From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.4.0 (2014-02-07) on aws-us-west-2-korg-lkml-1.web.codeaurora.org X-Spam-Level: X-Spam-Status: No, score=-5.3 required=3.0 tests=BAYES_00, HEADER_FROM_DIFFERENT_DOMAINS,MAILING_LIST_MULTI,NICE_REPLY_A,SPF_HELO_NONE, SPF_PASS,URIBL_BLOCKED,USER_AGENT_SANE_1 autolearn=no autolearn_force=no version=3.4.0 Received: from mail.kernel.org (mail.kernel.org [198.145.29.99]) by smtp.lore.kernel.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 6AF02C43460 for ; Thu, 15 Apr 2021 22:10:30 +0000 (UTC) Received: from vger.kernel.org (vger.kernel.org [23.128.96.18]) by mail.kernel.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id 497EB610FB for ; Thu, 15 Apr 2021 22:10:30 +0000 (UTC) Received: (majordomo@vger.kernel.org) by vger.kernel.org via listexpand id S236366AbhDOWKt (ORCPT ); Thu, 15 Apr 2021 18:10:49 -0400 Received: from www62.your-server.de ([213.133.104.62]:59832 "EHLO www62.your-server.de" rhost-flags-OK-OK-OK-OK) by vger.kernel.org with ESMTP id S234816AbhDOWKt (ORCPT ); Thu, 15 Apr 2021 18:10:49 -0400 Received: from sslproxy06.your-server.de ([78.46.172.3]) by www62.your-server.de with esmtpsa (TLSv1.3:TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384:256) (Exim 4.92.3) (envelope-from ) id 1lXABp-000CxX-8X; Fri, 16 Apr 2021 00:10:21 +0200 Received: from [85.7.101.30] (helo=linux.home) by sslproxy06.your-server.de with esmtpsa (TLSv1.3:TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384:256) (Exim 4.92) (envelope-from ) id 1lXABo-00086U-RW; Fri, 16 Apr 2021 00:10:20 +0200 Subject: Re: [PATCH bpf-next 3/5] libbpf: add low level TC-BPF API To: Andrii Nakryiko Cc: =?UTF-8?Q?Toke_H=c3=b8iland-J=c3=b8rgensen?= , Alexei Starovoitov , Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi , bpf , Jesper Dangaard Brouer , Alexei Starovoitov , Andrii Nakryiko , Martin KaFai Lau , Song Liu , Yonghong Song , John Fastabend , KP Singh , Shuah Khan , "David S. Miller" , Jakub Kicinski , Jesper Dangaard Brouer , Peter Zijlstra , open list , Networking , "open list:KERNEL SELFTEST FRAMEWORK" References: <20210325120020.236504-4-memxor@gmail.com> <20210328080648.oorx2no2j6zslejk@apollo> <48b99ccc-8ef6-4ba9-00f9-d7e71ae4fb5d@iogearbox.net> <20210331094400.ldznoctli6fljz64@apollo> <5d59b5ee-a21e-1860-e2e5-d03f89306fd8@iogearbox.net> <20210402152743.dbadpgcmrgjt4eca@apollo> <20210402190806.nhcgappm3iocvd3d@apollo> <20210403174721.vg4wle327wvossgl@ast-mbp> <87blar4ti7.fsf@toke.dk> <874kg9m8t1.fsf@toke.dk> <87wnt4jx8m.fsf@toke.dk> <4b99d6c3-0281-f539-e6dc-0b307c5a7db3@iogearbox.net> From: Daniel Borkmann Message-ID: <848d7864-44f3-79a2-ad3c-80adee6aa27a@iogearbox.net> Date: Fri, 16 Apr 2021 00:10:20 +0200 User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.7.2 MIME-Version: 1.0 In-Reply-To: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed Content-Language: en-US Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Authenticated-Sender: daniel@iogearbox.net X-Virus-Scanned: Clear (ClamAV 0.102.4/26141/Thu Apr 15 13:13:26 2021) Precedence: bulk List-ID: X-Mailing-List: bpf@vger.kernel.org On 4/15/21 1:58 AM, Andrii Nakryiko wrote: > On Wed, Apr 14, 2021 at 4:32 PM Daniel Borkmann wrote: >> On 4/15/21 1:19 AM, Andrii Nakryiko wrote: >>> On Wed, Apr 14, 2021 at 3:51 PM Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote: >>>> Andrii Nakryiko writes: >>>>> On Wed, Apr 14, 2021 at 3:58 AM Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote: >>>>>> Andrii Nakryiko writes: >>>>>>> On Tue, Apr 6, 2021 at 3:06 AM Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote: >>>>>>>> Andrii Nakryiko writes: >>>>>>>>> On Sat, Apr 3, 2021 at 10:47 AM Alexei Starovoitov >>>>>>>>> wrote: >>>>>>>>>> On Sat, Apr 03, 2021 at 12:38:06AM +0530, Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi wrote: >>>>>>>>>>> On Sat, Apr 03, 2021 at 12:02:14AM IST, Alexei Starovoitov wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>> On Fri, Apr 2, 2021 at 8:27 AM Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi wrote: >>>>>>>>>>>>> [...] >>>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> All of these things are messy because of tc legacy. bpf tried to follow tc style >>>>>>>>>>>> with cls and act distinction and it didn't quite work. cls with >>>>>>>>>>>> direct-action is the only >>>>>>>>>>>> thing that became mainstream while tc style attach wasn't really addressed. >>>>>>>>>>>> There were several incidents where tc had tens of thousands of progs attached >>>>>>>>>>>> because of this attach/query/index weirdness described above. >>>>>>>>>>>> I think the only way to address this properly is to introduce bpf_link style of >>>>>>>>>>>> attaching to tc. Such bpf_link would support ingress/egress only. >>>>>>>>>>>> direction-action will be implied. There won't be any index and query >>>>>>>>>>>> will be obvious. >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> Note that we already have bpf_link support working (without support for pinning >>>>>>>>>>> ofcourse) in a limited way. The ifindex, protocol, parent_id, priority, handle, >>>>>>>>>>> chain_index tuple uniquely identifies a filter, so we stash this in the bpf_link >>>>>>>>>>> and are able to operate on the exact filter during release. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> Except they're not unique. The library can stash them, but something else >>>>>>>>>> doing detach via iproute2 or their own netlink calls will detach the prog. >>>>>>>>>> This other app can attach to the same spot a different prog and now >>>>>>>>>> bpf_link__destroy will be detaching somebody else prog. >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>>> So I would like to propose to take this patch set a step further from >>>>>>>>>>>> what Daniel said: >>>>>>>>>>>> int bpf_tc_attach(prog_fd, ifindex, {INGRESS,EGRESS}): >>>>>>>>>>>> and make this proposed api to return FD. >>>>>>>>>>>> To detach from tc ingress/egress just close(fd). >>>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>>> You mean adding an fd-based TC API to the kernel? >>>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>>> yes. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I'm totally for bpf_link-based TC attachment. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> But I think *also* having "legacy" netlink-based APIs will allow >>>>>>>>> applications to handle older kernels in a much nicer way without extra >>>>>>>>> dependency on iproute2. We have a similar situation with kprobe, where >>>>>>>>> currently libbpf only supports "modern" fd-based attachment, but users >>>>>>>>> periodically ask questions and struggle to figure out issues on older >>>>>>>>> kernels that don't support new APIs. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> +1; I am OK with adding a new bpf_link-based way to attach TC programs, >>>>>>>> but we still need to support the netlink API in libbpf. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> So I think we'd have to support legacy TC APIs, but I agree with >>>>>>>>> Alexei and Daniel that we should keep it to the simplest and most >>>>>>>>> straightforward API of supporting direction-action attachments and >>>>>>>>> setting up qdisc transparently (if I'm getting all the terminology >>>>>>>>> right, after reading Quentin's blog post). That coincidentally should >>>>>>>>> probably match how bpf_link-based TC API will look like, so all that >>>>>>>>> can be abstracted behind a single bpf_link__attach_tc() API as well, >>>>>>>>> right? That's the plan for dealing with kprobe right now, btw. Libbpf >>>>>>>>> will detect the best available API and transparently fall back (maybe >>>>>>>>> with some warning for awareness, due to inherent downsides of legacy >>>>>>>>> APIs: no auto-cleanup being the most prominent one). >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Yup, SGTM: Expose both in the low-level API (in bpf.c), and make the >>>>>>>> high-level API auto-detect. That way users can also still use the >>>>>>>> netlink attach function if they don't want the fd-based auto-close >>>>>>>> behaviour of bpf_link. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> So I thought a bit more about this, and it feels like the right move >>>>>>> would be to expose only higher-level TC BPF API behind bpf_link. It >>>>>>> will keep the API complexity and amount of APIs that libbpf will have >>>>>>> to support to the minimum, and will keep the API itself simple: >>>>>>> direct-attach with the minimum amount of input arguments. By not >>>>>>> exposing low-level APIs we also table the whole bpf_tc_cls_attach_id >>>>>>> design discussion, as we now can keep as much info as needed inside >>>>>>> bpf_link_tc (which will embed bpf_link internally as well) to support >>>>>>> detachment and possibly some additional querying, if needed. >>>>>> >>>>>> But then there would be no way for the caller to explicitly select a >>>>>> mechanism? I.e., if I write a BPF program using this mechanism targeting >>>>>> a 5.12 kernel, I'll get netlink attachment, which can stick around when >>>>>> I do bpf_link__disconnect(). But then if the kernel gets upgraded to >>>>>> support bpf_link for TC programs I'll suddenly transparently get >>>>>> bpf_link and the attachments will go away unless I pin them. This >>>>>> seems... less than ideal? >>>>> >>>>> That's what we are doing with bpf_program__attach_kprobe(), though. >>>>> And so far I've only seen people (privately) saying how good it would >>>>> be to have bpf_link-based TC APIs, doesn't seem like anyone with a >>>>> realistic use case prefers the current APIs. So I suspect it's not >>>>> going to be a problem in practice. But at least I'd start there and >>>>> see how people are using it and if they need anything else. >>>> >>>> *sigh* - I really wish you would stop arbitrarily declaring your own use >>>> cases "realistic" and mine (implied) "unrealistic". Makes it really hard >>>> to have a productive discussion... >>> >>> Well (sigh?..), this wasn't my intention, sorry you read it this way. >>> But we had similar discussions when I was adding bpf_link-based XDP >>> attach APIs. And guess what, now I see that samples/bpf/whatever_xdp >>> is switched to bpf_link-based XDP, because that makes everything >>> simpler and more reliable. What I also know is that in production we >>> ran into multiple issues with anything that doesn't auto-detach on >>> process exit/crash (unless pinned explicitly, of course). And that >>> people that are trying to use TC right now are saying how having >>> bpf_link-based TC APIs would make everything *simpler* and *safer*. So >>> I don't know... I understand it might be convenient in some cases to >>> not care about a lifetime of BPF programs you are attaching, but then >>> there are usually explicit and intentional ways to achieve at least >>> similar behavior with safety by default. >> >> [...] >> >> >>> There are many ways to skin this cat. I'd prioritize bpf_link-based TC >> >>> APIs to be added with legacy TC API as a fallback. >> >> I think the problem here is though that this would need to be deterministic >> when upgrading from one kernel version to another where we don't use the >> fallback anymore, e.g. in case of Cilium we always want to keep the progs >> attached to allow headless updates on the agent, meaning, traffic keeps >> flowing through the BPF datapath while in user space, our agent restarts >> after upgrade, and atomically replaces the BPF progs once up and running >> (we're doing this for the whole range of 4.9 to 5.x kernels that we support). >> While we use the 'simple' api that is discussed here internally in Cilium, >> this attach behavior would have to be consistent, so transparent fallback >> inside libbpf on link vs non-link availability won't work (at least in our >> case). > > What about pinning? It's not exactly the same, but bpf_link could > actually pin a BPF program, if using legacy TC, and pin bpf_link, if > using bpf_link-based APIs. Of course before switching from iproute2 to > libbpf APIs you'd need to design your applications to use pinning > instead of relying implicitly on permanently attached BPF program. All the progs we load from Cilium in a K8s setting w/ Pods, we could have easily over 100 loaded at the same time on a node, and we template the per Pod ones, so the complexity of managing those pinned lifecycles from the agent and dealing with the semantic/fallback differences between kernels feels probably not worth the gain. So if there would be a libbpf tc simplified attach API, I'd for the time being stick to the existing aka legacy means. Thanks, Daniel