Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Tue, Apr 6, 2021 at 3:06 AM Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> > On Sat, Apr 3, 2021 at 10:47 AM Alexei Starovoitov >> > <alexei.starovoitov@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> >> >> On Sat, Apr 03, 2021 at 12:38:06AM +0530, Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi wrote: >> >> > On Sat, Apr 03, 2021 at 12:02:14AM IST, Alexei Starovoitov wrote: >> >> > > On Fri, Apr 2, 2021 at 8:27 AM Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi <memxor@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> > > > [...] >> >> > > >> >> > > All of these things are messy because of tc legacy. bpf tried to follow tc style >> >> > > with cls and act distinction and it didn't quite work. cls with >> >> > > direct-action is the only >> >> > > thing that became mainstream while tc style attach wasn't really addressed. >> >> > > There were several incidents where tc had tens of thousands of progs attached >> >> > > because of this attach/query/index weirdness described above. >> >> > > I think the only way to address this properly is to introduce bpf_link style of >> >> > > attaching to tc. Such bpf_link would support ingress/egress only. >> >> > > direction-action will be implied. There won't be any index and query >> >> > > will be obvious. >> >> > >> >> > Note that we already have bpf_link support working (without support for pinning >> >> > ofcourse) in a limited way. The ifindex, protocol, parent_id, priority, handle, >> >> > chain_index tuple uniquely identifies a filter, so we stash this in the bpf_link >> >> > and are able to operate on the exact filter during release. >> >> >> >> Except they're not unique. The library can stash them, but something else >> >> doing detach via iproute2 or their own netlink calls will detach the prog. >> >> This other app can attach to the same spot a different prog and now >> >> bpf_link__destroy will be detaching somebody else prog. >> >> >> >> > > So I would like to propose to take this patch set a step further from >> >> > > what Daniel said: >> >> > > int bpf_tc_attach(prog_fd, ifindex, {INGRESS,EGRESS}): >> >> > > and make this proposed api to return FD. >> >> > > To detach from tc ingress/egress just close(fd). >> >> > >> >> > You mean adding an fd-based TC API to the kernel? >> >> >> >> yes. >> > >> > I'm totally for bpf_link-based TC attachment. >> > >> > But I think *also* having "legacy" netlink-based APIs will allow >> > applications to handle older kernels in a much nicer way without extra >> > dependency on iproute2. We have a similar situation with kprobe, where >> > currently libbpf only supports "modern" fd-based attachment, but users >> > periodically ask questions and struggle to figure out issues on older >> > kernels that don't support new APIs. >> >> +1; I am OK with adding a new bpf_link-based way to attach TC programs, >> but we still need to support the netlink API in libbpf. >> >> > So I think we'd have to support legacy TC APIs, but I agree with >> > Alexei and Daniel that we should keep it to the simplest and most >> > straightforward API of supporting direction-action attachments and >> > setting up qdisc transparently (if I'm getting all the terminology >> > right, after reading Quentin's blog post). That coincidentally should >> > probably match how bpf_link-based TC API will look like, so all that >> > can be abstracted behind a single bpf_link__attach_tc() API as well, >> > right? That's the plan for dealing with kprobe right now, btw. Libbpf >> > will detect the best available API and transparently fall back (maybe >> > with some warning for awareness, due to inherent downsides of legacy >> > APIs: no auto-cleanup being the most prominent one). >> >> Yup, SGTM: Expose both in the low-level API (in bpf.c), and make the >> high-level API auto-detect. That way users can also still use the >> netlink attach function if they don't want the fd-based auto-close >> behaviour of bpf_link. > > So I thought a bit more about this, and it feels like the right move > would be to expose only higher-level TC BPF API behind bpf_link. It > will keep the API complexity and amount of APIs that libbpf will have > to support to the minimum, and will keep the API itself simple: > direct-attach with the minimum amount of input arguments. By not > exposing low-level APIs we also table the whole bpf_tc_cls_attach_id > design discussion, as we now can keep as much info as needed inside > bpf_link_tc (which will embed bpf_link internally as well) to support > detachment and possibly some additional querying, if needed. But then there would be no way for the caller to explicitly select a mechanism? I.e., if I write a BPF program using this mechanism targeting a 5.12 kernel, I'll get netlink attachment, which can stick around when I do bpf_link__disconnect(). But then if the kernel gets upgraded to support bpf_link for TC programs I'll suddenly transparently get bpf_link and the attachments will go away unless I pin them. This seems... less than ideal? If we expose the low-level API I can elect to just use this if I know I want netlink behaviour, but if bpf_program__attach_tc() is the only API available it would at least need a flag to enforce one mode or the other (I can see someone wanting to enforce kernel bpf_link semantics as well, so a flag for either mode seems reasonable?). -Toke