On Sun, Feb 05, 2023 at 12:42:03PM -0800, Cong Wang wrote: > On Fri, Feb 03, 2023 at 09:57:27AM -0600, David Vernet wrote: > > BPF kernel <-> kernel API stability has been discussed at length over > > the last several weeks and months. Now that we've largely aligned over > > kfuncs being the way forward, and BPF helpers being considered > > functionally frozen, it's time to document the expectations for kfunc > > lifecycles and stability so that everyone (BPF users, kfunc developers, > > and maintainers) are all aligned, and have a crystal-clear understanding > > of the expectations surrounding kfuncs. > > > > To do that, this patch adds that documentation to the main kfuncs > > documentation page via a new 'kfunc lifecycle expectations' section. The > > patch describes how decisions are made in the kernel regarding whether > > to include, keep, deprecate, or change / remove a kfunc. As described > > very overtly in the patch itself, but likely worth highlighting here: > > > > "kfunc stability" does not mean, nor ever will mean, "BPF APIs may block > > development elsewhere in the kernel". > > > > Rather, the intention and expectation is for kfuncs to be treated like > > EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL symbols in the kernel. The goal is for kfuncs to be a > > safe and valuable option for maintainers and kfunc developers to extend > > the kernel, without tying anyone's hands, or imposing any kind of > > restrictions on maintainers in the same way that UAPI changes do. > > I think they are still different, kernel modules are still considered as > a part of kernel development, while eBPF code is not that supposed to be > kernel development, at least much further. Treating them alike is > misleading, IMHO. I'm not following. How is a BPF program not kernel development? > > > > In addition to the 'kfunc lifecycle expectations' section, this patch > > also adds documentation for a new KF_DEPRECATED kfunc flag which kfunc > > authors or maintainers can choose to add to kfuncs if and when they > > decide to deprecate them. Note that as described in the patch itself, a > > kfunc need not be deprecated before being changed or removed -- this > > flag is simply provided as an available deprecation mechanism for those > > that want to provide a deprecation story / timeline to their users. > > When necessary, kfuncs may be changed or removed to accommodate changes > > elsewhere in the kernel without any deprecation at all. > > This fundamentally contradicts with Compile-Once-Run-Everywhere > https://facebookmicrosites.github.io/bpf/blog/2020/02/19/bpf-portability-and-co-re.html Sorry, but again, I'm not following your point. What exactly about this "fundamentally contradicts" with CO-RE? Please elaborate if you're going to claim that something is a fundamental contradiction. > Could you add some clarification for this too? Especically how we could > respect CO-RE meanwhile deprecating kfuncs? I don't know what you mean by "respecting CO-RE". You can compile a BPF program that calls a kfunc and invoke it on differents, as long as whatever kernel you're running on provides that kfunc with the same BTF encoding. This is no different than e.g. accessing a struct element on two kernel versions. Also, CO-RE doesn't provide any ironclad guarantees either. If you access a struct element in a BPF program, and then a kernel version removes that element from the struct, that BPF program will fail to load on that kernel. > BTW, not related to compatibility, but still kfuncs related confusion, > it also contradicts with Documentation/bpf/bpf_design_QA.rst: > > " > Q: Can BPF functionality such as new program or map types, new > helpers, etc be added out of kernel module code? > > A: NO. Agreed, we should improve the QA to mention that you can load kfuncs from a module -- thanks for pointing that out! > " > > The conntrack kfuncs like bpf_skb_ct_alloc() reside in a kernel module. > > Thanks!