|  | ============== | 
|  | BPF Design Q&A | 
|  | ============== | 
|  |  | 
|  | BPF extensibility and applicability to networking, tracing, security | 
|  | in the linux kernel and several user space implementations of BPF | 
|  | virtual machine led to a number of misunderstanding on what BPF actually is. | 
|  | This short QA is an attempt to address that and outline a direction | 
|  | of where BPF is heading long term. | 
|  |  | 
|  | .. contents:: | 
|  | :local: | 
|  | :depth: 3 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Questions and Answers | 
|  | ===================== | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Is BPF a generic instruction set similar to x64 and arm64? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: NO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Is BPF a generic virtual machine ? | 
|  | ------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: NO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | BPF is generic instruction set *with* C calling convention. | 
|  | ----------------------------------------------------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Why C calling convention was chosen? | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  |  | 
|  | A: Because BPF programs are designed to run in the linux kernel | 
|  | which is written in C, hence BPF defines instruction set compatible | 
|  | with two most used architectures x64 and arm64 (and takes into | 
|  | consideration important quirks of other architectures) and | 
|  | defines calling convention that is compatible with C calling | 
|  | convention of the linux kernel on those architectures. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Can multiple return values be supported in the future? | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  | A: NO. BPF allows only register R0 to be used as return value. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Can more than 5 function arguments be supported in the future? | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  | A: NO. BPF calling convention only allows registers R1-R5 to be used | 
|  | as arguments. BPF is not a standalone instruction set. | 
|  | (unlike x64 ISA that allows msft, cdecl and other conventions) | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Can BPF programs access instruction pointer or return address? | 
|  | ----------------------------------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: NO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Can BPF programs access stack pointer ? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------ | 
|  | A: NO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Only frame pointer (register R10) is accessible. | 
|  | From compiler point of view it's necessary to have stack pointer. | 
|  | For example, LLVM defines register R11 as stack pointer in its | 
|  | BPF backend, but it makes sure that generated code never uses it. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Does C-calling convention diminishes possible use cases? | 
|  | ----------------------------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: YES. | 
|  |  | 
|  | BPF design forces addition of major functionality in the form | 
|  | of kernel helper functions and kernel objects like BPF maps with | 
|  | seamless interoperability between them. It lets kernel call into | 
|  | BPF programs and programs call kernel helpers with zero overhead, | 
|  | as all of them were native C code. That is particularly the case | 
|  | for JITed BPF programs that are indistinguishable from | 
|  | native kernel C code. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Does it mean that 'innovative' extensions to BPF code are disallowed? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------------------------------------ | 
|  | A: Soft yes. | 
|  |  | 
|  | At least for now, until BPF core has support for | 
|  | bpf-to-bpf calls, indirect calls, loops, global variables, | 
|  | jump tables, read-only sections, and all other normal constructs | 
|  | that C code can produce. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Can loops be supported in a safe way? | 
|  | ---------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: It's not clear yet. | 
|  |  | 
|  | BPF developers are trying to find a way to | 
|  | support bounded loops. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: What are the verifier limits? | 
|  | -------------------------------- | 
|  | A: The only limit known to the user space is BPF_MAXINSNS (4096). | 
|  | It's the maximum number of instructions that the unprivileged bpf | 
|  | program can have. The verifier has various internal limits. | 
|  | Like the maximum number of instructions that can be explored during | 
|  | program analysis. Currently, that limit is set to 1 million. | 
|  | Which essentially means that the largest program can consist | 
|  | of 1 million NOP instructions. There is a limit to the maximum number | 
|  | of subsequent branches, a limit to the number of nested bpf-to-bpf | 
|  | calls, a limit to the number of the verifier states per instruction, | 
|  | a limit to the number of maps used by the program. | 
|  | All these limits can be hit with a sufficiently complex program. | 
|  | There are also non-numerical limits that can cause the program | 
|  | to be rejected. The verifier used to recognize only pointer + constant | 
|  | expressions. Now it can recognize pointer + bounded_register. | 
|  | bpf_lookup_map_elem(key) had a requirement that 'key' must be | 
|  | a pointer to the stack. Now, 'key' can be a pointer to map value. | 
|  | The verifier is steadily getting 'smarter'. The limits are | 
|  | being removed. The only way to know that the program is going to | 
|  | be accepted by the verifier is to try to load it. | 
|  | The bpf development process guarantees that the future kernel | 
|  | versions will accept all bpf programs that were accepted by | 
|  | the earlier versions. | 
|  |  | 
|  |  | 
|  | Instruction level questions | 
|  | --------------------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: LD_ABS and LD_IND instructions vs C code | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: How come LD_ABS and LD_IND instruction are present in BPF whereas | 
|  | C code cannot express them and has to use builtin intrinsics? | 
|  |  | 
|  | A: This is artifact of compatibility with classic BPF. Modern | 
|  | networking code in BPF performs better without them. | 
|  | See 'direct packet access'. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: BPF instructions mapping not one-to-one to native CPU | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  | Q: It seems not all BPF instructions are one-to-one to native CPU. | 
|  | For example why BPF_JNE and other compare and jumps are not cpu-like? | 
|  |  | 
|  | A: This was necessary to avoid introducing flags into ISA which are | 
|  | impossible to make generic and efficient across CPU architectures. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Why BPF_DIV instruction doesn't map to x64 div? | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  | A: Because if we picked one-to-one relationship to x64 it would have made | 
|  | it more complicated to support on arm64 and other archs. Also it | 
|  | needs div-by-zero runtime check. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Why there is no BPF_SDIV for signed divide operation? | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  | A: Because it would be rarely used. llvm errors in such case and | 
|  | prints a suggestion to use unsigned divide instead. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Why BPF has implicit prologue and epilogue? | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  | A: Because architectures like sparc have register windows and in general | 
|  | there are enough subtle differences between architectures, so naive | 
|  | store return address into stack won't work. Another reason is BPF has | 
|  | to be safe from division by zero (and legacy exception path | 
|  | of LD_ABS insn). Those instructions need to invoke epilogue and | 
|  | return implicitly. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Why BPF_JLT and BPF_JLE instructions were not introduced in the beginning? | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  | A: Because classic BPF didn't have them and BPF authors felt that compiler | 
|  | workaround would be acceptable. Turned out that programs lose performance | 
|  | due to lack of these compare instructions and they were added. | 
|  | These two instructions is a perfect example what kind of new BPF | 
|  | instructions are acceptable and can be added in the future. | 
|  | These two already had equivalent instructions in native CPUs. | 
|  | New instructions that don't have one-to-one mapping to HW instructions | 
|  | will not be accepted. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: BPF 32-bit subregister requirements | 
|  | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
|  | Q: BPF 32-bit subregisters have a requirement to zero upper 32-bits of BPF | 
|  | registers which makes BPF inefficient virtual machine for 32-bit | 
|  | CPU architectures and 32-bit HW accelerators. Can true 32-bit registers | 
|  | be added to BPF in the future? | 
|  |  | 
|  | A: NO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | But some optimizations on zero-ing the upper 32 bits for BPF registers are | 
|  | available, and can be leveraged to improve the performance of JITed BPF | 
|  | programs for 32-bit architectures. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Starting with version 7, LLVM is able to generate instructions that operate | 
|  | on 32-bit subregisters, provided the option -mattr=+alu32 is passed for | 
|  | compiling a program. Furthermore, the verifier can now mark the | 
|  | instructions for which zero-ing the upper bits of the destination register | 
|  | is required, and insert an explicit zero-extension (zext) instruction | 
|  | (a mov32 variant). This means that for architectures without zext hardware | 
|  | support, the JIT back-ends do not need to clear the upper bits for | 
|  | subregisters written by alu32 instructions or narrow loads. Instead, the | 
|  | back-ends simply need to support code generation for that mov32 variant, | 
|  | and to overwrite bpf_jit_needs_zext() to make it return "true" (in order to | 
|  | enable zext insertion in the verifier). | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note that it is possible for a JIT back-end to have partial hardware | 
|  | support for zext. In that case, if verifier zext insertion is enabled, | 
|  | it could lead to the insertion of unnecessary zext instructions. Such | 
|  | instructions could be removed by creating a simple peephole inside the JIT | 
|  | back-end: if one instruction has hardware support for zext and if the next | 
|  | instruction is an explicit zext, then the latter can be skipped when doing | 
|  | the code generation. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Does BPF have a stable ABI? | 
|  | ------------------------------ | 
|  | A: YES. BPF instructions, arguments to BPF programs, set of helper | 
|  | functions and their arguments, recognized return codes are all part | 
|  | of ABI. However there is one specific exception to tracing programs | 
|  | which are using helpers like bpf_probe_read() to walk kernel internal | 
|  | data structures and compile with kernel internal headers. Both of these | 
|  | kernel internals are subject to change and can break with newer kernels | 
|  | such that the program needs to be adapted accordingly. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Are tracepoints part of the stable ABI? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------ | 
|  | A: NO. Tracepoints are tied to internal implementation details hence they are | 
|  | subject to change and can break with newer kernels. BPF programs need to change | 
|  | accordingly when this happens. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: How much stack space a BPF program uses? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: Currently all program types are limited to 512 bytes of stack | 
|  | space, but the verifier computes the actual amount of stack used | 
|  | and both interpreter and most JITed code consume necessary amount. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Can BPF be offloaded to HW? | 
|  | ------------------------------ | 
|  | A: YES. BPF HW offload is supported by NFP driver. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Does classic BPF interpreter still exist? | 
|  | -------------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: NO. Classic BPF programs are converted into extend BPF instructions. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Can BPF call arbitrary kernel functions? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: NO. BPF programs can only call a set of helper functions which | 
|  | is defined for every program type. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Can BPF overwrite arbitrary kernel memory? | 
|  | --------------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: NO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Tracing bpf programs can *read* arbitrary memory with bpf_probe_read() | 
|  | and bpf_probe_read_str() helpers. Networking programs cannot read | 
|  | arbitrary memory, since they don't have access to these helpers. | 
|  | Programs can never read or write arbitrary memory directly. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Can BPF overwrite arbitrary user memory? | 
|  | ------------------------------------------- | 
|  | A: Sort-of. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Tracing BPF programs can overwrite the user memory | 
|  | of the current task with bpf_probe_write_user(). Every time such | 
|  | program is loaded the kernel will print warning message, so | 
|  | this helper is only useful for experiments and prototypes. | 
|  | Tracing BPF programs are root only. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: New functionality via kernel modules? | 
|  | ---------------------------------------- | 
|  | Q: Can BPF functionality such as new program or map types, new | 
|  | helpers, etc be added out of kernel module code? | 
|  |  | 
|  | A: NO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Q: Directly calling kernel function is an ABI? | 
|  | ---------------------------------------------- | 
|  | Q: Some kernel functions (e.g. tcp_slow_start) can be called | 
|  | by BPF programs.  Do these kernel functions become an ABI? | 
|  |  | 
|  | A: NO. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The kernel function protos will change and the bpf programs will be | 
|  | rejected by the verifier.  Also, for example, some of the bpf-callable | 
|  | kernel functions have already been used by other kernel tcp | 
|  | cc (congestion-control) implementations.  If any of these kernel | 
|  | functions has changed, both the in-tree and out-of-tree kernel tcp cc | 
|  | implementations have to be changed.  The same goes for the bpf | 
|  | programs and they have to be adjusted accordingly. |