It appears that it might be some kind of kernel dependency. I tested on Rocky Linux (RHEL based image) with Kernel 4.18 and Ubuntu 20.04 (Kernel 5.4) with the same issue running the simplified code. Error ----------------------- libbpf: sec 'kprobe/nvme_submit_cmd': found 2 CO-RE relocations libbpf: CO-RE relocating [2] struct pt_regs: found target candidate [202] struct pt_regs in [vmlinux] libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #0: <byte_off> [2] struct pt_regs.si (0:13 @ offset 104) libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #0: matching candidate #0 <byte_off> [202] struct pt_regs.si (0:13 @ offset 104) libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #0: patched insn #0 (LDX/ST/STX) off 104 -> 104 libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #1: <byte_off> [7] struct nvme_command.common.opcode (0:0:0:0 @ offset 0) libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #1: no matching targets found libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #1: substituting insn #1 w/ invalid insn libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': BPF program load failed: Invalid argument libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': -- BEGIN PROG LOAD LOG -- Unrecognized arg#0 type PTR ; int BPF_KPROBE(nvme_submit_cmd, void *nvmeq, struct nvme_command *cmd, bool write_sq) 0: (79) r3 = *(u64 *)(r1 +104) 1: <invalid CO-RE relocation> failed to resolve CO-RE relocation <byte_off> [7] struct nvme_command.common.opcode (0:0:0:0 @ offset 0) processed 2 insns (limit 1000000) max_states_per_insn 0 total_states 0 peak_states 0 mark_read 0 -- END PROG LOAD LOG -- I did have a breakthrough when upgrading Ubuntu to the HWE kernel (5.13) where the tool worked properly. We can start using the HWE Kernel for our development and make progress with our tools, but I would still like to try to understand why it may not be working on Ubuntu 20.04 Kernel 5.4 or RedHat's version of 4.18. I verified the following kernel configuration parameters. CONFIG_KPROBES=y CONFIG_UPROBES=y CONFIG_DEBUG_FS=y CONFIG_FTRACE=y CONFIG_FTRACE_SYSCALLS=y CONFIG_KPROBE_EVENTS=y CONFIG_UPROBE_EVENTS=y CONFIG_BPF_EVENTS=y Are there other config settings that I might not be thinking of for these kernels? On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 11:51 PM Andrii Nakryiko <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 7:16 PM John Mazzie <john.p.mazzie@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > I pulled the latest libbpf-bootstrap and rebuilt my programs. The > > error message is clearer now. I think last time I tried > > libbpf-bootstrap was still linked to 0.7 instead of 0.8. > > > > The new message is the following which makes sense in regard to what you said. > > > > <invalid CO-RE relocation> > > failed to resolve CO-RE relocation <byte_off> [14] struct > > nvme_command.common.opcode (0:0:0:0 @ offset 0) > > processed 8 insns (limit 1000000) max_states_per_insn 0 total_states 0 > > peak_states 0 mark_read 0 > > > > This struct is part of the nvme driver, which is running on this > > system as it only has nvme devices (including boot device). I've been > > able to access this data using bpftrace on the same system. If I don't > > try to access this struct I can count the correct number of > > nvme_submit_cmd triggers, so I believe the probe is working correctly. > > Is this a case where I need to define more/all of the struct? > > > > Look at debug logs from libbpf. I tried simplified version of your > program and it all works for me. > > struct nvme_common_command { > __u8 opcode; > } __attribute__((preserve_access_index)); > > struct nvme_command { > union { > struct nvme_common_command common; > }; > } __attribute__((preserve_access_index)); > > SEC("kprobe/nvme_submit_cmd") > int BPF_KPROBE(nvme_submit_cmd, void *nvmeq, struct nvme_command *cmd, > bool write_sq) > { > bpf_printk("OPCODE %d", BPF_CORE_READ(cmd, common.opcode)); > > return 0; > } > > > Libbpf logs: > > libbpf: sec 'kprobe/nvme_submit_cmd': found 2 CO-RE relocations > libbpf: CO-RE relocating [6] struct pt_regs: found target candidate > [226] struct pt_regs in [vmlinux] > libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #0: kind <byte_off> (0), spec is > [6] struct pt_regs.si (0:13 @ offset 104) > libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #0: matching candidate #0 [226] > struct pt_regs.si (0:13 @ offset 104) > libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #0: patched insn #0 (LDX/ST/STX) > off 104 -> 104 > libbpf: CO-RE relocating [10] struct nvme_command: found target > candidate [107390] struct nvme_command in [nvme_core] > libbpf: CO-RE relocating [10] struct nvme_command: found target > candidate [106451] struct nvme_command in [nvme] > libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #1: kind <byte_off> (0), spec is > [10] struct nvme_command.common.opcode (0:0:0:0 @ offset 0) > libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #1: matching candidate #0 > [107390] struct nvme_command.common.opcode (0:0:0:0 @ offset 0) > libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #1: matching candidate #1 > [106451] struct nvme_command.common.opcode (0:0:0:0 @ offset 0) > libbpf: prog 'nvme_submit_cmd': relo #1: patched insn #1 (ALU/ALU64) imm 0 -> 0 > Successfully started! Please run `sudo cat > /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace_pipe` to see output of the BPF > programs. > ..............^C > > > > > On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 7:22 PM Andrii Nakryiko > > <andrii.nakryiko@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > On Fri, May 27, 2022 at 3:07 AM John Mazzie <john.p.mazzie@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > > > > While attempting to learn more about BPF and libbpf, I ran into an > > > > issue I can't quite seem to resolve. > > > > > > > > While writing some tools to practice tracing with libbpf, I came > > > > across a situation where I get an error when using BPF_CORE_READ, > > > > which appears to be that CO-RE relocation failed to find a > > > > corresponding field. Compilation doesn't complain, just when I try to > > > > execute. > > > > > > > > Error Message: > > > > --------------------------------------------- > > > > 8: (85) call unknown#195896080 > > > > invalid func unknown#195896080 > > > > > > This means CO-RE relocation failed. If you update libbpf submodule (or > > > maybe we already did it for libbpf-bootstrap recently), you'll get > > > more meaningful error and details. But basically in running kernel > > > there is no cmd->common.opcode. > > > > > > > > > > > I'm using the Makefile from libbpf-bootstrap to build my program. The > > > > other example programs build and execute properly, and I've also > > > > successfully used tracepoints to trace the nvme_setup_cmd and > > > > nvme_complete_rq functions. My issue appears to be when I attempt to > > > > use kprobes for the nvme_submit_cmd function. > > > > > > > > > > [...]