Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > On Tue, Mar 8, 2022 at 5:40 AM Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <toke@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi <memxor@xxxxxxxxx> writes: >> >> > On Tue, Mar 08, 2022 at 11:18:52AM IST, Andrii Nakryiko wrote: >> >> On Sun, Mar 6, 2022 at 3:43 PM Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi <memxor@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> > >> >> > Expose existing 'bpf_xdp_pointer' as a BPF helper named 'bpf_packet_pointer' >> >> > returning a packet pointer with a fixed immutable range. This can be useful to >> >> > enable DPA without having to use memcpy (currently the case in >> >> > bpf_xdp_load_bytes and bpf_xdp_store_bytes). >> >> > >> >> > The intended usage to read and write data for multi-buff XDP is: >> >> > >> >> > int err = 0; >> >> > char buf[N]; >> >> > >> >> > off &= 0xffff; >> >> > ptr = bpf_packet_pointer(ctx, off, sizeof(buf), &err); >> >> > if (unlikely(!ptr)) { >> >> > if (err < 0) >> >> > return XDP_ABORTED; >> >> > err = bpf_xdp_load_bytes(ctx, off, buf, sizeof(buf)); >> >> > if (err < 0) >> >> > return XDP_ABORTED; >> >> > ptr = buf; >> >> > } >> >> > ... >> >> > // Do some stores and loads in [ptr, ptr + N) region >> >> > ... >> >> > if (unlikely(ptr == buf)) { >> >> > err = bpf_xdp_store_bytes(ctx, off, buf, sizeof(buf)); >> >> > if (err < 0) >> >> > return XDP_ABORTED; >> >> > } >> >> > >> >> > Note that bpf_packet_pointer returns a PTR_TO_PACKET, not PTR_TO_MEM, because >> >> > these pointers need to be invalidated on clear_all_pkt_pointers invocation, and >> >> > it is also more meaningful to the user to see return value as R0=pkt. >> >> > >> >> > This series is meant to collect feedback on the approach, next version can >> >> > include a bpf_skb_pointer and exposing it as bpf_packet_pointer helper for TC >> >> > hooks, and explore not resetting range to zero on r0 += rX, instead check access >> >> > like check_mem_region_access (var_off + off < range), since there would be no >> >> > data_end to compare against and obtain a new range. >> >> > >> >> > The common name and func_id is supposed to allow writing generic code using >> >> > bpf_packet_pointer that works for both XDP and TC programs. >> >> > >> >> > Please see the individual patches for implementation details. >> >> > >> >> >> >> Joanne is working on a "bpf_dynptr" framework that will support >> >> exactly this feature, in addition to working with dynamically >> >> allocated memory, working with memory of statically unknown size (but >> >> safe and checked at runtime), etc. And all that within a generic >> >> common feature implemented uniformly within the verifier. E.g., it >> >> won't need any of the custom bits of logic added in patch #2 and #3. >> >> So I'm thinking that instead of custom-implementing a partial case of >> >> bpf_dynptr just for skb and xdp packets, let's maybe wait for dynptr >> >> and do it only once there? >> >> >> > >> > Interesting stuff, looking forward to it. >> > >> >> See also my ARG_CONSTANT comment. It seems like a pretty common thing >> >> where input constant is used to characterize some pointer returned >> >> from the helper (e.g., bpf_ringbuf_reserve() case), and we'll need >> >> that for bpf_dynptr for exactly this "give me direct access of N >> >> bytes, if possible" case. So improving/generalizing it now before >> >> dynptr lands makes a lot of sense, outside of bpf_packet_pointer() >> >> feature itself. >> > >> > No worries, we can continue the discussion in patch 1, I'll split out the arg >> > changes into a separate patch, and wait for dynptr to be posted before reworking >> > this. >> >> This does raise the question of what we do in the meantime, though? Your >> patch includes a change to bpf_xdp_{load,store}_bytes() which, if we're >> making it, really has to go in before those hit a release and become >> UAPI. >> >> One option would be to still make the change to those other helpers; >> they'd become a bit slower, but if we have a solution for that coming, >> that may be OK for a single release? WDYT? > > I must have missed important changes to bpf_xdp_{load,store}_bytes(). > Does anything change about its behavior? If there are some fixes > specific to those helpers, we should fix them as well as a separate > patch. My main objection is adding a bpf_packet_pointer() special case > when we have a generic mechanism in the works that will come this use > case (among other use cases). Well it's not a functional change per se, but Kartikeya's patch is removing an optimisation from bpf_xdp_{load_store}_bytes() (i.e., the use of the bpf_xdp_pointer()) in favour of making it available directly to BPF. So if we don't do that change before those helpers are finalised, we will end up either introducing a performance regression for code using those helpers, or being stuck with the bpf_xdp_pointer() use inside them even though it makes more sense to move it out to BPF. So the "safe" thing to do would do the change to the store/load helpers now, and get rid of the bpf_xdp_pointer() entirely until it can be introduced as a BPF helper in a generic way. Of course this depends on whether you consider performance regressions to be something to avoid, but this being XDP IMO we should :) -Toke