1Linux Socket Filtering aka Berkeley Packet Filter (BPF)
2=======================================================
3
4Introduction
5------------
6
7Linux Socket Filtering (LSF) is derived from the Berkeley Packet Filter.
8Though there are some distinct differences between the BSD and Linux
9Kernel filtering, but when we speak of BPF or LSF in Linux context, we
10mean the very same mechanism of filtering in the Linux kernel.
11
12BPF allows a user-space program to attach a filter onto any socket and
13allow or disallow certain types of data to come through the socket. LSF
14follows exactly the same filter code structure as BSD's BPF, so referring
15to the BSD bpf.4 manpage is very helpful in creating filters.
16
17On Linux, BPF is much simpler than on BSD. One does not have to worry
18about devices or anything like that. You simply create your filter code,
19send it to the kernel via the SO_ATTACH_FILTER option and if your filter
20code passes the kernel check on it, you then immediately begin filtering
21data on that socket.
22
23You can also detach filters from your socket via the SO_DETACH_FILTER
24option. This will probably not be used much since when you close a socket
25that has a filter on it the filter is automagically removed. The other
26less common case may be adding a different filter on the same socket where
27you had another filter that is still running: the kernel takes care of
28removing the old one and placing your new one in its place, assuming your
29filter has passed the checks, otherwise if it fails the old filter will
30remain on that socket.
31
32SO_LOCK_FILTER option allows to lock the filter attached to a socket. Once
33set, a filter cannot be removed or changed. This allows one process to
34setup a socket, attach a filter, lock it then drop privileges and be
35assured that the filter will be kept until the socket is closed.
36
37The biggest user of this construct might be libpcap. Issuing a high-level
38filter command like `tcpdump -i em1 port 22` passes through the libpcap
39internal compiler that generates a structure that can eventually be loaded
40via SO_ATTACH_FILTER to the kernel. `tcpdump -i em1 port 22 -ddd`
41displays what is being placed into this structure.
42
43Although we were only speaking about sockets here, BPF in Linux is used
44in many more places. There's xt_bpf for netfilter, cls_bpf in the kernel
45qdisc layer, SECCOMP-BPF (SECure COMPuting [1]), and lots of other places
46such as team driver, PTP code, etc where BPF is being used.
47
48 [1] Documentation/userspace-api/seccomp_filter.rst
49
50Original BPF paper:
51
52Steven McCanne and Van Jacobson. 1993. The BSD packet filter: a new
53architecture for user-level packet capture. In Proceedings of the
54USENIX Winter 1993 Conference Proceedings on USENIX Winter 1993
55Conference Proceedings (USENIX'93). USENIX Association, Berkeley,
56CA, USA, 2-2. [http://www.tcpdump.org/papers/bpf-usenix93.pdf]
57
58Structure
59---------
60
61User space applications include <linux/filter.h> which contains the
62following relevant structures:
63
64struct sock_filter {	/* Filter block */
65	__u16	code;   /* Actual filter code */
66	__u8	jt;	/* Jump true */
67	__u8	jf;	/* Jump false */
68	__u32	k;      /* Generic multiuse field */
69};
70
71Such a structure is assembled as an array of 4-tuples, that contains
72a code, jt, jf and k value. jt and jf are jump offsets and k a generic
73value to be used for a provided code.
74
75struct sock_fprog {			/* Required for SO_ATTACH_FILTER. */
76	unsigned short		   len;	/* Number of filter blocks */
77	struct sock_filter __user *filter;
78};
79
80For socket filtering, a pointer to this structure (as shown in
81follow-up example) is being passed to the kernel through setsockopt(2).
82
83Example
84-------
85
86#include <sys/socket.h>
87#include <sys/types.h>
88#include <arpa/inet.h>
89#include <linux/if_ether.h>
90/* ... */
91
92/* From the example above: tcpdump -i em1 port 22 -dd */
93struct sock_filter code[] = {
94	{ 0x28,  0,  0, 0x0000000c },
95	{ 0x15,  0,  8, 0x000086dd },
96	{ 0x30,  0,  0, 0x00000014 },
97	{ 0x15,  2,  0, 0x00000084 },
98	{ 0x15,  1,  0, 0x00000006 },
99	{ 0x15,  0, 17, 0x00000011 },
100	{ 0x28,  0,  0, 0x00000036 },
101	{ 0x15, 14,  0, 0x00000016 },
102	{ 0x28,  0,  0, 0x00000038 },
103	{ 0x15, 12, 13, 0x00000016 },
104	{ 0x15,  0, 12, 0x00000800 },
105	{ 0x30,  0,  0, 0x00000017 },
106	{ 0x15,  2,  0, 0x00000084 },
107	{ 0x15,  1,  0, 0x00000006 },
108	{ 0x15,  0,  8, 0x00000011 },
109	{ 0x28,  0,  0, 0x00000014 },
110	{ 0x45,  6,  0, 0x00001fff },
111	{ 0xb1,  0,  0, 0x0000000e },
112	{ 0x48,  0,  0, 0x0000000e },
113	{ 0x15,  2,  0, 0x00000016 },
114	{ 0x48,  0,  0, 0x00000010 },
115	{ 0x15,  0,  1, 0x00000016 },
116	{ 0x06,  0,  0, 0x0000ffff },
117	{ 0x06,  0,  0, 0x00000000 },
118};
119
120struct sock_fprog bpf = {
121	.len = ARRAY_SIZE(code),
122	.filter = code,
123};
124
125sock = socket(PF_PACKET, SOCK_RAW, htons(ETH_P_ALL));
126if (sock < 0)
127	/* ... bail out ... */
128
129ret = setsockopt(sock, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ATTACH_FILTER, &bpf, sizeof(bpf));
130if (ret < 0)
131	/* ... bail out ... */
132
133/* ... */
134close(sock);
135
136The above example code attaches a socket filter for a PF_PACKET socket
137in order to let all IPv4/IPv6 packets with port 22 pass. The rest will
138be dropped for this socket.
139
140The setsockopt(2) call to SO_DETACH_FILTER doesn't need any arguments
141and SO_LOCK_FILTER for preventing the filter to be detached, takes an
142integer value with 0 or 1.
143
144Note that socket filters are not restricted to PF_PACKET sockets only,
145but can also be used on other socket families.
146
147Summary of system calls:
148
149 * setsockopt(sockfd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_ATTACH_FILTER, &val, sizeof(val));
150 * setsockopt(sockfd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_DETACH_FILTER, &val, sizeof(val));
151 * setsockopt(sockfd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_LOCK_FILTER,   &val, sizeof(val));
152
153Normally, most use cases for socket filtering on packet sockets will be
154covered by libpcap in high-level syntax, so as an application developer
155you should stick to that. libpcap wraps its own layer around all that.
156
157Unless i) using/linking to libpcap is not an option, ii) the required BPF
158filters use Linux extensions that are not supported by libpcap's compiler,
159iii) a filter might be more complex and not cleanly implementable with
160libpcap's compiler, or iv) particular filter codes should be optimized
161differently than libpcap's internal compiler does; then in such cases
162writing such a filter "by hand" can be of an alternative. For example,
163xt_bpf and cls_bpf users might have requirements that could result in
164more complex filter code, or one that cannot be expressed with libpcap
165(e.g. different return codes for various code paths). Moreover, BPF JIT
166implementors may wish to manually write test cases and thus need low-level
167access to BPF code as well.
168
169BPF engine and instruction set
170------------------------------
171
172Under tools/bpf/ there's a small helper tool called bpf_asm which can
173be used to write low-level filters for example scenarios mentioned in the
174previous section. Asm-like syntax mentioned here has been implemented in
175bpf_asm and will be used for further explanations (instead of dealing with
176less readable opcodes directly, principles are the same). The syntax is
177closely modelled after Steven McCanne's and Van Jacobson's BPF paper.
178
179The BPF architecture consists of the following basic elements:
180
181  Element          Description
182
183  A                32 bit wide accumulator
184  X                32 bit wide X register
185  M[]              16 x 32 bit wide misc registers aka "scratch memory
186                   store", addressable from 0 to 15
187
188A program, that is translated by bpf_asm into "opcodes" is an array that
189consists of the following elements (as already mentioned):
190
191  op:16, jt:8, jf:8, k:32
192
193The element op is a 16 bit wide opcode that has a particular instruction
194encoded. jt and jf are two 8 bit wide jump targets, one for condition
195"jump if true", the other one "jump if false". Eventually, element k
196contains a miscellaneous argument that can be interpreted in different
197ways depending on the given instruction in op.
198
199The instruction set consists of load, store, branch, alu, miscellaneous
200and return instructions that are also represented in bpf_asm syntax. This
201table lists all bpf_asm instructions available resp. what their underlying
202opcodes as defined in linux/filter.h stand for:
203
204  Instruction      Addressing mode      Description
205
206  ld               1, 2, 3, 4, 10       Load word into A
207  ldi              4                    Load word into A
208  ldh              1, 2                 Load half-word into A
209  ldb              1, 2                 Load byte into A
210  ldx              3, 4, 5, 10          Load word into X
211  ldxi             4                    Load word into X
212  ldxb             5                    Load byte into X
213
214  st               3                    Store A into M[]
215  stx              3                    Store X into M[]
216
217  jmp              6                    Jump to label
218  ja               6                    Jump to label
219  jeq              7, 8                 Jump on A == k
220  jneq             8                    Jump on A != k
221  jne              8                    Jump on A != k
222  jlt              8                    Jump on A <  k
223  jle              8                    Jump on A <= k
224  jgt              7, 8                 Jump on A >  k
225  jge              7, 8                 Jump on A >= k
226  jset             7, 8                 Jump on A &  k
227
228  add              0, 4                 A + <x>
229  sub              0, 4                 A - <x>
230  mul              0, 4                 A * <x>
231  div              0, 4                 A / <x>
232  mod              0, 4                 A % <x>
233  neg                                   !A
234  and              0, 4                 A & <x>
235  or               0, 4                 A | <x>
236  xor              0, 4                 A ^ <x>
237  lsh              0, 4                 A << <x>
238  rsh              0, 4                 A >> <x>
239
240  tax                                   Copy A into X
241  txa                                   Copy X into A
242
243  ret              4, 9                 Return
244
245The next table shows addressing formats from the 2nd column:
246
247  Addressing mode  Syntax               Description
248
249   0               x/%x                 Register X
250   1               [k]                  BHW at byte offset k in the packet
251   2               [x + k]              BHW at the offset X + k in the packet
252   3               M[k]                 Word at offset k in M[]
253   4               #k                   Literal value stored in k
254   5               4*([k]&0xf)          Lower nibble * 4 at byte offset k in the packet
255   6               L                    Jump label L
256   7               #k,Lt,Lf             Jump to Lt if true, otherwise jump to Lf
257   8               #k,Lt                Jump to Lt if predicate is true
258   9               a/%a                 Accumulator A
259  10               extension            BPF extension
260
261The Linux kernel also has a couple of BPF extensions that are used along
262with the class of load instructions by "overloading" the k argument with
263a negative offset + a particular extension offset. The result of such BPF
264extensions are loaded into A.
265
266Possible BPF extensions are shown in the following table:
267
268  Extension                             Description
269
270  len                                   skb->len
271  proto                                 skb->protocol
272  type                                  skb->pkt_type
273  poff                                  Payload start offset
274  ifidx                                 skb->dev->ifindex
275  nla                                   Netlink attribute of type X with offset A
276  nlan                                  Nested Netlink attribute of type X with offset A
277  mark                                  skb->mark
278  queue                                 skb->queue_mapping
279  hatype                                skb->dev->type
280  rxhash                                skb->hash
281  cpu                                   raw_smp_processor_id()
282  vlan_tci                              skb_vlan_tag_get(skb)
283  vlan_avail                            skb_vlan_tag_present(skb)
284  vlan_tpid                             skb->vlan_proto
285  rand                                  prandom_u32()
286
287These extensions can also be prefixed with '#'.
288Examples for low-level BPF:
289
290** ARP packets:
291
292  ldh [12]
293  jne #0x806, drop
294  ret #-1
295  drop: ret #0
296
297** IPv4 TCP packets:
298
299  ldh [12]
300  jne #0x800, drop
301  ldb [23]
302  jneq #6, drop
303  ret #-1
304  drop: ret #0
305
306** (Accelerated) VLAN w/ id 10:
307
308  ld vlan_tci
309  jneq #10, drop
310  ret #-1
311  drop: ret #0
312
313** icmp random packet sampling, 1 in 4
314  ldh [12]
315  jne #0x800, drop
316  ldb [23]
317  jneq #1, drop
318  # get a random uint32 number
319  ld rand
320  mod #4
321  jneq #1, drop
322  ret #-1
323  drop: ret #0
324
325** SECCOMP filter example:
326
327  ld [4]                  /* offsetof(struct seccomp_data, arch) */
328  jne #0xc000003e, bad    /* AUDIT_ARCH_X86_64 */
329  ld [0]                  /* offsetof(struct seccomp_data, nr) */
330  jeq #15, good           /* __NR_rt_sigreturn */
331  jeq #231, good          /* __NR_exit_group */
332  jeq #60, good           /* __NR_exit */
333  jeq #0, good            /* __NR_read */
334  jeq #1, good            /* __NR_write */
335  jeq #5, good            /* __NR_fstat */
336  jeq #9, good            /* __NR_mmap */
337  jeq #14, good           /* __NR_rt_sigprocmask */
338  jeq #13, good           /* __NR_rt_sigaction */
339  jeq #35, good           /* __NR_nanosleep */
340  bad: ret #0             /* SECCOMP_RET_KILL_THREAD */
341  good: ret #0x7fff0000   /* SECCOMP_RET_ALLOW */
342
343The above example code can be placed into a file (here called "foo"), and
344then be passed to the bpf_asm tool for generating opcodes, output that xt_bpf
345and cls_bpf understands and can directly be loaded with. Example with above
346ARP code:
347
348$ ./bpf_asm foo
3494,40 0 0 12,21 0 1 2054,6 0 0 4294967295,6 0 0 0,
350
351In copy and paste C-like output:
352
353$ ./bpf_asm -c foo
354{ 0x28,  0,  0, 0x0000000c },
355{ 0x15,  0,  1, 0x00000806 },
356{ 0x06,  0,  0, 0xffffffff },
357{ 0x06,  0,  0, 0000000000 },
358
359In particular, as usage with xt_bpf or cls_bpf can result in more complex BPF
360filters that might not be obvious at first, it's good to test filters before
361attaching to a live system. For that purpose, there's a small tool called
362bpf_dbg under tools/bpf/ in the kernel source directory. This debugger allows
363for testing BPF filters against given pcap files, single stepping through the
364BPF code on the pcap's packets and to do BPF machine register dumps.
365
366Starting bpf_dbg is trivial and just requires issuing:
367
368# ./bpf_dbg
369
370In case input and output do not equal stdin/stdout, bpf_dbg takes an
371alternative stdin source as a first argument, and an alternative stdout
372sink as a second one, e.g. `./bpf_dbg test_in.txt test_out.txt`.
373
374Other than that, a particular libreadline configuration can be set via
375file "~/.bpf_dbg_init" and the command history is stored in the file
376"~/.bpf_dbg_history".
377
378Interaction in bpf_dbg happens through a shell that also has auto-completion
379support (follow-up example commands starting with '>' denote bpf_dbg shell).
380The usual workflow would be to ...
381
382> load bpf 6,40 0 0 12,21 0 3 2048,48 0 0 23,21 0 1 1,6 0 0 65535,6 0 0 0
383  Loads a BPF filter from standard output of bpf_asm, or transformed via
384  e.g. `tcpdump -iem1 -ddd port 22 | tr '\n' ','`. Note that for JIT
385  debugging (next section), this command creates a temporary socket and
386  loads the BPF code into the kernel. Thus, this will also be useful for
387  JIT developers.
388
389> load pcap foo.pcap
390  Loads standard tcpdump pcap file.
391
392> run [<n>]
393bpf passes:1 fails:9
394  Runs through all packets from a pcap to account how many passes and fails
395  the filter will generate. A limit of packets to traverse can be given.
396
397> disassemble
398l0:	ldh [12]
399l1:	jeq #0x800, l2, l5
400l2:	ldb [23]
401l3:	jeq #0x1, l4, l5
402l4:	ret #0xffff
403l5:	ret #0
404  Prints out BPF code disassembly.
405
406> dump
407/* { op, jt, jf, k }, */
408{ 0x28,  0,  0, 0x0000000c },
409{ 0x15,  0,  3, 0x00000800 },
410{ 0x30,  0,  0, 0x00000017 },
411{ 0x15,  0,  1, 0x00000001 },
412{ 0x06,  0,  0, 0x0000ffff },
413{ 0x06,  0,  0, 0000000000 },
414  Prints out C-style BPF code dump.
415
416> breakpoint 0
417breakpoint at: l0:	ldh [12]
418> breakpoint 1
419breakpoint at: l1:	jeq #0x800, l2, l5
420  ...
421  Sets breakpoints at particular BPF instructions. Issuing a `run` command
422  will walk through the pcap file continuing from the current packet and
423  break when a breakpoint is being hit (another `run` will continue from
424  the currently active breakpoint executing next instructions):
425
426  > run
427  -- register dump --
428  pc:       [0]                       <-- program counter
429  code:     [40] jt[0] jf[0] k[12]    <-- plain BPF code of current instruction
430  curr:     l0:	ldh [12]              <-- disassembly of current instruction
431  A:        [00000000][0]             <-- content of A (hex, decimal)
432  X:        [00000000][0]             <-- content of X (hex, decimal)
433  M[0,15]:  [00000000][0]             <-- folded content of M (hex, decimal)
434  -- packet dump --                   <-- Current packet from pcap (hex)
435  len: 42
436    0: 00 19 cb 55 55 a4 00 14 a4 43 78 69 08 06 00 01
437   16: 08 00 06 04 00 01 00 14 a4 43 78 69 0a 3b 01 26
438   32: 00 00 00 00 00 00 0a 3b 01 01
439  (breakpoint)
440  >
441
442> breakpoint
443breakpoints: 0 1
444  Prints currently set breakpoints.
445
446> step [-<n>, +<n>]
447  Performs single stepping through the BPF program from the current pc
448  offset. Thus, on each step invocation, above register dump is issued.
449  This can go forwards and backwards in time, a plain `step` will break
450  on the next BPF instruction, thus +1. (No `run` needs to be issued here.)
451
452> select <n>
453  Selects a given packet from the pcap file to continue from. Thus, on
454  the next `run` or `step`, the BPF program is being evaluated against
455  the user pre-selected packet. Numbering starts just as in Wireshark
456  with index 1.
457
458> quit
459#
460  Exits bpf_dbg.
461
462JIT compiler
463------------
464
465The Linux kernel has a built-in BPF JIT compiler for x86_64, SPARC, PowerPC,
466ARM, ARM64, MIPS and s390 and can be enabled through CONFIG_BPF_JIT. The JIT
467compiler is transparently invoked for each attached filter from user space
468or for internal kernel users if it has been previously enabled by root:
469
470  echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/core/bpf_jit_enable
471
472For JIT developers, doing audits etc, each compile run can output the generated
473opcode image into the kernel log via:
474
475  echo 2 > /proc/sys/net/core/bpf_jit_enable
476
477Example output from dmesg:
478
479[ 3389.935842] flen=6 proglen=70 pass=3 image=ffffffffa0069c8f
480[ 3389.935847] JIT code: 00000000: 55 48 89 e5 48 83 ec 60 48 89 5d f8 44 8b 4f 68
481[ 3389.935849] JIT code: 00000010: 44 2b 4f 6c 4c 8b 87 d8 00 00 00 be 0c 00 00 00
482[ 3389.935850] JIT code: 00000020: e8 1d 94 ff e0 3d 00 08 00 00 75 16 be 17 00 00
483[ 3389.935851] JIT code: 00000030: 00 e8 28 94 ff e0 83 f8 01 75 07 b8 ff ff 00 00
484[ 3389.935852] JIT code: 00000040: eb 02 31 c0 c9 c3
485
486When CONFIG_BPF_JIT_ALWAYS_ON is enabled, bpf_jit_enable is permanently set to 1 and
487setting any other value than that will return in failure. This is even the case for
488setting bpf_jit_enable to 2, since dumping the final JIT image into the kernel log
489is discouraged and introspection through bpftool (under tools/bpf/bpftool/) is the
490generally recommended approach instead.
491
492In the kernel source tree under tools/bpf/, there's bpf_jit_disasm for
493generating disassembly out of the kernel log's hexdump:
494
495# ./bpf_jit_disasm
49670 bytes emitted from JIT compiler (pass:3, flen:6)
497ffffffffa0069c8f + <x>:
498   0:	push   %rbp
499   1:	mov    %rsp,%rbp
500   4:	sub    $0x60,%rsp
501   8:	mov    %rbx,-0x8(%rbp)
502   c:	mov    0x68(%rdi),%r9d
503  10:	sub    0x6c(%rdi),%r9d
504  14:	mov    0xd8(%rdi),%r8
505  1b:	mov    $0xc,%esi
506  20:	callq  0xffffffffe0ff9442
507  25:	cmp    $0x800,%eax
508  2a:	jne    0x0000000000000042
509  2c:	mov    $0x17,%esi
510  31:	callq  0xffffffffe0ff945e
511  36:	cmp    $0x1,%eax
512  39:	jne    0x0000000000000042
513  3b:	mov    $0xffff,%eax
514  40:	jmp    0x0000000000000044
515  42:	xor    %eax,%eax
516  44:	leaveq
517  45:	retq
518
519Issuing option `-o` will "annotate" opcodes to resulting assembler
520instructions, which can be very useful for JIT developers:
521
522# ./bpf_jit_disasm -o
52370 bytes emitted from JIT compiler (pass:3, flen:6)
524ffffffffa0069c8f + <x>:
525   0:	push   %rbp
526	55
527   1:	mov    %rsp,%rbp
528	48 89 e5
529   4:	sub    $0x60,%rsp
530	48 83 ec 60
531   8:	mov    %rbx,-0x8(%rbp)
532	48 89 5d f8
533   c:	mov    0x68(%rdi),%r9d
534	44 8b 4f 68
535  10:	sub    0x6c(%rdi),%r9d
536	44 2b 4f 6c
537  14:	mov    0xd8(%rdi),%r8
538	4c 8b 87 d8 00 00 00
539  1b:	mov    $0xc,%esi
540	be 0c 00 00 00
541  20:	callq  0xffffffffe0ff9442
542	e8 1d 94 ff e0
543  25:	cmp    $0x800,%eax
544	3d 00 08 00 00
545  2a:	jne    0x0000000000000042
546	75 16
547  2c:	mov    $0x17,%esi
548	be 17 00 00 00
549  31:	callq  0xffffffffe0ff945e
550	e8 28 94 ff e0
551  36:	cmp    $0x1,%eax
552	83 f8 01
553  39:	jne    0x0000000000000042
554	75 07
555  3b:	mov    $0xffff,%eax
556	b8 ff ff 00 00
557  40:	jmp    0x0000000000000044
558	eb 02
559  42:	xor    %eax,%eax
560	31 c0
561  44:	leaveq
562	c9
563  45:	retq
564	c3
565
566For BPF JIT developers, bpf_jit_disasm, bpf_asm and bpf_dbg provides a useful
567toolchain for developing and testing the kernel's JIT compiler.
568
569BPF kernel internals
570--------------------
571Internally, for the kernel interpreter, a different instruction set
572format with similar underlying principles from BPF described in previous
573paragraphs is being used. However, the instruction set format is modelled
574closer to the underlying architecture to mimic native instruction sets, so
575that a better performance can be achieved (more details later). This new
576ISA is called 'eBPF' or 'internal BPF' interchangeably. (Note: eBPF which
577originates from [e]xtended BPF is not the same as BPF extensions! While
578eBPF is an ISA, BPF extensions date back to classic BPF's 'overloading'
579of BPF_LD | BPF_{B,H,W} | BPF_ABS instruction.)
580
581It is designed to be JITed with one to one mapping, which can also open up
582the possibility for GCC/LLVM compilers to generate optimized eBPF code through
583an eBPF backend that performs almost as fast as natively compiled code.
584
585The new instruction set was originally designed with the possible goal in
586mind to write programs in "restricted C" and compile into eBPF with a optional
587GCC/LLVM backend, so that it can just-in-time map to modern 64-bit CPUs with
588minimal performance overhead over two steps, that is, C -> eBPF -> native code.
589
590Currently, the new format is being used for running user BPF programs, which
591includes seccomp BPF, classic socket filters, cls_bpf traffic classifier,
592team driver's classifier for its load-balancing mode, netfilter's xt_bpf
593extension, PTP dissector/classifier, and much more. They are all internally
594converted by the kernel into the new instruction set representation and run
595in the eBPF interpreter. For in-kernel handlers, this all works transparently
596by using bpf_prog_create() for setting up the filter, resp.
597bpf_prog_destroy() for destroying it. The macro
598BPF_PROG_RUN(filter, ctx) transparently invokes eBPF interpreter or JITed
599code to run the filter. 'filter' is a pointer to struct bpf_prog that we
600got from bpf_prog_create(), and 'ctx' the given context (e.g.
601skb pointer). All constraints and restrictions from bpf_check_classic() apply
602before a conversion to the new layout is being done behind the scenes!
603
604Currently, the classic BPF format is being used for JITing on most 32-bit
605architectures, whereas x86-64, aarch64, s390x, powerpc64, sparc64, arm32 perform
606JIT compilation from eBPF instruction set.
607
608Some core changes of the new internal format:
609
610- Number of registers increase from 2 to 10:
611
612  The old format had two registers A and X, and a hidden frame pointer. The
613  new layout extends this to be 10 internal registers and a read-only frame
614  pointer. Since 64-bit CPUs are passing arguments to functions via registers
615  the number of args from eBPF program to in-kernel function is restricted
616  to 5 and one register is used to accept return value from an in-kernel
617  function. Natively, x86_64 passes first 6 arguments in registers, aarch64/
618  sparcv9/mips64 have 7 - 8 registers for arguments; x86_64 has 6 callee saved
619  registers, and aarch64/sparcv9/mips64 have 11 or more callee saved registers.
620
621  Therefore, eBPF calling convention is defined as:
622
623    * R0	- return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for eBPF program
624    * R1 - R5	- arguments from eBPF program to in-kernel function
625    * R6 - R9	- callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve
626    * R10	- read-only frame pointer to access stack
627
628  Thus, all eBPF registers map one to one to HW registers on x86_64, aarch64,
629  etc, and eBPF calling convention maps directly to ABIs used by the kernel on
630  64-bit architectures.
631
632  On 32-bit architectures JIT may map programs that use only 32-bit arithmetic
633  and may let more complex programs to be interpreted.
634
635  R0 - R5 are scratch registers and eBPF program needs spill/fill them if
636  necessary across calls. Note that there is only one eBPF program (== one
637  eBPF main routine) and it cannot call other eBPF functions, it can only
638  call predefined in-kernel functions, though.
639
640- Register width increases from 32-bit to 64-bit:
641
642  Still, the semantics of the original 32-bit ALU operations are preserved
643  via 32-bit subregisters. All eBPF registers are 64-bit with 32-bit lower
644  subregisters that zero-extend into 64-bit if they are being written to.
645  That behavior maps directly to x86_64 and arm64 subregister definition, but
646  makes other JITs more difficult.
647
648  32-bit architectures run 64-bit internal BPF programs via interpreter.
649  Their JITs may convert BPF programs that only use 32-bit subregisters into
650  native instruction set and let the rest being interpreted.
651
652  Operation is 64-bit, because on 64-bit architectures, pointers are also
653  64-bit wide, and we want to pass 64-bit values in/out of kernel functions,
654  so 32-bit eBPF registers would otherwise require to define register-pair
655  ABI, thus, there won't be able to use a direct eBPF register to HW register
656  mapping and JIT would need to do combine/split/move operations for every
657  register in and out of the function, which is complex, bug prone and slow.
658  Another reason is the use of atomic 64-bit counters.
659
660- Conditional jt/jf targets replaced with jt/fall-through:
661
662  While the original design has constructs such as "if (cond) jump_true;
663  else jump_false;", they are being replaced into alternative constructs like
664  "if (cond) jump_true; /* else fall-through */".
665
666- Introduces bpf_call insn and register passing convention for zero overhead
667  calls from/to other kernel functions:
668
669  Before an in-kernel function call, the internal BPF program needs to
670  place function arguments into R1 to R5 registers to satisfy calling
671  convention, then the interpreter will take them from registers and pass
672  to in-kernel function. If R1 - R5 registers are mapped to CPU registers
673  that are used for argument passing on given architecture, the JIT compiler
674  doesn't need to emit extra moves. Function arguments will be in the correct
675  registers and BPF_CALL instruction will be JITed as single 'call' HW
676  instruction. This calling convention was picked to cover common call
677  situations without performance penalty.
678
679  After an in-kernel function call, R1 - R5 are reset to unreadable and R0 has
680  a return value of the function. Since R6 - R9 are callee saved, their state
681  is preserved across the call.
682
683  For example, consider three C functions:
684
685  u64 f1() { return (*_f2)(1); }
686  u64 f2(u64 a) { return f3(a + 1, a); }
687  u64 f3(u64 a, u64 b) { return a - b; }
688
689  GCC can compile f1, f3 into x86_64:
690
691  f1:
692    movl $1, %edi
693    movq _f2(%rip), %rax
694    jmp  *%rax
695  f3:
696    movq %rdi, %rax
697    subq %rsi, %rax
698    ret
699
700  Function f2 in eBPF may look like:
701
702  f2:
703    bpf_mov R2, R1
704    bpf_add R1, 1
705    bpf_call f3
706    bpf_exit
707
708  If f2 is JITed and the pointer stored to '_f2'. The calls f1 -> f2 -> f3 and
709  returns will be seamless. Without JIT, __bpf_prog_run() interpreter needs to
710  be used to call into f2.
711
712  For practical reasons all eBPF programs have only one argument 'ctx' which is
713  already placed into R1 (e.g. on __bpf_prog_run() startup) and the programs
714  can call kernel functions with up to 5 arguments. Calls with 6 or more arguments
715  are currently not supported, but these restrictions can be lifted if necessary
716  in the future.
717
718  On 64-bit architectures all register map to HW registers one to one. For
719  example, x86_64 JIT compiler can map them as ...
720
721    R0 - rax
722    R1 - rdi
723    R2 - rsi
724    R3 - rdx
725    R4 - rcx
726    R5 - r8
727    R6 - rbx
728    R7 - r13
729    R8 - r14
730    R9 - r15
731    R10 - rbp
732
733  ... since x86_64 ABI mandates rdi, rsi, rdx, rcx, r8, r9 for argument passing
734  and rbx, r12 - r15 are callee saved.
735
736  Then the following internal BPF pseudo-program:
737
738    bpf_mov R6, R1 /* save ctx */
739    bpf_mov R2, 2
740    bpf_mov R3, 3
741    bpf_mov R4, 4
742    bpf_mov R5, 5
743    bpf_call foo
744    bpf_mov R7, R0 /* save foo() return value */
745    bpf_mov R1, R6 /* restore ctx for next call */
746    bpf_mov R2, 6
747    bpf_mov R3, 7
748    bpf_mov R4, 8
749    bpf_mov R5, 9
750    bpf_call bar
751    bpf_add R0, R7
752    bpf_exit
753
754  After JIT to x86_64 may look like:
755
756    push %rbp
757    mov %rsp,%rbp
758    sub $0x228,%rsp
759    mov %rbx,-0x228(%rbp)
760    mov %r13,-0x220(%rbp)
761    mov %rdi,%rbx
762    mov $0x2,%esi
763    mov $0x3,%edx
764    mov $0x4,%ecx
765    mov $0x5,%r8d
766    callq foo
767    mov %rax,%r13
768    mov %rbx,%rdi
769    mov $0x2,%esi
770    mov $0x3,%edx
771    mov $0x4,%ecx
772    mov $0x5,%r8d
773    callq bar
774    add %r13,%rax
775    mov -0x228(%rbp),%rbx
776    mov -0x220(%rbp),%r13
777    leaveq
778    retq
779
780  Which is in this example equivalent in C to:
781
782    u64 bpf_filter(u64 ctx)
783    {
784        return foo(ctx, 2, 3, 4, 5) + bar(ctx, 6, 7, 8, 9);
785    }
786
787  In-kernel functions foo() and bar() with prototype: u64 (*)(u64 arg1, u64
788  arg2, u64 arg3, u64 arg4, u64 arg5); will receive arguments in proper
789  registers and place their return value into '%rax' which is R0 in eBPF.
790  Prologue and epilogue are emitted by JIT and are implicit in the
791  interpreter. R0-R5 are scratch registers, so eBPF program needs to preserve
792  them across the calls as defined by calling convention.
793
794  For example the following program is invalid:
795
796    bpf_mov R1, 1
797    bpf_call foo
798    bpf_mov R0, R1
799    bpf_exit
800
801  After the call the registers R1-R5 contain junk values and cannot be read.
802  An in-kernel eBPF verifier is used to validate internal BPF programs.
803
804Also in the new design, eBPF is limited to 4096 insns, which means that any
805program will terminate quickly and will only call a fixed number of kernel
806functions. Original BPF and the new format are two operand instructions,
807which helps to do one-to-one mapping between eBPF insn and x86 insn during JIT.
808
809The input context pointer for invoking the interpreter function is generic,
810its content is defined by a specific use case. For seccomp register R1 points
811to seccomp_data, for converted BPF filters R1 points to a skb.
812
813A program, that is translated internally consists of the following elements:
814
815  op:16, jt:8, jf:8, k:32    ==>    op:8, dst_reg:4, src_reg:4, off:16, imm:32
816
817So far 87 internal BPF instructions were implemented. 8-bit 'op' opcode field
818has room for new instructions. Some of them may use 16/24/32 byte encoding. New
819instructions must be multiple of 8 bytes to preserve backward compatibility.
820
821Internal BPF is a general purpose RISC instruction set. Not every register and
822every instruction are used during translation from original BPF to new format.
823For example, socket filters are not using 'exclusive add' instruction, but
824tracing filters may do to maintain counters of events, for example. Register R9
825is not used by socket filters either, but more complex filters may be running
826out of registers and would have to resort to spill/fill to stack.
827
828Internal BPF can used as generic assembler for last step performance
829optimizations, socket filters and seccomp are using it as assembler. Tracing
830filters may use it as assembler to generate code from kernel. In kernel usage
831may not be bounded by security considerations, since generated internal BPF code
832may be optimizing internal code path and not being exposed to the user space.
833Safety of internal BPF can come from a verifier (TBD). In such use cases as
834described, it may be used as safe instruction set.
835
836Just like the original BPF, the new format runs within a controlled environment,
837is deterministic and the kernel can easily prove that. The safety of the program
838can be determined in two steps: first step does depth-first-search to disallow
839loops and other CFG validation; second step starts from the first insn and
840descends all possible paths. It simulates execution of every insn and observes
841the state change of registers and stack.
842
843eBPF opcode encoding
844--------------------
845
846eBPF is reusing most of the opcode encoding from classic to simplify conversion
847of classic BPF to eBPF. For arithmetic and jump instructions the 8-bit 'code'
848field is divided into three parts:
849
850  +----------------+--------+--------------------+
851  |   4 bits       |  1 bit |   3 bits           |
852  | operation code | source | instruction class  |
853  +----------------+--------+--------------------+
854  (MSB)                                      (LSB)
855
856Three LSB bits store instruction class which is one of:
857
858  Classic BPF classes:    eBPF classes:
859
860  BPF_LD    0x00          BPF_LD    0x00
861  BPF_LDX   0x01          BPF_LDX   0x01
862  BPF_ST    0x02          BPF_ST    0x02
863  BPF_STX   0x03          BPF_STX   0x03
864  BPF_ALU   0x04          BPF_ALU   0x04
865  BPF_JMP   0x05          BPF_JMP   0x05
866  BPF_RET   0x06          [ class 6 unused, for future if needed ]
867  BPF_MISC  0x07          BPF_ALU64 0x07
868
869When BPF_CLASS(code) == BPF_ALU or BPF_JMP, 4th bit encodes source operand ...
870
871  BPF_K     0x00
872  BPF_X     0x08
873
874 * in classic BPF, this means:
875
876  BPF_SRC(code) == BPF_X - use register X as source operand
877  BPF_SRC(code) == BPF_K - use 32-bit immediate as source operand
878
879 * in eBPF, this means:
880
881  BPF_SRC(code) == BPF_X - use 'src_reg' register as source operand
882  BPF_SRC(code) == BPF_K - use 32-bit immediate as source operand
883
884... and four MSB bits store operation code.
885
886If BPF_CLASS(code) == BPF_ALU or BPF_ALU64 [ in eBPF ], BPF_OP(code) is one of:
887
888  BPF_ADD   0x00
889  BPF_SUB   0x10
890  BPF_MUL   0x20
891  BPF_DIV   0x30
892  BPF_OR    0x40
893  BPF_AND   0x50
894  BPF_LSH   0x60
895  BPF_RSH   0x70
896  BPF_NEG   0x80
897  BPF_MOD   0x90
898  BPF_XOR   0xa0
899  BPF_MOV   0xb0  /* eBPF only: mov reg to reg */
900  BPF_ARSH  0xc0  /* eBPF only: sign extending shift right */
901  BPF_END   0xd0  /* eBPF only: endianness conversion */
902
903If BPF_CLASS(code) == BPF_JMP, BPF_OP(code) is one of:
904
905  BPF_JA    0x00
906  BPF_JEQ   0x10
907  BPF_JGT   0x20
908  BPF_JGE   0x30
909  BPF_JSET  0x40
910  BPF_JNE   0x50  /* eBPF only: jump != */
911  BPF_JSGT  0x60  /* eBPF only: signed '>' */
912  BPF_JSGE  0x70  /* eBPF only: signed '>=' */
913  BPF_CALL  0x80  /* eBPF only: function call */
914  BPF_EXIT  0x90  /* eBPF only: function return */
915  BPF_JLT   0xa0  /* eBPF only: unsigned '<' */
916  BPF_JLE   0xb0  /* eBPF only: unsigned '<=' */
917  BPF_JSLT  0xc0  /* eBPF only: signed '<' */
918  BPF_JSLE  0xd0  /* eBPF only: signed '<=' */
919
920So BPF_ADD | BPF_X | BPF_ALU means 32-bit addition in both classic BPF
921and eBPF. There are only two registers in classic BPF, so it means A += X.
922In eBPF it means dst_reg = (u32) dst_reg + (u32) src_reg; similarly,
923BPF_XOR | BPF_K | BPF_ALU means A ^= imm32 in classic BPF and analogous
924src_reg = (u32) src_reg ^ (u32) imm32 in eBPF.
925
926Classic BPF is using BPF_MISC class to represent A = X and X = A moves.
927eBPF is using BPF_MOV | BPF_X | BPF_ALU code instead. Since there are no
928BPF_MISC operations in eBPF, the class 7 is used as BPF_ALU64 to mean
929exactly the same operations as BPF_ALU, but with 64-bit wide operands
930instead. So BPF_ADD | BPF_X | BPF_ALU64 means 64-bit addition, i.e.:
931dst_reg = dst_reg + src_reg
932
933Classic BPF wastes the whole BPF_RET class to represent a single 'ret'
934operation. Classic BPF_RET | BPF_K means copy imm32 into return register
935and perform function exit. eBPF is modeled to match CPU, so BPF_JMP | BPF_EXIT
936in eBPF means function exit only. The eBPF program needs to store return
937value into register R0 before doing a BPF_EXIT. Class 6 in eBPF is currently
938unused and reserved for future use.
939
940For load and store instructions the 8-bit 'code' field is divided as:
941
942  +--------+--------+-------------------+
943  | 3 bits | 2 bits |   3 bits          |
944  |  mode  |  size  | instruction class |
945  +--------+--------+-------------------+
946  (MSB)                             (LSB)
947
948Size modifier is one of ...
949
950  BPF_W   0x00    /* word */
951  BPF_H   0x08    /* half word */
952  BPF_B   0x10    /* byte */
953  BPF_DW  0x18    /* eBPF only, double word */
954
955... which encodes size of load/store operation:
956
957 B  - 1 byte
958 H  - 2 byte
959 W  - 4 byte
960 DW - 8 byte (eBPF only)
961
962Mode modifier is one of:
963
964  BPF_IMM  0x00  /* used for 32-bit mov in classic BPF and 64-bit in eBPF */
965  BPF_ABS  0x20
966  BPF_IND  0x40
967  BPF_MEM  0x60
968  BPF_LEN  0x80  /* classic BPF only, reserved in eBPF */
969  BPF_MSH  0xa0  /* classic BPF only, reserved in eBPF */
970  BPF_XADD 0xc0  /* eBPF only, exclusive add */
971
972eBPF has two non-generic instructions: (BPF_ABS | <size> | BPF_LD) and
973(BPF_IND | <size> | BPF_LD) which are used to access packet data.
974
975They had to be carried over from classic to have strong performance of
976socket filters running in eBPF interpreter. These instructions can only
977be used when interpreter context is a pointer to 'struct sk_buff' and
978have seven implicit operands. Register R6 is an implicit input that must
979contain pointer to sk_buff. Register R0 is an implicit output which contains
980the data fetched from the packet. Registers R1-R5 are scratch registers
981and must not be used to store the data across BPF_ABS | BPF_LD or
982BPF_IND | BPF_LD instructions.
983
984These instructions have implicit program exit condition as well. When
985eBPF program is trying to access the data beyond the packet boundary,
986the interpreter will abort the execution of the program. JIT compilers
987therefore must preserve this property. src_reg and imm32 fields are
988explicit inputs to these instructions.
989
990For example:
991
992  BPF_IND | BPF_W | BPF_LD means:
993
994    R0 = ntohl(*(u32 *) (((struct sk_buff *) R6)->data + src_reg + imm32))
995    and R1 - R5 were scratched.
996
997Unlike classic BPF instruction set, eBPF has generic load/store operations:
998
999BPF_MEM | <size> | BPF_STX:  *(size *) (dst_reg + off) = src_reg
1000BPF_MEM | <size> | BPF_ST:   *(size *) (dst_reg + off) = imm32
1001BPF_MEM | <size> | BPF_LDX:  dst_reg = *(size *) (src_reg + off)
1002BPF_XADD | BPF_W  | BPF_STX: lock xadd *(u32 *)(dst_reg + off16) += src_reg
1003BPF_XADD | BPF_DW | BPF_STX: lock xadd *(u64 *)(dst_reg + off16) += src_reg
1004
1005Where size is one of: BPF_B or BPF_H or BPF_W or BPF_DW. Note that 1 and
10062 byte atomic increments are not supported.
1007
1008eBPF has one 16-byte instruction: BPF_LD | BPF_DW | BPF_IMM which consists
1009of two consecutive 'struct bpf_insn' 8-byte blocks and interpreted as single
1010instruction that loads 64-bit immediate value into a dst_reg.
1011Classic BPF has similar instruction: BPF_LD | BPF_W | BPF_IMM which loads
101232-bit immediate value into a register.
1013
1014eBPF verifier
1015-------------
1016The safety of the eBPF program is determined in two steps.
1017
1018First step does DAG check to disallow loops and other CFG validation.
1019In particular it will detect programs that have unreachable instructions.
1020(though classic BPF checker allows them)
1021
1022Second step starts from the first insn and descends all possible paths.
1023It simulates execution of every insn and observes the state change of
1024registers and stack.
1025
1026At the start of the program the register R1 contains a pointer to context
1027and has type PTR_TO_CTX.
1028If verifier sees an insn that does R2=R1, then R2 has now type
1029PTR_TO_CTX as well and can be used on the right hand side of expression.
1030If R1=PTR_TO_CTX and insn is R2=R1+R1, then R2=SCALAR_VALUE,
1031since addition of two valid pointers makes invalid pointer.
1032(In 'secure' mode verifier will reject any type of pointer arithmetic to make
1033sure that kernel addresses don't leak to unprivileged users)
1034
1035If register was never written to, it's not readable:
1036  bpf_mov R0 = R2
1037  bpf_exit
1038will be rejected, since R2 is unreadable at the start of the program.
1039
1040After kernel function call, R1-R5 are reset to unreadable and
1041R0 has a return type of the function.
1042
1043Since R6-R9 are callee saved, their state is preserved across the call.
1044  bpf_mov R6 = 1
1045  bpf_call foo
1046  bpf_mov R0 = R6
1047  bpf_exit
1048is a correct program. If there was R1 instead of R6, it would have
1049been rejected.
1050
1051load/store instructions are allowed only with registers of valid types, which
1052are PTR_TO_CTX, PTR_TO_MAP, PTR_TO_STACK. They are bounds and alignment checked.
1053For example:
1054 bpf_mov R1 = 1
1055 bpf_mov R2 = 2
1056 bpf_xadd *(u32 *)(R1 + 3) += R2
1057 bpf_exit
1058will be rejected, since R1 doesn't have a valid pointer type at the time of
1059execution of instruction bpf_xadd.
1060
1061At the start R1 type is PTR_TO_CTX (a pointer to generic 'struct bpf_context')
1062A callback is used to customize verifier to restrict eBPF program access to only
1063certain fields within ctx structure with specified size and alignment.
1064
1065For example, the following insn:
1066  bpf_ld R0 = *(u32 *)(R6 + 8)
1067intends to load a word from address R6 + 8 and store it into R0
1068If R6=PTR_TO_CTX, via is_valid_access() callback the verifier will know
1069that offset 8 of size 4 bytes can be accessed for reading, otherwise
1070the verifier will reject the program.
1071If R6=PTR_TO_STACK, then access should be aligned and be within
1072stack bounds, which are [-MAX_BPF_STACK, 0). In this example offset is 8,
1073so it will fail verification, since it's out of bounds.
1074
1075The verifier will allow eBPF program to read data from stack only after
1076it wrote into it.
1077Classic BPF verifier does similar check with M[0-15] memory slots.
1078For example:
1079  bpf_ld R0 = *(u32 *)(R10 - 4)
1080  bpf_exit
1081is invalid program.
1082Though R10 is correct read-only register and has type PTR_TO_STACK
1083and R10 - 4 is within stack bounds, there were no stores into that location.
1084
1085Pointer register spill/fill is tracked as well, since four (R6-R9)
1086callee saved registers may not be enough for some programs.
1087
1088Allowed function calls are customized with bpf_verifier_ops->get_func_proto()
1089The eBPF verifier will check that registers match argument constraints.
1090After the call register R0 will be set to return type of the function.
1091
1092Function calls is a main mechanism to extend functionality of eBPF programs.
1093Socket filters may let programs to call one set of functions, whereas tracing
1094filters may allow completely different set.
1095
1096If a function made accessible to eBPF program, it needs to be thought through
1097from safety point of view. The verifier will guarantee that the function is
1098called with valid arguments.
1099
1100seccomp vs socket filters have different security restrictions for classic BPF.
1101Seccomp solves this by two stage verifier: classic BPF verifier is followed
1102by seccomp verifier. In case of eBPF one configurable verifier is shared for
1103all use cases.
1104
1105See details of eBPF verifier in kernel/bpf/verifier.c
1106
1107Register value tracking
1108-----------------------
1109In order to determine the safety of an eBPF program, the verifier must track
1110the range of possible values in each register and also in each stack slot.
1111This is done with 'struct bpf_reg_state', defined in include/linux/
1112bpf_verifier.h, which unifies tracking of scalar and pointer values.  Each
1113register state has a type, which is either NOT_INIT (the register has not been
1114written to), SCALAR_VALUE (some value which is not usable as a pointer), or a
1115pointer type.  The types of pointers describe their base, as follows:
1116    PTR_TO_CTX          Pointer to bpf_context.
1117    CONST_PTR_TO_MAP    Pointer to struct bpf_map.  "Const" because arithmetic
1118                        on these pointers is forbidden.
1119    PTR_TO_MAP_VALUE    Pointer to the value stored in a map element.
1120    PTR_TO_MAP_VALUE_OR_NULL
1121                        Either a pointer to a map value, or NULL; map accesses
1122                        (see section 'eBPF maps', below) return this type,
1123                        which becomes a PTR_TO_MAP_VALUE when checked != NULL.
1124                        Arithmetic on these pointers is forbidden.
1125    PTR_TO_STACK        Frame pointer.
1126    PTR_TO_PACKET       skb->data.
1127    PTR_TO_PACKET_END   skb->data + headlen; arithmetic forbidden.
1128However, a pointer may be offset from this base (as a result of pointer
1129arithmetic), and this is tracked in two parts: the 'fixed offset' and 'variable
1130offset'.  The former is used when an exactly-known value (e.g. an immediate
1131operand) is added to a pointer, while the latter is used for values which are
1132not exactly known.  The variable offset is also used in SCALAR_VALUEs, to track
1133the range of possible values in the register.
1134The verifier's knowledge about the variable offset consists of:
1135* minimum and maximum values as unsigned
1136* minimum and maximum values as signed
1137* knowledge of the values of individual bits, in the form of a 'tnum': a u64
1138'mask' and a u64 'value'.  1s in the mask represent bits whose value is unknown;
11391s in the value represent bits known to be 1.  Bits known to be 0 have 0 in both
1140mask and value; no bit should ever be 1 in both.  For example, if a byte is read
1141into a register from memory, the register's top 56 bits are known zero, while
1142the low 8 are unknown - which is represented as the tnum (0x0; 0xff).  If we
1143then OR this with 0x40, we get (0x40; 0xbf), then if we add 1 we get (0x0;
11440x1ff), because of potential carries.
1145
1146Besides arithmetic, the register state can also be updated by conditional
1147branches.  For instance, if a SCALAR_VALUE is compared > 8, in the 'true' branch
1148it will have a umin_value (unsigned minimum value) of 9, whereas in the 'false'
1149branch it will have a umax_value of 8.  A signed compare (with BPF_JSGT or
1150BPF_JSGE) would instead update the signed minimum/maximum values.  Information
1151from the signed and unsigned bounds can be combined; for instance if a value is
1152first tested < 8 and then tested s> 4, the verifier will conclude that the value
1153is also > 4 and s< 8, since the bounds prevent crossing the sign boundary.
1154
1155PTR_TO_PACKETs with a variable offset part have an 'id', which is common to all
1156pointers sharing that same variable offset.  This is important for packet range
1157checks: after adding a variable to a packet pointer register A, if you then copy
1158it to another register B and then add a constant 4 to A, both registers will
1159share the same 'id' but the A will have a fixed offset of +4.  Then if A is
1160bounds-checked and found to be less than a PTR_TO_PACKET_END, the register B is
1161now known to have a safe range of at least 4 bytes.  See 'Direct packet access',
1162below, for more on PTR_TO_PACKET ranges.
1163
1164The 'id' field is also used on PTR_TO_MAP_VALUE_OR_NULL, common to all copies of
1165the pointer returned from a map lookup.  This means that when one copy is
1166checked and found to be non-NULL, all copies can become PTR_TO_MAP_VALUEs.
1167As well as range-checking, the tracked information is also used for enforcing
1168alignment of pointer accesses.  For instance, on most systems the packet pointer
1169is 2 bytes after a 4-byte alignment.  If a program adds 14 bytes to that to jump
1170over the Ethernet header, then reads IHL and addes (IHL * 4), the resulting
1171pointer will have a variable offset known to be 4n+2 for some n, so adding the 2
1172bytes (NET_IP_ALIGN) gives a 4-byte alignment and so word-sized accesses through
1173that pointer are safe.
1174
1175Direct packet access
1176--------------------
1177In cls_bpf and act_bpf programs the verifier allows direct access to the packet
1178data via skb->data and skb->data_end pointers.
1179Ex:
11801:  r4 = *(u32 *)(r1 +80)  /* load skb->data_end */
11812:  r3 = *(u32 *)(r1 +76)  /* load skb->data */
11823:  r5 = r3
11834:  r5 += 14
11845:  if r5 > r4 goto pc+16
1185R1=ctx R3=pkt(id=0,off=0,r=14) R4=pkt_end R5=pkt(id=0,off=14,r=14) R10=fp
11866:  r0 = *(u16 *)(r3 +12) /* access 12 and 13 bytes of the packet */
1187
1188this 2byte load from the packet is safe to do, since the program author
1189did check 'if (skb->data + 14 > skb->data_end) goto err' at insn #5 which
1190means that in the fall-through case the register R3 (which points to skb->data)
1191has at least 14 directly accessible bytes. The verifier marks it
1192as R3=pkt(id=0,off=0,r=14).
1193id=0 means that no additional variables were added to the register.
1194off=0 means that no additional constants were added.
1195r=14 is the range of safe access which means that bytes [R3, R3 + 14) are ok.
1196Note that R5 is marked as R5=pkt(id=0,off=14,r=14). It also points
1197to the packet data, but constant 14 was added to the register, so
1198it now points to 'skb->data + 14' and accessible range is [R5, R5 + 14 - 14)
1199which is zero bytes.
1200
1201More complex packet access may look like:
1202 R0=inv1 R1=ctx R3=pkt(id=0,off=0,r=14) R4=pkt_end R5=pkt(id=0,off=14,r=14) R10=fp
1203 6:  r0 = *(u8 *)(r3 +7) /* load 7th byte from the packet */
1204 7:  r4 = *(u8 *)(r3 +12)
1205 8:  r4 *= 14
1206 9:  r3 = *(u32 *)(r1 +76) /* load skb->data */
120710:  r3 += r4
120811:  r2 = r1
120912:  r2 <<= 48
121013:  r2 >>= 48
121114:  r3 += r2
121215:  r2 = r3
121316:  r2 += 8
121417:  r1 = *(u32 *)(r1 +80) /* load skb->data_end */
121518:  if r2 > r1 goto pc+2
1216 R0=inv(id=0,umax_value=255,var_off=(0x0; 0xff)) R1=pkt_end R2=pkt(id=2,off=8,r=8) R3=pkt(id=2,off=0,r=8) R4=inv(id=0,umax_value=3570,var_off=(0x0; 0xfffe)) R5=pkt(id=0,off=14,r=14) R10=fp
121719:  r1 = *(u8 *)(r3 +4)
1218The state of the register R3 is R3=pkt(id=2,off=0,r=8)
1219id=2 means that two 'r3 += rX' instructions were seen, so r3 points to some
1220offset within a packet and since the program author did
1221'if (r3 + 8 > r1) goto err' at insn #18, the safe range is [R3, R3 + 8).
1222The verifier only allows 'add'/'sub' operations on packet registers. Any other
1223operation will set the register state to 'SCALAR_VALUE' and it won't be
1224available for direct packet access.
1225Operation 'r3 += rX' may overflow and become less than original skb->data,
1226therefore the verifier has to prevent that.  So when it sees 'r3 += rX'
1227instruction and rX is more than 16-bit value, any subsequent bounds-check of r3
1228against skb->data_end will not give us 'range' information, so attempts to read
1229through the pointer will give "invalid access to packet" error.
1230Ex. after insn 'r4 = *(u8 *)(r3 +12)' (insn #7 above) the state of r4 is
1231R4=inv(id=0,umax_value=255,var_off=(0x0; 0xff)) which means that upper 56 bits
1232of the register are guaranteed to be zero, and nothing is known about the lower
12338 bits. After insn 'r4 *= 14' the state becomes
1234R4=inv(id=0,umax_value=3570,var_off=(0x0; 0xfffe)), since multiplying an 8-bit
1235value by constant 14 will keep upper 52 bits as zero, also the least significant
1236bit will be zero as 14 is even.  Similarly 'r2 >>= 48' will make
1237R2=inv(id=0,umax_value=65535,var_off=(0x0; 0xffff)), since the shift is not sign
1238extending.  This logic is implemented in adjust_reg_min_max_vals() function,
1239which calls adjust_ptr_min_max_vals() for adding pointer to scalar (or vice
1240versa) and adjust_scalar_min_max_vals() for operations on two scalars.
1241
1242The end result is that bpf program author can access packet directly
1243using normal C code as:
1244  void *data = (void *)(long)skb->data;
1245  void *data_end = (void *)(long)skb->data_end;
1246  struct eth_hdr *eth = data;
1247  struct iphdr *iph = data + sizeof(*eth);
1248  struct udphdr *udp = data + sizeof(*eth) + sizeof(*iph);
1249
1250  if (data + sizeof(*eth) + sizeof(*iph) + sizeof(*udp) > data_end)
1251          return 0;
1252  if (eth->h_proto != htons(ETH_P_IP))
1253          return 0;
1254  if (iph->protocol != IPPROTO_UDP || iph->ihl != 5)
1255          return 0;
1256  if (udp->dest == 53 || udp->source == 9)
1257          ...;
1258which makes such programs easier to write comparing to LD_ABS insn
1259and significantly faster.
1260
1261eBPF maps
1262---------
1263'maps' is a generic storage of different types for sharing data between kernel
1264and userspace.
1265
1266The maps are accessed from user space via BPF syscall, which has commands:
1267- create a map with given type and attributes
1268  map_fd = bpf(BPF_MAP_CREATE, union bpf_attr *attr, u32 size)
1269  using attr->map_type, attr->key_size, attr->value_size, attr->max_entries
1270  returns process-local file descriptor or negative error
1271
1272- lookup key in a given map
1273  err = bpf(BPF_MAP_LOOKUP_ELEM, union bpf_attr *attr, u32 size)
1274  using attr->map_fd, attr->key, attr->value
1275  returns zero and stores found elem into value or negative error
1276
1277- create or update key/value pair in a given map
1278  err = bpf(BPF_MAP_UPDATE_ELEM, union bpf_attr *attr, u32 size)
1279  using attr->map_fd, attr->key, attr->value
1280  returns zero or negative error
1281
1282- find and delete element by key in a given map
1283  err = bpf(BPF_MAP_DELETE_ELEM, union bpf_attr *attr, u32 size)
1284  using attr->map_fd, attr->key
1285
1286- to delete map: close(fd)
1287  Exiting process will delete maps automatically
1288
1289userspace programs use this syscall to create/access maps that eBPF programs
1290are concurrently updating.
1291
1292maps can have different types: hash, array, bloom filter, radix-tree, etc.
1293
1294The map is defined by:
1295  . type
1296  . max number of elements
1297  . key size in bytes
1298  . value size in bytes
1299
1300Pruning
1301-------
1302The verifier does not actually walk all possible paths through the program.  For
1303each new branch to analyse, the verifier looks at all the states it's previously
1304been in when at this instruction.  If any of them contain the current state as a
1305subset, the branch is 'pruned' - that is, the fact that the previous state was
1306accepted implies the current state would be as well.  For instance, if in the
1307previous state, r1 held a packet-pointer, and in the current state, r1 holds a
1308packet-pointer with a range as long or longer and at least as strict an
1309alignment, then r1 is safe.  Similarly, if r2 was NOT_INIT before then it can't
1310have been used by any path from that point, so any value in r2 (including
1311another NOT_INIT) is safe.  The implementation is in the function regsafe().
1312Pruning considers not only the registers but also the stack (and any spilled
1313registers it may hold).  They must all be safe for the branch to be pruned.
1314This is implemented in states_equal().
1315
1316Understanding eBPF verifier messages
1317------------------------------------
1318
1319The following are few examples of invalid eBPF programs and verifier error
1320messages as seen in the log:
1321
1322Program with unreachable instructions:
1323static struct bpf_insn prog[] = {
1324  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1325  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1326};
1327Error:
1328  unreachable insn 1
1329
1330Program that reads uninitialized register:
1331  BPF_MOV64_REG(BPF_REG_0, BPF_REG_2),
1332  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1333Error:
1334  0: (bf) r0 = r2
1335  R2 !read_ok
1336
1337Program that doesn't initialize R0 before exiting:
1338  BPF_MOV64_REG(BPF_REG_2, BPF_REG_1),
1339  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1340Error:
1341  0: (bf) r2 = r1
1342  1: (95) exit
1343  R0 !read_ok
1344
1345Program that accesses stack out of bounds:
1346  BPF_ST_MEM(BPF_DW, BPF_REG_10, 8, 0),
1347  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1348Error:
1349  0: (7a) *(u64 *)(r10 +8) = 0
1350  invalid stack off=8 size=8
1351
1352Program that doesn't initialize stack before passing its address into function:
1353  BPF_MOV64_REG(BPF_REG_2, BPF_REG_10),
1354  BPF_ALU64_IMM(BPF_ADD, BPF_REG_2, -8),
1355  BPF_LD_MAP_FD(BPF_REG_1, 0),
1356  BPF_RAW_INSN(BPF_JMP | BPF_CALL, 0, 0, 0, BPF_FUNC_map_lookup_elem),
1357  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1358Error:
1359  0: (bf) r2 = r10
1360  1: (07) r2 += -8
1361  2: (b7) r1 = 0x0
1362  3: (85) call 1
1363  invalid indirect read from stack off -8+0 size 8
1364
1365Program that uses invalid map_fd=0 while calling to map_lookup_elem() function:
1366  BPF_ST_MEM(BPF_DW, BPF_REG_10, -8, 0),
1367  BPF_MOV64_REG(BPF_REG_2, BPF_REG_10),
1368  BPF_ALU64_IMM(BPF_ADD, BPF_REG_2, -8),
1369  BPF_LD_MAP_FD(BPF_REG_1, 0),
1370  BPF_RAW_INSN(BPF_JMP | BPF_CALL, 0, 0, 0, BPF_FUNC_map_lookup_elem),
1371  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1372Error:
1373  0: (7a) *(u64 *)(r10 -8) = 0
1374  1: (bf) r2 = r10
1375  2: (07) r2 += -8
1376  3: (b7) r1 = 0x0
1377  4: (85) call 1
1378  fd 0 is not pointing to valid bpf_map
1379
1380Program that doesn't check return value of map_lookup_elem() before accessing
1381map element:
1382  BPF_ST_MEM(BPF_DW, BPF_REG_10, -8, 0),
1383  BPF_MOV64_REG(BPF_REG_2, BPF_REG_10),
1384  BPF_ALU64_IMM(BPF_ADD, BPF_REG_2, -8),
1385  BPF_LD_MAP_FD(BPF_REG_1, 0),
1386  BPF_RAW_INSN(BPF_JMP | BPF_CALL, 0, 0, 0, BPF_FUNC_map_lookup_elem),
1387  BPF_ST_MEM(BPF_DW, BPF_REG_0, 0, 0),
1388  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1389Error:
1390  0: (7a) *(u64 *)(r10 -8) = 0
1391  1: (bf) r2 = r10
1392  2: (07) r2 += -8
1393  3: (b7) r1 = 0x0
1394  4: (85) call 1
1395  5: (7a) *(u64 *)(r0 +0) = 0
1396  R0 invalid mem access 'map_value_or_null'
1397
1398Program that correctly checks map_lookup_elem() returned value for NULL, but
1399accesses the memory with incorrect alignment:
1400  BPF_ST_MEM(BPF_DW, BPF_REG_10, -8, 0),
1401  BPF_MOV64_REG(BPF_REG_2, BPF_REG_10),
1402  BPF_ALU64_IMM(BPF_ADD, BPF_REG_2, -8),
1403  BPF_LD_MAP_FD(BPF_REG_1, 0),
1404  BPF_RAW_INSN(BPF_JMP | BPF_CALL, 0, 0, 0, BPF_FUNC_map_lookup_elem),
1405  BPF_JMP_IMM(BPF_JEQ, BPF_REG_0, 0, 1),
1406  BPF_ST_MEM(BPF_DW, BPF_REG_0, 4, 0),
1407  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1408Error:
1409  0: (7a) *(u64 *)(r10 -8) = 0
1410  1: (bf) r2 = r10
1411  2: (07) r2 += -8
1412  3: (b7) r1 = 1
1413  4: (85) call 1
1414  5: (15) if r0 == 0x0 goto pc+1
1415   R0=map_ptr R10=fp
1416  6: (7a) *(u64 *)(r0 +4) = 0
1417  misaligned access off 4 size 8
1418
1419Program that correctly checks map_lookup_elem() returned value for NULL and
1420accesses memory with correct alignment in one side of 'if' branch, but fails
1421to do so in the other side of 'if' branch:
1422  BPF_ST_MEM(BPF_DW, BPF_REG_10, -8, 0),
1423  BPF_MOV64_REG(BPF_REG_2, BPF_REG_10),
1424  BPF_ALU64_IMM(BPF_ADD, BPF_REG_2, -8),
1425  BPF_LD_MAP_FD(BPF_REG_1, 0),
1426  BPF_RAW_INSN(BPF_JMP | BPF_CALL, 0, 0, 0, BPF_FUNC_map_lookup_elem),
1427  BPF_JMP_IMM(BPF_JEQ, BPF_REG_0, 0, 2),
1428  BPF_ST_MEM(BPF_DW, BPF_REG_0, 0, 0),
1429  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1430  BPF_ST_MEM(BPF_DW, BPF_REG_0, 0, 1),
1431  BPF_EXIT_INSN(),
1432Error:
1433  0: (7a) *(u64 *)(r10 -8) = 0
1434  1: (bf) r2 = r10
1435  2: (07) r2 += -8
1436  3: (b7) r1 = 1
1437  4: (85) call 1
1438  5: (15) if r0 == 0x0 goto pc+2
1439   R0=map_ptr R10=fp
1440  6: (7a) *(u64 *)(r0 +0) = 0
1441  7: (95) exit
1442
1443  from 5 to 8: R0=imm0 R10=fp
1444  8: (7a) *(u64 *)(r0 +0) = 1
1445  R0 invalid mem access 'imm'
1446
1447Testing
1448-------
1449
1450Next to the BPF toolchain, the kernel also ships a test module that contains
1451various test cases for classic and internal BPF that can be executed against
1452the BPF interpreter and JIT compiler. It can be found in lib/test_bpf.c and
1453enabled via Kconfig:
1454
1455  CONFIG_TEST_BPF=m
1456
1457After the module has been built and installed, the test suite can be executed
1458via insmod or modprobe against 'test_bpf' module. Results of the test cases
1459including timings in nsec can be found in the kernel log (dmesg).
1460
1461Misc
1462----
1463
1464Also trinity, the Linux syscall fuzzer, has built-in support for BPF and
1465SECCOMP-BPF kernel fuzzing.
1466
1467Written by
1468----------
1469
1470The document was written in the hope that it is found useful and in order
1471to give potential BPF hackers or security auditors a better overview of
1472the underlying architecture.
1473
1474Jay Schulist <jschlst@samba.org>
1475Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
1476Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
1477