Re: [PATCH v9 tip 3/9] tracing: attach BPF programs to kprobes

From: Alexei Starovoitov
Date: Sun Mar 22 2015 - 14:03:51 EST


On 3/22/15 3:06 AM, Masami Hiramatsu wrote:
> (2015/03/22 1:02), Alexei Starovoitov wrote:
>> On 3/21/15 5:14 AM, Masami Hiramatsu wrote:
>>> (2015/03/21 8:30), Alexei Starovoitov wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Note, kprobes are _not_ a stable kernel ABI, so bpf programs attached to
>>>> kprobes must be recompiled for every kernel version and user must supply correct
>>>> LINUX_VERSION_CODE in attr.kern_version during bpf_prog_load() call.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Would you mean that the ABI of kprobe-based BPF programs? Kprobe API/ABIs
>>> (register_kprobe() etc.) are stable, but the code who use kprobes certainly
>>> depends the kernel binary by design. So, if you meant it, BPF programs must
>>> be recompiled for every kernel binaries (including configuration changes,
>>> not only its version).
>>
>> yes. I mainly meant that bpf+kprobe programs must be recompiled
>> for every kernel binary.
>
> Hmm, if so, as we do in perf (and systemtap too), you'd better check
> kernel's build-id instead of the kernel version when loading the
> BPF program. It is safer than the KERNEL_VERSION_CODE.

It's not about safety. As I mentioned in cover letter:
"version check is not used for safety, but for enforcing 'non-ABI-ness'"
In other words it's like check-box next to 'terms and conditions'
paragraph that the user has to click before he can continue.
By providing 'kern_version' during loading the user accepts the fact
that bpf+kprobe is not a stable ABI. Nothing more and nothing less.
build-id cannot achieve that, because it cannot be checked from inside
the kernel.
User space tools that will compile ktap/dtrace scripts into bpf might
use build-id for their own purpose, but that's a different discussion.

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