Re: [PATCH bpf-next 1/3] libbpf: xsk: use bpf_link
From: Toke Høiland-Jørgensen <hidden>
Date: 2021-02-15 19:37:21
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netdev
Björn Töpel [off-list ref] writes:
On 2021-02-15 18:07, Toke Høiland-Jørgensen wrote:quoted
Maciej Fijalkowski [off-list ref] writes:quoted
Currently, if there are multiple xdpsock instances running on a single interface and in case one of the instances is terminated, the rest of them are left in an inoperable state due to the fact of unloaded XDP prog from interface. To address that, step away from setting bpf prog in favour of bpf_link. This means that refcounting of BPF resources will be done automatically by bpf_link itself. When setting up BPF resources during xsk socket creation, check whether bpf_link for a given ifindex already exists via set of calls to bpf_link_get_next_id -> bpf_link_get_fd_by_id -> bpf_obj_get_info_by_fd and comparing the ifindexes from bpf_link and xsk socket.One consideration here is that bpf_link_get_fd_by_id() is a privileged operation (privileged as in CAP_SYS_ADMIN), so this has the side effect of making AF_XDP privileged as well. Is that the intention?We're already using, e.g., bpf_map_get_fd_by_id() which has that as well. So we're assuming that for XDP setup already!
Ah, right, didn't realise that one is CAP_SYS_ADMIN as well; I remembered this as being specific to the bpf_link operation.
quoted
Another is that the AF_XDP code is in the process of moving to libxdp (see in-progress PR [0]), and this approach won't carry over as-is to that model, because libxdp has to pin the bpf_link fds.I was assuming there were two modes of operations for AF_XDP in libxdp. One which is with the multi-program support (which AFAIK is why the pinning is required), and one "like the current libbpf" one. For the latter Maciej's series would be a good fit, no?
We haven't added an explicit mode switch for now; libxdp will fall back to regular interface attach if the kernel doesn't support the needed features for multi-attach, but if it's possible to just have libxdp transparently do the right thing I'd much prefer that. So we're still exploring that (part of which is that Magnus has promised to run some performance tests to see if there's a difference). However, even if there's an explicit mode switch I'd like to avoid different *semantics* between the two modes if possible, to keep the two as compatible as possible. And since we can't currently do "auto-detach on bpf_link fd close" when using multi-prog, introducing this now would lead to just such a semantic difference. So my preference would be to do it differently... :)
quoted
However, in libxdp we can solve the original problem in a different way, and in fact I already suggested to Magnus that we should do this (see [1]); so one way forward could be to address it during the merge in libxdp? It should be possible to address the original issue (two instances of xdpsock breaking each other when they exit), but applications will still need to do an explicit unload operation before exiting (i.e., the automatic detach on bpf_link fd closure will take more work, and likely require extending the bpf_link kernel support)...I'd say it's depending on the libbpf 1.0/libxdp merge timeframe. If we're months ahead, then I'd really like to see this in libbpf until the merge. However, I'll leave that for Magnus/you to decide!
Well, as far as libxdp support goes, the PR I linked is pretty close to being mergeable. One of the few outstanding issues is whether we should solve just this issue before merging, actually :) Not sure exactly which timeframe Andrii is envisioning for libbpf 1.0, but last I heard he'll announce something next week.
Bottom line; I'd *really* like bpf_link behavior (process scoped) for AF_XDP sooner than later! ;-)
Totally agree that we should solve the multi-process coexistence problem! And as I said, I think we can do so in libxdp by using the same synchronisation mechanism we use for setting up the multi-prog dispatcher. So it doesn't *have* to hold things up :) -Toke