Hi Al, Thanks for your quick reply. > On Jul 25, 2024, at 10:34 PM, Al Viro <viro@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 25, 2024 at 04:47:05PM -0700, Song Liu wrote: > >> +__bpf_kfunc struct dentry *bpf_file_dentry(const struct file *file) >> +{ >> + /* file_dentry() does not hold reference to the dentry. We add a >> + * dget() here so that we can add KF_ACQUIRE flag to >> + * bpf_file_dentry(). >> + */ >> + return dget(file_dentry(file)); >> +} >> + >> +__bpf_kfunc struct dentry *bpf_dget_parent(struct dentry *dentry) >> +{ >> + return dget_parent(dentry); >> +} >> + >> +__bpf_kfunc void bpf_dput(struct dentry *dentry) >> +{ >> + return dput(dentry); >> +} > > If you keep a file reference, why bother grabbing dentry one? > If not, you have a very bad trouble if that opened file is the only > thing that keeps the filesystem busy. Yes, we keep a file reference for the duration of the BPF program. Therefore, it is technically not necessary to grab a dentry one. However, we grab a dentry reference to make the dentry pointer returned by bpf_file_dentry() a trusted pointer from BPF verifier's POV, so that these kfuncs are more robust. The following explanation is a bit long. Please let me know if it turns out confusing. ==== What is trusted pointer? ==== Trusted point is the mechanism to make sure bpf kfuncs are called with valid pointer. The BPF verifier requires certain BPF kfuncs (helpers) are called with trusted pointers. A pointer is trusted if one of the following two is true: 1. The pointer is passed directly by the tracepoint/kprobe, i.e., no pointer walking, no non-zero offset. For example, int bpf_security_file_open(struct file *file) /* file is trusted */ { /* mapping is not trusted */ struct address_space *mapping = file->f_mapping; /* file2 is not trusted */ struct file *file2 = file + 1; } 2. The pointer is returned by a kfunc with KF_ACQUIRE. This pointer has to be released by a kfunc with KF_RELEASE. KF_ACQUIRE and KF_RELEASE kfuncs are like any _get() _put() pairs. ==== bpf_dget_parent and bpf_dput ==== In this case, bpf_dget_parent() is a KF_ACQUIRE kfunc and bpf_dput() is a KF_RELEASE function. They are just like regular _get() _put() functions. The BPF verifier makes sure pointers acquired by bpf_dget_parent() is always released by bpf_dput() before the BPF program returns. For example, in the following BPF program: xxxx(struct dentry *d) { struct dentry *parent = bpf_dget_parent(d); /* main logic */ bpf_dput(parent); } If the bpf_dput() call is missing, the verifier will not allow the program to load. ==== More on kfunc safety ==== Trusted point makes kfunc calls safe. In this case, we want bpf_get_dentry_xattr() to only take trusted dentry pointer. For example, in the security_inode_listxattr LSM hook: bpf_security_inode_listxattr(struct dentry *dentry) { /* This is allowed, dentry is an input and thus * is trusted */ bpf_get_dentry_xattr(dentry); /* This is not allowed, as dentry->d_parent is * not trusted */ bpf_get_dentry_xattr(dentry->d_parent); /* This is allowed, as bpf_dget_parent() holds * a reference to d_parent, and returns a trusted * pointer */ struct dentry *parent = bpf_dget_parent(dentry); /* The following is needed, as we need the release * parent pointer. If this line is missing, this * program cannot pass BPF verifier. */ bpf_dput(parent); } ==== bpf_file_dentry ==== In this use case, we want to get from file pointer, such as LSM hook security_file_open() to the dentry and thus walk the directory tree. However, security_file_open() does not pass in a dentry pointer, and file->f_path.dentry is not a trusted pointer. There are two ways to get a trusted dentry pointer from a file pointer: 1. As what we do here, use bpf_file_dentry() to hold a reference on file->f_path.dentry and return a trusted pointer. 2. Give the verifier special knowledge that if file pointer is trusted, file->f_path.dentry is also trusted. This can be achieve with the following macros: BTF_TYPE_SAFE_TRUSTED BTF_TYPE_SAFE_RCU BTF_TYPE_SAFE_RCU_OR_NULL. Using the second method here requires a little more work in the BPF verifier, as dentry is not a simple pointer in struct file, but f_path.dentry. Therefore, I chose current approach that bpf_file_dentry() holds a reference on dentry pointer, and the pointer has to be released with bpf_dput(). For more details about trusted pointers in kfuncs, please refer to Documentation/bpf/kfuncs.rst. Does this answer your question? Thanks, Song > It's almost certainly a wrong interface; please, explain what > exactly are you trying to do here.