Andrii Nakryiko 4bdbb7ea28 sync: latest libbpf changes from kernel
Syncing latest libbpf commits from kernel repository.
Baseline bpf-next commit:   62c69e89e81bfbdb9a87ae3e0599dcc6aacf786b
Checkpoint bpf-next commit: b548b17a93fd18357a5a6f535c10c1e68719ad32
Baseline bpf commit:        e7b09357453a99e6f9e74c39e9ca1363c22c0b96
Checkpoint bpf commit:      9cbd48d5fa14e4c65f8580de16686077f7cea02b

Alan Maguire (1):
  libbpf: Btf dedup identical struct test needs check for nested
    structs/arrays

Andrii Nakryiko (2):
  libbpf: clean up and refactor BTF fixup step
  libbpf: only add BPF_F_MMAPABLE flag for data maps with global vars

Anshuman Khandual (4):
  perf: Add system error and not in transaction branch types
  perf: Extend branch type classification
  perf: Capture branch privilege information
  perf: Add PERF_BR_NEW_ARCH_[N] map for BRBE on arm64 platform

Eduard Zingerman (4):
  libbpf: Resolve enum fwd as full enum64 and vice versa
  libbpf: Hashmap interface update to allow both long and void*
    keys/values
  libbpf: Resolve unambigous forward declarations
  libbpf: Hashmap.h update to fix build issues using LLVM14

Martin KaFai Lau (1):
  bpf: Add hwtstamp field for the sockops prog

Namhyung Kim (1):
  perf: Kill __PERF_SAMPLE_CALLCHAIN_EARLY

Ravi Bangoria (3):
  perf/mem: Introduce PERF_MEM_LVLNUM_{EXTN_MEM|IO}
  perf/uapi: Define PERF_MEM_SNOOPX_PEER in kernel header file
  perf/mem: Rename PERF_MEM_LVLNUM_EXTN_MEM to PERF_MEM_LVLNUM_CXL

Sandipan Das (1):
  perf/core: Add speculation info to branch entries

Xu Kuohai (1):
  libbpf: Avoid allocating reg_name with sscanf in parse_usdt_arg()

Yonghong Song (2):
  bpf: Implement cgroup storage available to non-cgroup-attached bpf
    progs
  libbpf: Support new cgroup local storage

 include/uapi/linux/bpf.h        |  51 +++++-
 include/uapi/linux/perf_event.h |  57 ++++++-
 src/btf.c                       | 267 ++++++++++++++++++++++----------
 src/btf_dump.c                  |  15 +-
 src/hashmap.c                   |  18 +--
 src/hashmap.h                   |  91 +++++++----
 src/libbpf.c                    | 196 ++++++++++++++---------
 src/libbpf_probes.c             |   1 +
 src/strset.c                    |  18 +--
 src/usdt.c                      |  44 +++---
 10 files changed, 511 insertions(+), 247 deletions(-)

--
2.30.2
2022-11-12 18:24:12 -08:00
2022-08-24 21:51:42 -07:00
2022-01-24 15:37:36 -08:00
2022-10-27 16:46:38 -07:00
2019-10-28 15:15:47 -07:00
2022-04-22 14:30:27 -07:00
2021-02-22 11:35:49 -08:00
2022-10-17 13:55:59 -07:00

libbpf Github Actions Builds & Tests Total alerts Coverity OSS-Fuzz Status Read the Docs

This is the official home of the libbpf library.

Please use this Github repository for building and packaging libbpf and when using it in your projects through Git submodule.

Libbpf authoritative source code is developed as part of bpf-next Linux source tree under tools/lib/bpf subdirectory and is periodically synced to Github. As such, all the libbpf changes should be sent to BPF mailing list, please don't open PRs here unless you are changing Github-specific parts of libbpf (e.g., Github-specific Makefile).

Libbpf and general BPF usage questions

Libbpf documentation can be found here. It's an ongoing effort and has ways to go, but please take a look and consider contributing as well.

Please check out libbpf-bootstrap and the companion blog post for the examples of building BPF applications with libbpf. libbpf-tools are also a good source of the real-world libbpf-based tracing tools.

See also "BPF CO-RE reference guide" for the coverage of practical aspects of building BPF CO-RE applications and "BPF CO-RE" for general introduction into BPF portability issues and BPF CO-RE origins.

All general BPF questions, including kernel functionality, libbpf APIs and their application, should be sent to bpf@vger.kernel.org mailing list. You can subscribe to it here and search its archive here. Please search the archive before asking new questions. It very well might be that this was already addressed or answered before.

bpf@vger.kernel.org is monitored by many more people and they will happily try to help you with whatever issue you have. This repository's PRs and issues should be opened only for dealing with issues pertaining to specific way this libbpf mirror repo is set up and organized.

Building libbpf

libelf is an internal dependency of libbpf and thus it is required to link against and must be installed on the system for applications to work. pkg-config is used by default to find libelf, and the program called can be overridden with PKG_CONFIG.

If using pkg-config at build time is not desired, it can be disabled by setting NO_PKG_CONFIG=1 when calling make.

To build both static libbpf.a and shared libbpf.so:

$ cd src
$ make

To build only static libbpf.a library in directory build/ and install them together with libbpf headers in a staging directory root/:

$ cd src
$ mkdir build root
$ BUILD_STATIC_ONLY=y OBJDIR=build DESTDIR=root make install

To build both static libbpf.a and shared libbpf.so against a custom libelf dependency installed in /build/root/ and install them together with libbpf headers in a build directory /build/root/:

$ cd src
$ PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/build/root/lib64/pkgconfig DESTDIR=/build/root make install

BPF CO-RE (Compile Once Run Everywhere)

Libbpf supports building BPF CO-RE-enabled applications, which, in contrast to BCC, do not require Clang/LLVM runtime being deployed to target servers and doesn't rely on kernel-devel headers being available.

It does rely on kernel to be built with BTF type information, though. Some major Linux distributions come with kernel BTF already built in:

  • Fedora 31+
  • RHEL 8.2+
  • OpenSUSE Tumbleweed (in the next release, as of 2020-06-04)
  • Arch Linux (from kernel 5.7.1.arch1-1)
  • Manjaro (from kernel 5.4 if compiled after 2021-06-18)
  • Ubuntu 20.10
  • Debian 11 (amd64/arm64)

If your kernel doesn't come with BTF built-in, you'll need to build custom kernel. You'll need:

  • pahole 1.16+ tool (part of dwarves package), which performs DWARF to BTF conversion;
  • kernel built with CONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF=y option;
  • you can check if your kernel has BTF built-in by looking for /sys/kernel/btf/vmlinux file:
$ ls -la /sys/kernel/btf/vmlinux
-r--r--r--. 1 root root 3541561 Jun  2 18:16 /sys/kernel/btf/vmlinux

To develop and build BPF programs, you'll need Clang/LLVM 10+. The following distributions have Clang/LLVM 10+ packaged by default:

  • Fedora 32+
  • Ubuntu 20.04+
  • Arch Linux
  • Ubuntu 20.10 (LLVM 11)
  • Debian 11 (LLVM 11)
  • Alpine 3.13+

Otherwise, please make sure to update it on your system.

The following resources are useful to understand what BPF CO-RE is and how to use it:

Distributions

Distributions packaging libbpf from this mirror:

Benefits of packaging from the mirror over packaging from kernel sources:

  • Consistent versioning across distributions.
  • No ties to any specific kernel, transparent handling of older kernels. Libbpf is designed to be kernel-agnostic and work across multitude of kernel versions. It has built-in mechanisms to gracefully handle older kernels, that are missing some of the features, by working around or gracefully degrading functionality. Thus libbpf is not tied to a specific kernel version and can/should be packaged and versioned independently.
  • Continuous integration testing via GitHub Actions.
  • Static code analysis via LGTM and Coverity.

Package dependencies of libbpf, package names may vary across distros:

  • zlib
  • libelf

libbpf distro packaging status

bpf-next to Github sync

All the gory details of syncing can be found in scripts/sync-kernel.sh script.

Some header files in this repo (include/linux/*.h) are reduced versions of their counterpart files at bpf-next's tools/include/linux/*.h to make compilation successful.

License

This work is dual-licensed under BSD 2-clause license and GNU LGPL v2.1 license. You can choose between one of them if you use this work.

SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause OR LGPL-2.1

Description
Automated upstream mirror for libbpf stand-alone build.
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