On Sat, Apr 30, 2022 at 9:12 AM Benjamin Tissoires <benjamin.tissoires@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > [...] > This is roughly what I have now: > > - hid-core is not aware of BPF except for a few __weak > ALLOW_ERROR_INJECTION hooks (dispatch_hid_bpf_device_event for > example) > - I have a separate hid-bpf module that attaches BPF traces to these > hooks and calls a "dispatch" kfunc within hid-bpf > - the dispatch function then do a succession of BPF calls to programs > attached to it by using bpf_tail_call(prog_array, hid_id) > > - for the clients, they define one or more > SEC("fmod_ret/hid_bpf_device_event"). That __weak hook is declared in > the kernel by hid-bpf but is never called, it's just an API > declaration > - then clients call in a SEC("syscall") > hid_bpf_attach_prog(ctx->prog_fd, ctx->hid_id, ctx->flags); > - hid_bpf_attach_prog is a kfunc that takes a ref on the struct > bpf_prog*, and stores that program in the correct struct bpf_map *for > the given attached_btf_id (hid_bpf_device_event in our case) > > And that's about it. > I still need to handle automatic release of the bpf prog when there is > no userspace open fd on it unless it's pinned but I think this should > be working fine. > > I also probably need to pin some SEC("syscall") (hid_bpf_attach_prog > and hid_bpf_dettach_prog) so users don't have to write them down and > can just use the ones provided by the kernel. > > The nice thing is that I can define my own API for the attach call > without dealing with bpf core. I can thus add a priority flag that is > relevant here because the data coming through the bpf program can be > modified. > > The other thing is that now, I don't care which function we are in to > decide if a RET_PTR_MEM is read only or not. I can deal with that by > either playing with the flags or even replacing entirely the dispatch > trace prog from userspace if I want to access the raw events. > > However, the downsides are: > - I need to also define kfuncs for BPF_PROG_TYPE_SYSCALL (I don't > think It'll be a big issue) > - The only way I could store the bpf_prog into the map was to hack > around the map ops, because the fd of the map in the skel is not > available while doing a SEC("syscall") from a different process. Update on this side: I realized that I could use the syscall BPF_MAP_GET_FD_BY_ID instead to get an fd for the current task. However, I've been bitten quite hard today because I was using bpf_map_get() instead of bpf_map_get_with_uref(), and so every time I closed the fd in the syscall the map was cleared... But now I would like to have more than one program of a type per hid device, meaning that I can not have only one bpf_map of type BPF_MAP_TYPE_PROG_ARRAY. I have explored BPF_MAP_TYPE_HASH_OF_MAPS, but we can not have BPF_MAP_TYPE_PROG_ARRAY as inner maps with the current code. And I'd need 2 levels of nesting (which is not authorized today): - hid_jmp_table (key: HID id) - array of different program type per HID device (key: HID_BPF_PROG_TYPE) - BPF_MAP_TYPE_PROG_ARRAY with the actual progs (key: int) The other solution would be to be able to create a map when needed, store it in struct hid_device, and then call bpf_tail_call on this map. The problem is that I need a way to teach the verifier that the struct bpf_map pointer I have in the context is a true bpf_map... Any input would be appreciated :) Cheers, Benjamin > > Also, I wonder if we should not have some way to namespace kfuncs. > Ideally, I would like to prevent the usage of those kfuncs outside of > some helpers that I define in HID so I don't have to worry too much > about other trace programs fuzzing and segfaulting the kernel. > [...]