
TRUNNER_BPF_CFLAGS := $(BPF_CFLAGS) $(CLANG_CFLAGS)
TRUNNER_BPF_LDFLAGS := -mattr=+alu32
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
$(eval $(call DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER,test_progs))
# Define test_progs-no_alu32 test runner.
TRUNNER_BPF_BUILD_RULE := CLANG_NOALU32_BPF_BUILD_RULE
TRUNNER_BPF_LDFLAGS :=
$(eval $(call DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER,test_progs,no_alu32))
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# Define test_progs BPF-GCC-flavored test runner.
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
ifneq ($(BPF_GCC),)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
TRUNNER_BPF_BUILD_RULE := GCC_BPF_BUILD_RULE
TRUNNER_BPF_CFLAGS := $(BPF_CFLAGS) $(call get_sys_includes,gcc)
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
TRUNNER_BPF_LDFLAGS :=
$(eval $(call DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER,test_progs,bpf_gcc))
selftests/bpf: add bpf-gcc support Now that binutils and gcc support for BPF is upstream, make use of it in BPF selftests using alu32-like approach. Share as much as possible of CFLAGS calculation with clang. Fixes only obvious issues, leaving more complex ones for later: - Use gcc-provided bpf-helpers.h instead of manually defining the helpers, change bpf_helpers.h include guard to avoid conflict. - Include <linux/stddef.h> for __always_inline. - Add $(OUTPUT)/../usr/include to include path in order to use local kernel headers instead of system kernel headers when building with O=. In order to activate the bpf-gcc support, one needs to configure binutils and gcc with --target=bpf and make them available in $PATH. In particular, gcc must be installed as `bpf-gcc`, which is the default. Right now with binutils 25a2915e8dba and gcc r275589 only a handful of tests work: # ./test_progs_bpf_gcc # Summary: 7/39 PASSED, 1 SKIPPED, 98 FAILED The reason for those failures are as follows: - Build errors: - `error: too many function arguments for eBPF` for __always_inline functions read_str_var and read_map_var - must be inlining issue, and for process_l3_headers_v6, which relies on optimizing away function arguments. - `error: indirect call in function, which are not supported by eBPF` where there are no obvious indirect calls in the source calls, e.g. in __encap_ipip_none. - `error: field 'lock' has incomplete type` for fields of `struct bpf_spin_lock` type - bpf_spin_lock is re#defined by bpf-helpers.h, so its usage is sensitive to order of #includes. - `error: eBPF stack limit exceeded` in sysctl_tcp_mem. - Load errors: - Missing object files due to above build errors. - `libbpf: failed to create map (name: 'test_ver.bss')`. - `libbpf: object file doesn't contain bpf program`. - `libbpf: Program '.text' contains unrecognized relo data pointing to section 0`. - `libbpf: BTF is required, but is missing or corrupted` - no BTF support in gcc yet. Signed-off-by: Ilya Leoshkevich <iii@linux.ibm.com> Cc: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
2019-09-12 16:05:43 +00:00
endif
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
# Define test_maps test runner.
TRUNNER_TESTS_DIR := map_tests
TRUNNER_BPF_PROGS_DIR := progs
TRUNNER_EXTRA_SOURCES := test_maps.c
TRUNNER_EXTRA_FILES :=
TRUNNER_BPF_BUILD_RULE := $$(error no BPF objects should be built)
TRUNNER_BPF_CFLAGS :=
TRUNNER_BPF_LDFLAGS :=
$(eval $(call DEFINE_TEST_RUNNER,test_maps))
# Define test_verifier test runner.
# It is much simpler than test_maps/test_progs and sufficiently different from
# them (e.g., test.h is using completely pattern), that it's worth just
# explicitly defining all the rules explicitly.
verifier/tests.h: verifier/*.c
$(shell ( cd verifier/; \
echo '/* Generated header, do not edit */'; \
echo '#ifdef FILL_ARRAY'; \
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
ls *.c 2> /dev/null | sed -e 's@\(.*\)@#include \"\1\"@'; \
echo '#endif' \
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
) > verifier/tests.h)
$(OUTPUT)/test_verifier: test_verifier.c verifier/tests.h $(BPFOBJ) | $(OUTPUT)
$(call msg,BINARY,,$@)
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(filter %.a %.o %.c,$^) $(LDLIBS) -o $@
# Make sure we are able to include and link libbpf against c++.
$(OUTPUT)/test_cpp: test_cpp.cpp $(OUTPUT)/test_core_extern.skel.h $(BPFOBJ)
$(call msg,CXX,,$@)
$(CXX) $(CFLAGS) $^ $(LDLIBS) -o $@
selftests/bpf: Add benchmark runner infrastructure While working on BPF ringbuf implementation, testing, and benchmarking, I've developed a pretty generic and modular benchmark runner, which seems to be generically useful, as I've already used it for one more purpose (testing fastest way to trigger BPF program, to minimize overhead of in-kernel code). This patch adds generic part of benchmark runner and sets up Makefile for extending it with more sets of benchmarks. Benchmarker itself operates by spinning up specified number of producer and consumer threads, setting up interval timer sending SIGALARM signal to application once a second. Every second, current snapshot with hits/drops counters are collected and stored in an array. Drops are useful for producer/consumer benchmarks in which producer might overwhelm consumers. Once test finishes after given amount of warm-up and testing seconds, mean and stddev are calculated (ignoring warm-up results) and is printed out to stdout. This setup seems to give consistent and accurate results. To validate behavior, I added two atomic counting tests: global and local. For global one, all the producer threads are atomically incrementing same counter as fast as possible. This, of course, leads to huge drop of performance once there is more than one producer thread due to CPUs fighting for the same memory location. Local counting, on the other hand, maintains one counter per each producer thread, incremented independently. Once per second, all counters are read and added together to form final "counting throughput" measurement. As expected, such setup demonstrates linear scalability with number of producers (as long as there are enough physical CPU cores, of course). See example output below. Also, this setup can nicely demonstrate disastrous effects of false sharing, if care is not taken to take those per-producer counters apart into independent cache lines. Demo output shows global counter first with 1 producer, then with 4. Both total and per-producer performance significantly drop. The last run is local counter with 4 producers, demonstrating near-perfect scalability. $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p1 count-global Setting up benchmark 'count-global'... Benchmark 'count-global' started. Iter 0 ( 24.822us): hits 148.179M/s (148.179M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 ( 37.939us): hits 149.308M/s (149.308M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 (-10.774us): hits 150.717M/s (150.717M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( 3.807us): hits 151.435M/s (151.435M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 150.488 ± 1.079M/s (150.488M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p4 count-global Setting up benchmark 'count-global'... Benchmark 'count-global' started. Iter 0 ( 60.659us): hits 53.910M/s ( 13.477M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 (-17.658us): hits 53.722M/s ( 13.431M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 ( 5.865us): hits 53.495M/s ( 13.374M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( 0.104us): hits 53.606M/s ( 13.402M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 53.608 ± 0.113M/s ( 13.402M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p4 count-local Setting up benchmark 'count-local'... Benchmark 'count-local' started. Iter 0 ( 23.388us): hits 640.450M/s (160.113M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 ( 2.291us): hits 605.661M/s (151.415M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 ( -6.415us): hits 607.092M/s (151.773M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( -1.361us): hits 601.796M/s (150.449M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 604.849 ± 2.739M/s (151.212M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s Benchmark runner supports setting thread affinity for producer and consumer threads. You can use -a flag for default CPU selection scheme, where first consumer gets CPU #0, next one gets CPU #1, and so on. Then producer threads pick up next CPU and increment one-by-one as well. But user can also specify a set of CPUs independently for producers and consumers with --prod-affinity 1,2-10,15 and --cons-affinity <set-of-cpus>. The latter allows to force producers and consumers to share same set of CPUs, if necessary. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200512192445.2351848-3-andriin@fb.com
2020-05-12 19:24:43 +00:00
# Benchmark runner
$(OUTPUT)/bench_%.o: benchs/bench_%.c bench.h
$(call msg,CC,,$@)
$(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $(filter %.c,$^) $(LDLIBS) -o $@
selftest/bpf: Fmod_ret prog and implement test_overhead as part of bench Add fmod_ret BPF program to existing test_overhead selftest. Also re-implement user-space benchmarking part into benchmark runner to compare results. Results with ./bench are consistently somewhat lower than test_overhead's, but relative performance of various types of BPF programs stay consisten (e.g., kretprobe is noticeably slower). This slowdown seems to be coming from the fact that test_overhead is single-threaded, while benchmark always spins off at least one thread for producer. This has been confirmed by hacking multi-threaded test_overhead variant and also single-threaded bench variant. Resutls are below. run_bench_rename.sh script from benchs/ subdirectory was used to produce results for ./bench. Single-threaded implementations =============================== /* bench: single-threaded, atomics */ base : 4.622 ± 0.049M/s kprobe : 3.673 ± 0.052M/s kretprobe : 2.625 ± 0.052M/s rawtp : 4.369 ± 0.089M/s fentry : 4.201 ± 0.558M/s fexit : 4.309 ± 0.148M/s fmodret : 4.314 ± 0.203M/s /* selftest: single-threaded, no atomics */ task_rename base 4555K events per sec task_rename kprobe 3643K events per sec task_rename kretprobe 2506K events per sec task_rename raw_tp 4303K events per sec task_rename fentry 4307K events per sec task_rename fexit 4010K events per sec task_rename fmod_ret 3984K events per sec Multi-threaded implementations ============================== /* bench: multi-threaded w/ atomics */ base : 3.910 ± 0.023M/s kprobe : 3.048 ± 0.037M/s kretprobe : 2.300 ± 0.015M/s rawtp : 3.687 ± 0.034M/s fentry : 3.740 ± 0.087M/s fexit : 3.510 ± 0.009M/s fmodret : 3.485 ± 0.050M/s /* selftest: multi-threaded w/ atomics */ task_rename base 3872K events per sec task_rename kprobe 3068K events per sec task_rename kretprobe 2350K events per sec task_rename raw_tp 3731K events per sec task_rename fentry 3639K events per sec task_rename fexit 3558K events per sec task_rename fmod_ret 3511K events per sec /* selftest: multi-threaded, no atomics */ task_rename base 3945K events per sec task_rename kprobe 3298K events per sec task_rename kretprobe 2451K events per sec task_rename raw_tp 3718K events per sec task_rename fentry 3782K events per sec task_rename fexit 3543K events per sec task_rename fmod_ret 3526K events per sec Note that the fact that ./bench benchmark always uses atomic increments for counting, while test_overhead doesn't, doesn't influence test results all that much. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200512192445.2351848-4-andriin@fb.com
2020-05-12 19:24:44 +00:00
$(OUTPUT)/bench_rename.o: $(OUTPUT)/test_overhead.skel.h
selftest/bpf: Add BPF triggering benchmark It is sometimes desirable to be able to trigger BPF program from user-space with minimal overhead. sys_enter would seem to be a good candidate, yet in a lot of cases there will be a lot of noise from syscalls triggered by other processes on the system. So while searching for low-overhead alternative, I've stumbled upon getpgid() syscall, which seems to be specific enough to not suffer from accidental syscall by other apps. This set of benchmarks compares tp, raw_tp w/ filtering by syscall ID, kprobe, fentry and fmod_ret with returning error (so that syscall would not be executed), to determine the lowest-overhead way. Here are results on my machine (using benchs/run_bench_trigger.sh script): base : 9.200 ± 0.319M/s tp : 6.690 ± 0.125M/s rawtp : 8.571 ± 0.214M/s kprobe : 6.431 ± 0.048M/s fentry : 8.955 ± 0.241M/s fmodret : 8.903 ± 0.135M/s So it seems like fmodret doesn't give much benefit for such lightweight syscall. Raw tracepoint is pretty decent despite additional filtering logic, but it will be called for any other syscall in the system, which rules it out. Fentry, though, seems to be adding the least amoung of overhead and achieves 97.3% of performance of baseline no-BPF-attached syscall. Using getpgid() seems to be preferable to set_task_comm() approach from test_overhead, as it's about 2.35x faster in a baseline performance. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200512192445.2351848-5-andriin@fb.com
2020-05-12 19:24:45 +00:00
$(OUTPUT)/bench_trigger.o: $(OUTPUT)/trigger_bench.skel.h
selftests/bpf: Add benchmark runner infrastructure While working on BPF ringbuf implementation, testing, and benchmarking, I've developed a pretty generic and modular benchmark runner, which seems to be generically useful, as I've already used it for one more purpose (testing fastest way to trigger BPF program, to minimize overhead of in-kernel code). This patch adds generic part of benchmark runner and sets up Makefile for extending it with more sets of benchmarks. Benchmarker itself operates by spinning up specified number of producer and consumer threads, setting up interval timer sending SIGALARM signal to application once a second. Every second, current snapshot with hits/drops counters are collected and stored in an array. Drops are useful for producer/consumer benchmarks in which producer might overwhelm consumers. Once test finishes after given amount of warm-up and testing seconds, mean and stddev are calculated (ignoring warm-up results) and is printed out to stdout. This setup seems to give consistent and accurate results. To validate behavior, I added two atomic counting tests: global and local. For global one, all the producer threads are atomically incrementing same counter as fast as possible. This, of course, leads to huge drop of performance once there is more than one producer thread due to CPUs fighting for the same memory location. Local counting, on the other hand, maintains one counter per each producer thread, incremented independently. Once per second, all counters are read and added together to form final "counting throughput" measurement. As expected, such setup demonstrates linear scalability with number of producers (as long as there are enough physical CPU cores, of course). See example output below. Also, this setup can nicely demonstrate disastrous effects of false sharing, if care is not taken to take those per-producer counters apart into independent cache lines. Demo output shows global counter first with 1 producer, then with 4. Both total and per-producer performance significantly drop. The last run is local counter with 4 producers, demonstrating near-perfect scalability. $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p1 count-global Setting up benchmark 'count-global'... Benchmark 'count-global' started. Iter 0 ( 24.822us): hits 148.179M/s (148.179M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 ( 37.939us): hits 149.308M/s (149.308M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 (-10.774us): hits 150.717M/s (150.717M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( 3.807us): hits 151.435M/s (151.435M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 150.488 ± 1.079M/s (150.488M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p4 count-global Setting up benchmark 'count-global'... Benchmark 'count-global' started. Iter 0 ( 60.659us): hits 53.910M/s ( 13.477M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 (-17.658us): hits 53.722M/s ( 13.431M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 ( 5.865us): hits 53.495M/s ( 13.374M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( 0.104us): hits 53.606M/s ( 13.402M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 53.608 ± 0.113M/s ( 13.402M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p4 count-local Setting up benchmark 'count-local'... Benchmark 'count-local' started. Iter 0 ( 23.388us): hits 640.450M/s (160.113M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 ( 2.291us): hits 605.661M/s (151.415M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 ( -6.415us): hits 607.092M/s (151.773M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( -1.361us): hits 601.796M/s (150.449M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 604.849 ± 2.739M/s (151.212M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s Benchmark runner supports setting thread affinity for producer and consumer threads. You can use -a flag for default CPU selection scheme, where first consumer gets CPU #0, next one gets CPU #1, and so on. Then producer threads pick up next CPU and increment one-by-one as well. But user can also specify a set of CPUs independently for producers and consumers with --prod-affinity 1,2-10,15 and --cons-affinity <set-of-cpus>. The latter allows to force producers and consumers to share same set of CPUs, if necessary. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200512192445.2351848-3-andriin@fb.com
2020-05-12 19:24:43 +00:00
$(OUTPUT)/bench.o: bench.h testing_helpers.h
$(OUTPUT)/bench: LDLIBS += -lm
$(OUTPUT)/bench: $(OUTPUT)/bench.o $(OUTPUT)/testing_helpers.o \
selftest/bpf: Fmod_ret prog and implement test_overhead as part of bench Add fmod_ret BPF program to existing test_overhead selftest. Also re-implement user-space benchmarking part into benchmark runner to compare results. Results with ./bench are consistently somewhat lower than test_overhead's, but relative performance of various types of BPF programs stay consisten (e.g., kretprobe is noticeably slower). This slowdown seems to be coming from the fact that test_overhead is single-threaded, while benchmark always spins off at least one thread for producer. This has been confirmed by hacking multi-threaded test_overhead variant and also single-threaded bench variant. Resutls are below. run_bench_rename.sh script from benchs/ subdirectory was used to produce results for ./bench. Single-threaded implementations =============================== /* bench: single-threaded, atomics */ base : 4.622 ± 0.049M/s kprobe : 3.673 ± 0.052M/s kretprobe : 2.625 ± 0.052M/s rawtp : 4.369 ± 0.089M/s fentry : 4.201 ± 0.558M/s fexit : 4.309 ± 0.148M/s fmodret : 4.314 ± 0.203M/s /* selftest: single-threaded, no atomics */ task_rename base 4555K events per sec task_rename kprobe 3643K events per sec task_rename kretprobe 2506K events per sec task_rename raw_tp 4303K events per sec task_rename fentry 4307K events per sec task_rename fexit 4010K events per sec task_rename fmod_ret 3984K events per sec Multi-threaded implementations ============================== /* bench: multi-threaded w/ atomics */ base : 3.910 ± 0.023M/s kprobe : 3.048 ± 0.037M/s kretprobe : 2.300 ± 0.015M/s rawtp : 3.687 ± 0.034M/s fentry : 3.740 ± 0.087M/s fexit : 3.510 ± 0.009M/s fmodret : 3.485 ± 0.050M/s /* selftest: multi-threaded w/ atomics */ task_rename base 3872K events per sec task_rename kprobe 3068K events per sec task_rename kretprobe 2350K events per sec task_rename raw_tp 3731K events per sec task_rename fentry 3639K events per sec task_rename fexit 3558K events per sec task_rename fmod_ret 3511K events per sec /* selftest: multi-threaded, no atomics */ task_rename base 3945K events per sec task_rename kprobe 3298K events per sec task_rename kretprobe 2451K events per sec task_rename raw_tp 3718K events per sec task_rename fentry 3782K events per sec task_rename fexit 3543K events per sec task_rename fmod_ret 3526K events per sec Note that the fact that ./bench benchmark always uses atomic increments for counting, while test_overhead doesn't, doesn't influence test results all that much. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200512192445.2351848-4-andriin@fb.com
2020-05-12 19:24:44 +00:00
$(OUTPUT)/bench_count.o \
selftest/bpf: Add BPF triggering benchmark It is sometimes desirable to be able to trigger BPF program from user-space with minimal overhead. sys_enter would seem to be a good candidate, yet in a lot of cases there will be a lot of noise from syscalls triggered by other processes on the system. So while searching for low-overhead alternative, I've stumbled upon getpgid() syscall, which seems to be specific enough to not suffer from accidental syscall by other apps. This set of benchmarks compares tp, raw_tp w/ filtering by syscall ID, kprobe, fentry and fmod_ret with returning error (so that syscall would not be executed), to determine the lowest-overhead way. Here are results on my machine (using benchs/run_bench_trigger.sh script): base : 9.200 ± 0.319M/s tp : 6.690 ± 0.125M/s rawtp : 8.571 ± 0.214M/s kprobe : 6.431 ± 0.048M/s fentry : 8.955 ± 0.241M/s fmodret : 8.903 ± 0.135M/s So it seems like fmodret doesn't give much benefit for such lightweight syscall. Raw tracepoint is pretty decent despite additional filtering logic, but it will be called for any other syscall in the system, which rules it out. Fentry, though, seems to be adding the least amoung of overhead and achieves 97.3% of performance of baseline no-BPF-attached syscall. Using getpgid() seems to be preferable to set_task_comm() approach from test_overhead, as it's about 2.35x faster in a baseline performance. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Acked-by: John Fastabend <john.fastabend@gmail.com> Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200512192445.2351848-5-andriin@fb.com
2020-05-12 19:24:45 +00:00
$(OUTPUT)/bench_rename.o \
$(OUTPUT)/bench_trigger.o
selftests/bpf: Add benchmark runner infrastructure While working on BPF ringbuf implementation, testing, and benchmarking, I've developed a pretty generic and modular benchmark runner, which seems to be generically useful, as I've already used it for one more purpose (testing fastest way to trigger BPF program, to minimize overhead of in-kernel code). This patch adds generic part of benchmark runner and sets up Makefile for extending it with more sets of benchmarks. Benchmarker itself operates by spinning up specified number of producer and consumer threads, setting up interval timer sending SIGALARM signal to application once a second. Every second, current snapshot with hits/drops counters are collected and stored in an array. Drops are useful for producer/consumer benchmarks in which producer might overwhelm consumers. Once test finishes after given amount of warm-up and testing seconds, mean and stddev are calculated (ignoring warm-up results) and is printed out to stdout. This setup seems to give consistent and accurate results. To validate behavior, I added two atomic counting tests: global and local. For global one, all the producer threads are atomically incrementing same counter as fast as possible. This, of course, leads to huge drop of performance once there is more than one producer thread due to CPUs fighting for the same memory location. Local counting, on the other hand, maintains one counter per each producer thread, incremented independently. Once per second, all counters are read and added together to form final "counting throughput" measurement. As expected, such setup demonstrates linear scalability with number of producers (as long as there are enough physical CPU cores, of course). See example output below. Also, this setup can nicely demonstrate disastrous effects of false sharing, if care is not taken to take those per-producer counters apart into independent cache lines. Demo output shows global counter first with 1 producer, then with 4. Both total and per-producer performance significantly drop. The last run is local counter with 4 producers, demonstrating near-perfect scalability. $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p1 count-global Setting up benchmark 'count-global'... Benchmark 'count-global' started. Iter 0 ( 24.822us): hits 148.179M/s (148.179M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 ( 37.939us): hits 149.308M/s (149.308M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 (-10.774us): hits 150.717M/s (150.717M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( 3.807us): hits 151.435M/s (151.435M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 150.488 ± 1.079M/s (150.488M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p4 count-global Setting up benchmark 'count-global'... Benchmark 'count-global' started. Iter 0 ( 60.659us): hits 53.910M/s ( 13.477M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 (-17.658us): hits 53.722M/s ( 13.431M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 ( 5.865us): hits 53.495M/s ( 13.374M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( 0.104us): hits 53.606M/s ( 13.402M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 53.608 ± 0.113M/s ( 13.402M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s $ ./bench -a -w1 -d2 -p4 count-local Setting up benchmark 'count-local'... Benchmark 'count-local' started. Iter 0 ( 23.388us): hits 640.450M/s (160.113M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 1 ( 2.291us): hits 605.661M/s (151.415M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 2 ( -6.415us): hits 607.092M/s (151.773M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Iter 3 ( -1.361us): hits 601.796M/s (150.449M/prod), drops 0.000M/s Summary: hits 604.849 ± 2.739M/s (151.212M/prod), drops 0.000 ± 0.000M/s Benchmark runner supports setting thread affinity for producer and consumer threads. You can use -a flag for default CPU selection scheme, where first consumer gets CPU #0, next one gets CPU #1, and so on. Then producer threads pick up next CPU and increment one-by-one as well. But user can also specify a set of CPUs independently for producers and consumers with --prod-affinity 1,2-10,15 and --cons-affinity <set-of-cpus>. The latter allows to force producers and consumers to share same set of CPUs, if necessary. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20200512192445.2351848-3-andriin@fb.com
2020-05-12 19:24:43 +00:00
$(call msg,BINARY,,$@)
$(CC) $(LDFLAGS) -o $@ $(filter %.a %.o,$^) $(LDLIBS)
EXTRA_CLEAN := $(TEST_CUSTOM_PROGS) $(SCRATCH_DIR) \
selftests/bpf: Replace test_progs and test_maps w/ general rule Define test runner generation meta-rule that codifies dependencies between test runner, its tests, and its dependent BPF programs. Use that for defining test_progs and test_maps test-runners. Also additionally define 2 flavors of test_progs: - alu32, which builds BPF programs with 32-bit registers codegen; - bpf_gcc, which build BPF programs using GCC, if it supports BPF target. Overall, this is accomplished through $(eval)'ing a set of generic rules, which defines Makefile targets dynamically at runtime. See comments explaining the need for 2 $(evals), though. For each test runner we have (test_maps and test_progs, currently), and, optionally, their flavors, the logic of build process is modeled as follows (using test_progs as an example): - all BPF objects are in progs/: - BPF object's .o file is built into output directory from corresponding progs/.c file; - all BPF objects in progs/*.c depend on all progs/*.h headers; - all BPF objects depend on bpf_*.h helpers from libbpf (but not libbpf archive). There is an extra rule to trigger bpf_helper_defs.h (re-)build, if it's not present/outdated); - build recipe for BPF object can be re-defined per test runner/flavor; - test files are built from prog_tests/*.c: - all such test file objects are built on individual file basis; - currently, every single test file depends on all BPF object files; this might be improved in follow up patches to do 1-to-1 dependency, but allowing to customize this per each individual test; - each test runner definition can specify a list of extra .c and .h files to be built along test files and test runner binary; all such headers are becoming automatic dependency of each test .c file; - due to test files sometimes embedding (using .incbin assembly directive) contents of some BPF objects at compilation time, which are expected to be in CWD of compiler, compilation for test file object does cd into test runner's output directory; to support this mode all the include paths are turned into absolute paths using $(abspath) make function; - prog_tests/test.h is automatically (re-)generated with an entry for each .c file in prog_tests/; - final test runner binary is linked together from test object files and extra object files, linking together libbpf's archive as well; - it's possible to specify extra "resource" files/targets, which will be copied into test runner output directory, if it differes from Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT). This is used to ensure btf_dump test cases and urandom_read binary is put into a test runner's CWD for tests to find them in runtime. For flavored test runners, their output directory is a subdirectory of common Makefile-wide $(OUTPUT) directory with flavor name used as subdirectory name. BPF objects targets might be reused between different test runners, so extra checks are employed to not double-define them. Similarly, we have redefinition guards for output directories and test headers. test_verifier follows slightly different patterns and is simple enough to not justify generalizing TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE/TEST_RUNNER_DEFINE_RULES further to accomodate these differences. Instead, rules for test_verifier are minimized and simplified, while preserving correctness of dependencies. Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@fb.com> Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20191016060051.2024182-6-andriin@fb.com
2019-10-16 06:00:49 +00:00
prog_tests/tests.h map_tests/tests.h verifier/tests.h \
feature \
$(addprefix $(OUTPUT)/,*.o *.skel.h no_alu32 bpf_gcc)