Working with aya in vscode will currently show a number of warnings
along the lines of:
```
found duplicate lang item `panic_impl`
the lang item is first defined in crate `std` (which `aya` depends on)
...
second definition in the local crate (`bpf_probe_read`)
```
This comes from feature unification.
integration-test requires the integration-common user feature, which
requires aya, which in turn brings in std.
For this same reason we avoid running clippy across the whole workspace.
We can avoid this issue by using the panic handler from the panic_halt
crate, which implements the same loop {} panic handler we use today.
However, it seems rustc is happy to conditionally link the panic handler
from an external crate without issuing warnings.
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dave@dtucker.co.uk>
This makes a few changes to the way that Aya reads the ELF object
files.
1. To find programs in a section, we use the symbols table. This allows
for cases where multiple programs could appear in the same section.
2. When parsing our ELF file we build symbols_by_section_index as an
optimization as we use it for legacy maps, BTF maps and now programs.
As a result of theses changes the "NAME" used in `bpf.prog_mut("NAME")`
is now ALWAYS the same as the function name in the eBPF code, making the
user experience more consistent.
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dave@dtucker.co.uk>
Replace all `assert!(matches!(..))` with `assert_matches!(..)`.
Remove the now-unused build-integration-test xtask command whose logic
doesn't match that of the build-and-run command.
This commit replaces the existing RTF test runner with a simple rust
binary package called - integration-test.
integration-test depends on integration-ebpf, which contains test eBPF
code written in Rust and C. `cargo xtask build-integration-test-ebpf`
can be used to build this code and supress rust-analyzer warnings. It
does require `bpf-linker`, but that is highly likely to be available to
developers of Aya. It also requires a checkout of `libbpf` to extract
headers like bpf-helpers.h.
Since everything is compiled into a single binary, it can be run
be run locally using `cargo xtask integration-test` or remotely using
`./run.sh` which re-uses the bash script from the old test framework
to spawn a VM in which to run the tests.
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dave@dtucker.co.uk>