Re: [PATCH v2 bpf-next] bpf: sharing bpf runtime stats with /dev/bpf_stats

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On 03/18, Song Liu wrote:
> 
> 
> > On Mar 18, 2020, at 1:58 PM, Daniel Borkmann <daniel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > 
> > On 3/18/20 7:33 AM, Song Liu wrote:
> >>> On Mar 17, 2020, at 4:08 PM, Song Liu <songliubraving@xxxxxx> wrote:
> >>>> On Mar 17, 2020, at 2:47 PM, Daniel Borkmann <daniel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >>>>>> 
> >>>>>> Hm, true as well. Wouldn't long-term extending "bpftool prog profile" fentry/fexit
> >>>>>> programs supersede this old bpf_stats infrastructure? Iow, can't we implement the
> >>>>>> same (or even more elaborate stats aggregation) in BPF via fentry/fexit and then
> >>>>>> potentially deprecate bpf_stats counters?
> >>>>> I think run_time_ns has its own value as a simple monitoring framework. We can
> >>>>> use it in tools like top (and variations). It will be easier for these tools to
> >>>>> adopt run_time_ns than using fentry/fexit.
> >>>> 
> >>>> Agree that this is easier; I presume there is no such official integration today
> >>>> in tools like top, right, or is there anything planned?
> >>> 
> >>> Yes, we do want more supports in different tools to increase the visibility.
> >>> Here is the effort for atop: https://github.com/Atoptool/atop/pull/88 .
> >>> 
> >>> I wasn't pushing push hard on this one mostly because the sysctl interface requires
> >>> a user space "owner".
> >>> 
> >>>>> On the other hand, in long term, we may include a few fentry/fexit based programs
> >>>>> in the kernel binary (or the rpm), so that these tools can use them easily. At
> >>>>> that time, we can fully deprecate run_time_ns. Maybe this is not too far away?
> >>>> 
> >>>> Did you check how feasible it is to have something like `bpftool prog profile top`
> >>>> which then enables fentry/fexit for /all/ existing BPF programs in the system? It
> >>>> could then sort the sample interval by run_cnt, cycles, cache misses, aggregated
> >>>> runtime, etc in a top-like output. Wdyt?
> >>> 
> >>> I wonder whether we can achieve this with one bpf prog (or a trampoline) that covers
> >>> all BPF programs, like a trampoline inside __BPF_PROG_RUN()?
> >>> 
> >>> For long term direction, I think we could compare two different approaches: add new
> >>> tools (like bpftool prog profile top) vs. add BPF support to existing tools. The
> >>> first approach is easier. The latter approach would show BPF information to users
> >>> who are not expecting BPF programs in the systems. For many sysadmins, seeing BPF
> >>> programs in top/ps, and controlling them via kill is more natural than learning
> >>> bpftool. What's your thought on this?
> >> More thoughts on this.
> >> If we have a special trampoline that attach to all BPF programs at once, we really
> >> don't need the run_time_ns stats anymore. Eventually, tools that monitor BPF
> >> programs will depend on libbpf, so using fentry/fexit to monitor BPF programs doesn't
> >> introduce extra dependency. I guess we also need a way to include BPF program in
> >> libbpf.
> >> To summarize this plan, we need:
> >> 1) A global trampoline that attaches to all BPF programs at once;
> > 
> > Overall sounds good, I think the `at once` part might be tricky, at least it would
> > need to patch one prog after another, each prog also needs to store its own metrics
> > somewhere for later collection. The start-to-sample could be a shared global var (aka
> > shared map between all the programs) which would flip the switch though.
> 
> I was thinking about adding bpf_global_trampoline and use it in __BPF_PROG_RUN. 
> Something like:
> 
> diff --git i/include/linux/filter.h w/include/linux/filter.h
> index 9b5aa5c483cc..ac9497d1fa7b 100644
> --- i/include/linux/filter.h
> +++ w/include/linux/filter.h
> @@ -559,9 +559,14 @@ struct sk_filter {
> 
>  DECLARE_STATIC_KEY_FALSE(bpf_stats_enabled_key);
> 
> +extern struct bpf_trampoline *bpf_global_trampoline;
> +DECLARE_STATIC_KEY_FALSE(bpf_global_tr_active);
> +
>  #define __BPF_PROG_RUN(prog, ctx, dfunc)       ({                      \
>         u32 ret;                                                        \
>         cant_migrate();                                                 \
> +       if (static_branch_unlikely(&bpf_global_tr_active))              \
> +               run_the_trampoline();                                   \
>         if (static_branch_unlikely(&bpf_stats_enabled_key)) {           \
>                 struct bpf_prog_stats *stats;                           \
>                 u64 start = sched_clock();                              \
> 
> 
> I am not 100% sure this is OK. 
> 
> I am also not sure whether this is an overkill. Do we really want more complex
> metric for all BPF programs? Or run_time_ns is enough? 
I was thinking about exporting a real distribution of the prog runtimes
instead of doing an average. It would be interesting to see
50%/95%/99%/max stats.



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