Jörn-Thorben Hinz wrote: > On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 10:17 -0500, Willem de Bruijn wrote: > > Jörn-Thorben Hinz wrote: > > > A BPF application, e.g., a TCP congestion control, might benefit > > > from or > > > even require precise (=hardware) packet timestamps. These > > > timestamps are > > > already available through __sk_buff.hwtstamp and > > > bpf_sock_ops.skb_hwtstamp, but could not be requested: BPF programs > > > were > > > not allowed to set SO_TIMESTAMPING* on sockets. > > > > > > Enable BPF programs to actively request the generation of > > > timestamps > > > from a stream socket. The also required ioctl(SIOCSHWTSTAMP) on the > > > network device must still be done separately, in user space. > > > > > > This patch had previously been submitted in a two-part series > > > (first > > > link below). The second patch has been independently applied in > > > commit > > > 7f6ca95d16b9 ("net: Implement missing > > > getsockopt(SO_TIMESTAMPING_NEW)") > > > (second link below). > > > > > > On the earlier submission, there was the open question whether to > > > only > > > allow, thus enforce, SO_TIMESTAMPING_NEW in this patch: > > > > > > For a BPF program, this won't make a difference: A timestamp, when > > > accessed through the fields mentioned above, is directly read from > > > skb_shared_info.hwtstamps, independent of the places where NEW/OLD > > > is > > > relevant. See bpf_convert_ctx_access() besides others. > > > > > > I am unsure, though, when it comes to the interconnection of user > > > space > > > and BPF "space", when both are interested in the timestamps. I > > > think it > > > would cause an unsolvable conflict when user space is bound to use > > > SO_TIMESTAMPING_OLD with a BPF program only allowed to set > > > SO_TIMESTAMPING_NEW *on the same socket*? Please correct me if I'm > > > mistaken. > > > > The difference between OLD and NEW only affects the system calls. It > > is not reflected in how the data is stored in the skb, or how BPF can > > read the data. A process setting SO_TIMESTAMPING_OLD will still allow > > BPF to read data using SO_TIMESTAMPING_NEW. > > > > But, he one place where I see a conflict is in setting sock_flag > > SOCK_TSTAMP_NEW. That affects what getsockopt returns and which cmsg > > is written: > > > > if (sock_flag(sk, SOCK_TSTAMP_NEW)) > > put_cmsg_scm_timestamping64(msg, tss); > > else > > put_cmsg_scm_timestamping(msg, tss); > > > > So a process could issue setsockopt SO_TIMESTAMPING_OLD followed by > > a BPF program that issues setsockopt SO_TIMESTAMPING_NEW and this > > would flip SOCK_TSTAMP_NEW. > > > > Just allowing BPF to set SO_TIMESTAMPING_OLD does not fix it, as it > > just adds the inverse case. > Thanks for elaborating on this. I see I only thought of half the > possible conflicting situations. > > > > > A related problem is how does the BPF program know which of the two > > variants to set. The BPF program is usually compiled and loaded > > independently of the running process. > True, that is an additional challenge. And with respect to CO-RE, I > think a really portable BPF program could (or at least should) not even > decide on NEW or OLD at compile time. > > > > > Perhaps one option is to fail the setsockop if it would flip > > sock_flag SOCK_TSTAMP_NEW. But only if called from BPF, as else it > > changes existing ABI. > > > > Then a BPF program can attempt to set SO_TIMESTAMPING NEW, be > > prepared to handle a particular errno, and retry with > > SO_TIMESTAMPING_OLD. > Hmm, would be possible, yes. But sounds like a weird and unexpected > special-case behavior to the occasional BPF user. Agreed. So perhaps we're back to where we say: this is a new feature for BPF, only support it on modern environments that use SO_TIMESTAMPING_NEW?