tree: fdb2b23794ea17067dbbc9adc6d91e2c4560c10e [path history] [tgz]
  1. bcc/
  2. bpf/
  3. src/
  4. .busted
  5. .luacheckrc
  6. bcc-probe
  7. bpf-scm-1.rockspec
  8. CMakeLists.txt
  9. README.md
  10. squishy
src/lua/README.md

Lua Tools for BCC

This directory contains Lua tooling for BCC (the BPF Compiler Collection).

BCC is a toolkit for creating userspace and kernel tracing programs. By default, it comes with a library libbcc, some example tooling and a Python frontend for the library.

Here we present an alternate frontend for libbcc implemented in LuaJIT. This lets you write the userspace part of your tracer in Lua instead of Python.

Since LuaJIT is a JIT compiled language, tracers implemented in bcc-lua exhibit significantly reduced overhead compared to their Python equivalents. This is particularly noticeable in tracers that actively use the table APIs to get information from the kernel.

If your tracer makes extensive use of BPF_MAP_TYPE_PERF_EVENT_ARRAY or BPF_MAP_TYPE_HASH, you may find the performance characteristics of this implementation very appealing, as LuaJIT can compile to native code a lot of the callchain to process the events, and this wrapper has been designed to benefit from such JIT compilation.

Quickstart Guide

The following instructions assume Ubuntu 18.04 LTS.

  1. Clone this repository

    $ git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
    $ cd bcc/
    
  2. As per the Ubuntu - Binary installation istructions, install the required upstream stable and signed packages

    $ sudo apt-key adv --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys 4052245BD4284CDD
    $ echo "deb https://repo.iovisor.org/apt/$(lsb_release -cs) $(lsb_release -cs) main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/iovisor.list
    $ sudo apt-get update
    $ sudo apt-get install bcc-tools libbcc-examples linux-headers-$(uname -r)
    
  3. Install LuaJit and the corresponding development files

    $ sudo apt-get install luajit luajit-5.1-dev
    
  4. Test one of the examples to ensure libbcc is properly installed

    $ sudo src/lua/bcc-probe examples/lua/task_switch.lua
    

LuaJIT BPF compiler

Now it is also possible to write Lua functions and compile them transparently to BPF bytecode, here is a simple socket filter example:

local S = require('syscall')
local bpf = require('bpf')
local map = bpf.map('array', 256)
-- Kernel-space part of the program
local prog = assert(bpf(function ()
    local proto = pkt.ip.proto  -- Get byte (ip.proto) from frame at [23]
    xadd(map[proto], 1)         -- Increment packet count
end))
-- User-space part of the program
local sock = assert(bpf.socket('lo', prog))
for i=1,10 do
    local icmp, udp, tcp = map[1], map[17], map[6]
    print('TCP', tcp, 'UDP', udp, 'ICMP', icmp, 'packets')
    S.sleep(1)
end

The other application of BPF programs is attaching to probes for perf event tracing. That means you can trace events inside the kernel (or user-space), and then collect results - for example histogram of sendto() latency, off-cpu time stack traces, syscall latency, and so on. While kernel probes and perf events have unstable ABI, with a dynamic language we can create and use proper type based on the tracepoint ABI on runtime.

Runtime automatically recognizes reads that needs a helper to be accessed. The type casts denote source of the objects, for example the bashreadline example that prints entered bash commands from all running shells:

local ffi = require('ffi')
local bpf = require('bpf')
-- Perf event map
local sample_t = 'struct { uint64_t pid; char str[80]; }'
local events = bpf.map('perf_event_array')
-- Kernel-space part of the program
bpf.uprobe('/bin/bash:readline' function (ptregs)
    local sample = ffi.new(sample_t)
    sample.pid = pid_tgid()
    ffi.copy(sample.str, ffi.cast('char *', req.ax)) -- Cast `ax` to string pointer and copy to buffer
    perf_submit(events, sample)                      -- Write sample to perf event map
end, true, -1, 0)
-- User-space part of the program
local log = events:reader(nil, 0, sample_t) -- Must specify PID or CPU_ID to observe
while true do
    log:block()               -- Wait until event reader is readable
    for _,e in log:read() do  -- Collect available reader events
        print(tonumber(e.pid), ffi.string(e.str))
    end
end

Where cast to struct pt_regs flags the source of data as probe arguments, which means any pointer derived from this structure points to kernel and a helper is needed to access it. Casting req.ax to pointer is then required for ffi.copy semantics, otherwise it would be treated as u64 and only it's value would be copied. The type detection is automatic most of the times (socket filters and bpf.tracepoint), but not with uprobes and kprobes.

Installation

$ luarocks install bpf

Examples

See examples/lua directory.

Helpers

  • print(...) is a wrapper for bpf_trace_printk, the output is captured in cat /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace_pipe
  • bit.* library is supported (lshift, rshift, arshift, bnot, band, bor, bxor)
  • math.* library partially supported (log2, log, log10)
  • ffi.cast() is implemented (including structures and arrays)
  • ffi.new(...) allocates memory on stack, initializers are NYI
  • ffi.copy(...) copies memory (possibly using helpers) between stack/kernel/registers
  • ntoh(x[, width]) - convert from network to host byte order.
  • hton(x[, width]) - convert from host to network byte order.
  • xadd(dst, inc) - exclusive add, a synchronous *dst += b if Lua had += operator

Below is a list of BPF-specific helpers:

  • time() - return current monotonic time in nanoseconds (uses bpf_ktime_get_ns)
  • cpu() - return current CPU number (uses bpf_get_smp_processor_id)
  • pid_tgid() - return caller tgid << 32 | pid (uses bpf_get_current_pid_tgid)
  • uid_gid() - return caller gid << 32 | uid (uses bpf_get_current_uid_gid)
  • comm(var) - write current process name (uses bpf_get_current_comm)
  • perf_submit(map, var) - submit variable to perf event array BPF map
  • stack_id(map, flags) - return stack trace identifier from stack trace BPF map
  • load_bytes(off, var) - helper for direct packet access with skb_load_bytes()

Current state

  • Not all LuaJIT bytecode opcodes are supported (notable mentions below)
  • Closures UCLO will probably never be supported, although you can use upvalues inside compiled function.
  • Type narrowing is opportunistic. Numbers are 64-bit by default, but 64-bit immediate loads are not supported (e.g. local x = map[ffi.cast('uint64_t', 1000)])
  • Tail calls CALLT, and iterators ITERI are NYI (as of now)
  • Arbitrary ctype is supported both for map keys and values
  • Basic optimisations like: constant propagation, partial DCE, liveness analysis and speculative register allocation are implement, but there's no control flow analysis yet. This means the compiler has the visibility when things are used and dead-stores occur, but there's no rewriter pass to eliminate them.
  • No register sub-allocations, no aggressive use of caller-saved R1-5, no aggressive narrowing (this would require variable range assertions and variable relationships)
  • Slices with not 1/2/4/8 length are NYI (requires allocating a memory on stack and using pointer type)