On Thu, 13 Sep 2018 at 14:02, Alexei Starovoitov
<alexei.starovoi...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Sep 13, 2018 at 01:55:01PM -0700, Joe Stringer wrote:
> > On Thu, 13 Sep 2018 at 12:06, Alexei Starovoitov
> > <alexei.starovoi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > >
> > > On Wed, Sep 12, 2018 at 5:06 PM, Alexei Starovoitov
> > > <alexei.starovoi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > > On Tue, Sep 11, 2018 at 05:36:36PM -0700, Joe Stringer wrote:
> > > >> This patch adds new BPF helper functions, bpf_sk_lookup_tcp() and
> > > >> bpf_sk_lookup_udp() which allows BPF programs to find out if there is a
> > > >> socket listening on this host, and returns a socket pointer which the
> > > >> BPF program can then access to determine, for instance, whether to
> > > >> forward or drop traffic. bpf_sk_lookup_xxx() may take a reference on 
> > > >> the
> > > >> socket, so when a BPF program makes use of this function, it must
> > > >> subsequently pass the returned pointer into the newly added 
> > > >> sk_release()
> > > >> to return the reference.
> > > >>
> > > >> By way of example, the following pseudocode would filter inbound
> > > >> connections at XDP if there is no corresponding service listening for
> > > >> the traffic:
> > > >>
> > > >>   struct bpf_sock_tuple tuple;
> > > >>   struct bpf_sock_ops *sk;
> > > >>
> > > >>   populate_tuple(ctx, &tuple); // Extract the 5tuple from the packet
> > > >>   sk = bpf_sk_lookup_tcp(ctx, &tuple, sizeof tuple, netns, 0);
> > > > ...
> > > >> +struct bpf_sock_tuple {
> > > >> +     union {
> > > >> +             __be32 ipv6[4];
> > > >> +             __be32 ipv4;
> > > >> +     } saddr;
> > > >> +     union {
> > > >> +             __be32 ipv6[4];
> > > >> +             __be32 ipv4;
> > > >> +     } daddr;
> > > >> +     __be16 sport;
> > > >> +     __be16 dport;
> > > >> +     __u8 family;
> > > >> +};
> > > >
> > > > since we can pass ptr_to_packet into map lookup and other helpers now,
> > > > can you move 'family' out of bpf_sock_tuple and combine with netns_id 
> > > > arg?
> > > > then progs wouldn't need to copy bytes from the packet into tuple
> > > > to do a lookup.
> >
> > If I follow, you're proposing that users should be able to pass a
> > pointer to the source address field of the L3 header, and assuming
> > that the L3 header ends with saddr+daddr (no options/extheaders), and
> > is immediately followed by the sport/dport then a packet pointer
> > should work for performing socket lookup. Then it is up to the BPF
> > program writer to ensure that this is the case, or otherwise fall back
> > to populating a copy of the sock tuple on the stack.
>
> yep.
>
> > > have been thinking more about it.
> > > since only ipv4 and ipv6 supported may be use size of bpf_sock_tuple
> > > to infer family inside the helper, so it doesn't need to be passed 
> > > explicitly?
> >
> > Let me make sure I understand the proposal here.
> >
> > The current structure and function prototypes are:
> >
> > struct bpf_sock_tuple {
> >       union {
> >               __be32 ipv6[4];
> >               __be32 ipv4;
> >       } saddr;
> >       union {
> >               __be32 ipv6[4];
> >               __be32 ipv4;
> >       } daddr;
> >       __be16 sport;
> >       __be16 dport;
> >       __u8 family;
> > };
> ...
> > You're proposing something like:
> >
> > struct bpf_sock_tuple4 {
> >       __be32 saddr;
> >       __be32 daddr;
> >       __be16 sport;
> >       __be16 dport;
> >       __u8 family;
> > };
> >
> > struct bpf_sock_tuple6 {
> >       __be32 saddr[4];
> >       __be32 daddr[4];
> >       __be16 sport;
> >       __be16 dport;
> >       __u8 family;
> > };
>
> I think the split is unnecessary.
> I'm proposing:
> struct bpf_sock_tuple {
>       union {
>               __be32 ipv6[4];
>               __be32 ipv4;
>       } saddr;
>       union {
>               __be32 ipv6[4];
>               __be32 ipv4;
>       } daddr;
>       __be16 sport;
>       __be16 dport;
> };
>
> that points directly into the packet (when ipv4 options are not there)
> and bpf_sk_lookup_tcp() uses 'size' argument to figure out ipv4/ipv6 family.

Needs to be subtly different, the 'sport'/'dport' offset would be
wrong in the IPv4 case otherwise:

$ cat foo.c
#include <linux/types.h>

struct bpf_sock_tuple {
     union {
             __be32 ipv6[4];
             __be32 ipv4;
     } saddr;
     union {
             __be32 ipv6[4];
             __be32 ipv4;
     } daddr;
     __be16 sport;
     __be16 dport;
};

int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
       struct bpf_sock_tuple tuple;

       return 0;
}
$ gcc -g ./foo.c -o foo.o
$ pahole foo.o
struct bpf_sock_tuple {
       union {
               __be32             ipv6[4];              /*          16 */
               __be32             ipv4;                 /*           4 */
       } saddr;                                         /*     0    16 */
       union {
               __be32             ipv6[4];              /*          16 */
               __be32             ipv4;                 /*           4 */
       } daddr;                                         /*    16    16 */
       __be16                     sport;                /*    32     2 */
       __be16                     dport;                /*    34     2 */

       /* size: 36, cachelines: 1, members: 4 */
       /* last cacheline: 36 bytes */
};

---

We could take my definitions above and do the following if we want to
try to type the helper definition:

union bpf_sock_tuple {
       struct bpf_sock_tuple4 t4;
       struct bpf_sock_tuple6 t6;
};

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