Daniel Borkmann <daniel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > On 3/4/20 4:38 PM, Daniel Borkmann wrote: >> On 3/4/20 10:37 AM, Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote: >>> Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >>>> On Tue, Mar 3, 2020 at 3:01 PM Daniel Borkmann <daniel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On 3/3/20 1:32 AM, Andrii Nakryiko wrote: >>>>>> Switch BPF UAPI constants, previously defined as #define macro, to anonymous >>>>>> enum values. This preserves constants values and behavior in expressions, but >>>>>> has added advantaged of being captured as part of DWARF and, subsequently, BTF >>>>>> type info. Which, in turn, greatly improves usefulness of generated vmlinux.h >>>>>> for BPF applications, as it will not require BPF users to copy/paste various >>>>>> flags and constants, which are frequently used with BPF helpers. Only those >>>>>> constants that are used/useful from BPF program side are converted. >>>>>> >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andriin@xxxxxx> >>>>> >>>>> Just thinking out loud, is there some way this could be resolved generically >>>>> either from compiler side or via additional tooling where this ends up as BTF >>>>> data and thus inside vmlinux.h as anon enum eventually? bpf.h is one single >>>>> header and worst case libbpf could also ship a copy of it (?), but what about >>>>> all the other things one would need to redefine e.g. for tracing? Small example >>>>> that comes to mind are all these TASK_* defines in sched.h etc, and there's >>>>> probably dozens of other similar stuff needed too depending on the particular >>>>> case; would be nice to have some generic catch-all, hmm. >>>> >>>> Enum convertion seems to be the simplest and cleanest way, >>>> unfortunately (as far as I know). DWARF has some extensions capturing >>>> #defines, but values are strings (and need to be parsed, which is pain >>>> already for "1 << 1ULL"), and it's some obscure extension, not a >>>> standard thing. I agree would be nice not to have and change all UAPI >>>> headers for this, but I'm not aware of the solution like that. >>> >>> Since this is a UAPI header, are we sure that no userspace programs are >>> using these defines in #ifdefs or something like that? >> >> Hm, yes, anyone doing #ifdefs on them would get build issues. Simple example: >> >> enum { >> FOO = 42, >> //#define FOO FOO >> }; >> >> #ifndef FOO >> # warning "bar" >> #endif >> >> int main(int argc, char **argv) >> { >> return FOO; >> } >> >> $ gcc -Wall -O2 foo.c >> foo.c:7:3: warning: #warning "bar" [-Wcpp] >> 7 | # warning "bar" >> | ^~~~~~~ >> >> Commenting #define FOO FOO back in fixes it as we discussed in v2: >> >> $ gcc -Wall -O2 foo.c >> $ >> >> There's also a flag_enum attribute, but with the experiments I tried yesterday >> night I couldn't get a warning to trigger for anonymous enums at least, so that >> part should be ok. >> >> I was about to push the series out, but agree that there may be a risk for #ifndefs >> in the BPF C code. If we want to be on safe side, #define FOO FOO would be needed. > > I checked Cilium, LLVM, bcc, bpftrace code, and various others at least there it > seems okay with the current approach, meaning no such if{,n}def seen that would > cause a build warning. Also suricata seems to ship the BPF header itself. But > iproute2 had the following in include/bpf_util.h: > > #ifndef BPF_PSEUDO_MAP_FD > # define BPF_PSEUDO_MAP_FD 1 > #endif > > It's still not what was converted though. I would expect risk might be > rather low. OK, fair enough; thank you for checking :) > Toke, is there anything on your side affected? Nope, we're not #if-testing for any of the variables changed in this patch in either xdp-tutorial or xdp-tools. -Toke