doc: filter: extend BPF documentation to document new internals

Further extend the current BPF documentation to document new BPF
engine internals. Joint work with Daniel Borkmann.

Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@plumgrid.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
This commit is contained in:
Alexei Starovoitov 2014-03-28 18:58:26 +01:00 committed by David S. Miller
parent bd4cf0ed33
commit 9a985cdc5c

View file

@ -546,6 +546,130 @@ ffffffffa0069c8f + <x>:
For BPF JIT developers, bpf_jit_disasm, bpf_asm and bpf_dbg provides a useful
toolchain for developing and testing the kernel's JIT compiler.
BPF kernel internals
--------------------
Internally, for the kernel interpreter, a different BPF instruction set
format with similar underlying principles from BPF described in previous
paragraphs is being used. However, the instruction set format is modelled
closer to the underlying architecture to mimic native instruction sets, so
that a better performance can be achieved (more details later).
It is designed to be JITed with one to one mapping, which can also open up
the possibility for GCC/LLVM compilers to generate optimized BPF code through
a BPF backend that performs almost as fast as natively compiled code.
The new instruction set was originally designed with the possible goal in
mind to write programs in "restricted C" and compile into BPF with a optional
GCC/LLVM backend, so that it can just-in-time map to modern 64-bit CPUs with
minimal performance overhead over two steps, that is, C -> BPF -> native code.
Currently, the new format is being used for running user BPF programs, which
includes seccomp BPF, classic socket filters, cls_bpf traffic classifier,
team driver's classifier for its load-balancing mode, netfilter's xt_bpf
extension, PTP dissector/classifier, and much more. They are all internally
converted by the kernel into the new instruction set representation and run
in the extended interpreter. For in-kernel handlers, this all works
transparently by using sk_unattached_filter_create() for setting up the
filter, resp. sk_unattached_filter_destroy() for destroying it. The macro
SK_RUN_FILTER(filter, ctx) transparently invokes the right BPF function to
run the filter. 'filter' is a pointer to struct sk_filter that we got from
sk_unattached_filter_create(), and 'ctx' the given context (e.g. skb pointer).
All constraints and restrictions from sk_chk_filter() apply before a
conversion to the new layout is being done behind the scenes!
Currently, for JITing, the user BPF format is being used and current BPF JIT
compilers reused whenever possible. In other words, we do not (yet!) perform
a JIT compilation in the new layout, however, future work will successively
migrate traditional JIT compilers into the new instruction format as well, so
that they will profit from the very same benefits. Thus, when speaking about
JIT in the following, a JIT compiler (TBD) for the new instruction format is
meant in this context.
Some core changes of the new internal format:
- Number of registers increase from 2 to 10:
The old format had two registers A and X, and a hidden frame pointer. The
new layout extends this to be 10 internal registers and a read-only frame
pointer. Since 64-bit CPUs are passing arguments to functions via registers
the number of args from BPF program to in-kernel function is restricted
to 5 and one register is used to accept return value from an in-kernel
function. Natively, x86_64 passes first 6 arguments in registers, aarch64/
sparcv9/mips64 have 7 - 8 registers for arguments; x86_64 has 6 callee saved
registers, and aarch64/sparcv9/mips64 have 11 or more callee saved registers.
Therefore, BPF calling convention is defined as:
* R0 - return value from in-kernel function
* R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function
* R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve
* R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack
Thus, all BPF registers map one to one to HW registers on x86_64, aarch64,
etc, and BPF calling convention maps directly to ABIs used by the kernel on
64-bit architectures.
On 32-bit architectures JIT may map programs that use only 32-bit arithmetic
and may let more complex programs to be interpreted.
R0 - R5 are scratch registers and BPF program needs spill/fill them if
necessary across calls. Note that there is only one BPF program (== one BPF
main routine) and it cannot call other BPF functions, it can only call
predefined in-kernel functions, though.
- Register width increases from 32-bit to 64-bit:
Still, the semantics of the original 32-bit ALU operations are preserved
via 32-bit subregisters. All BPF registers are 64-bit with 32-bit lower
subregisters that zero-extend into 64-bit if they are being written to.
That behavior maps directly to x86_64 and arm64 subregister definition, but
makes other JITs more difficult.
32-bit architectures run 64-bit internal BPF programs via interpreter.
Their JITs may convert BPF programs that only use 32-bit subregisters into
native instruction set and let the rest being interpreted.
Operation is 64-bit, because on 64-bit architectures, pointers are also
64-bit wide, and we want to pass 64-bit values in/out of kernel functions,
so 32-bit BPF registers would otherwise require to define register-pair
ABI, thus, there won't be able to use a direct BPF register to HW register
mapping and JIT would need to do combine/split/move operations for every
register in and out of the function, which is complex, bug prone and slow.
Another reason is the use of atomic 64-bit counters.
- Conditional jt/jf targets replaced with jt/fall-through:
While the original design has constructs such as "if (cond) jump_true;
else jump_false;", they are being replaced into alternative constructs like
"if (cond) jump_true; /* else fall-through */".
- Introduces bpf_call insn and register passing convention for zero overhead
calls from/to other kernel functions:
After a kernel function call, R1 - R5 are reset to unreadable and R0 has a
return type of the function. Since R6 - R9 are callee saved, their state is
preserved across the call.
Also in the new design, BPF is limited to 4096 insns, which means that any
program will terminate quickly and will only call a fixed number of kernel
functions. Original BPF and the new format are two operand instructions,
which helps to do one-to-one mapping between BPF insn and x86 insn during JIT.
The input context pointer for invoking the interpreter function is generic,
its content is defined by a specific use case. For seccomp register R1 points
to seccomp_data, for converted BPF filters R1 points to a skb.
A program, that is translated internally consists of the following elements:
op:16, jt:8, jf:8, k:32 ==> op:8, a_reg:4, x_reg:4, off:16, imm:32
Just like the original BPF, the new format runs within a controlled environment,
is deterministic and the kernel can easily prove that. The safety of the program
can be determined in two steps: first step does depth-first-search to disallow
loops and other CFG validation; second step starts from the first insn and
descends all possible paths. It simulates execution of every insn and observes
the state change of registers and stack.
Misc
----
@ -561,3 +685,4 @@ the underlying architecture.
Jay Schulist <jschlst@samba.org>
Daniel Borkmann <dborkman@redhat.com>
Alexei Starovoitov <ast@plumgrid.com>