On Sat, 5 Dec 2020, Yonghong Song wrote: > > > __builtin_btf_type_id() is really only supported in llvm12 > and 64bit return value support is pushed to llvm12 trunk > a while back. The builtin is introduced in llvm11 but has a > corner bug, so llvm12 is recommended. So if people use the builtin, > you can assume 64bit return value. libbpf support is required > here. So in my opinion, there is no need to do feature detection. > > Andrii has a patch to support 64bit return value for > __builtin_btf_type_id() and I assume that one should > be landed before or together with your patch. > > Just for your info. The following is an example you could > use to determine whether __builtin_btf_type_id() > supports btf object id at llvm level. > > -bash-4.4$ cat t.c > int test(int arg) { > return __builtin_btf_type_id(arg, 1); > } > > Compile to generate assembly code with latest llvm12 trunk: > clang -target bpf -O2 -S -g -mcpu=v3 t.c > In the asm code, you should see one line with > r0 = 1 ll > > Or you can generate obj code: > clang -target bpf -O2 -c -g -mcpu=v3 t.c > and then you disassemble the obj file > llvm-objdump -d --no-show-raw-insn --no-leading-addr t.o > You should see below in the output > r0 = 1 ll > > Use earlier version of llvm12 trunk, the builtin has > 32bit return value, you will see > r0 = 1 > which is a 32bit imm to r0, while "r0 = 1 ll" is > 64bit imm to r0. > Thanks for this Yonghong! I'm thinking the way I'll tackle it is to simply verify that the upper 32 bits specifying the veth module object id are non-zero; if they are zero, we'll skip the test (I think a skip probably makes sense as not everyone will have llvm12). Does that seem reasonable? With the additional few minor changes on top of Andrii's patch, the use of __builtin_btf_type_id() worked perfectly. Thanks! Alan