Implement `PerfEventConfig::Breakpoint`, allowing users to attach
hardware breakpoints. Generate `HW_BREAKPOINT_*` and `struct
bpf_perf_event_data` in support of this feature and update the type of
`PerfEventContext` accordingly.
Add a test exercising R, W, RW, and X breakpoints. Note that R
breakpoints are unsupported on x86, and this is asserted in the test.
Extend the VM integration test harness and supporting infrastructure
(e.g. `download_kernel_images.sh`) to download kernel debug packages and
mount `System.map` in initramfs. This is needed (at least) on the aarch
6.1 Debian kernel which was not compiled with `CONFIG_KALLSYMS_ALL=y`
for some reason, and the locations of globals are not available in
kallsyms. To attach breakpoints to these symbols in the test pipeline,
we need to read them from System.map and apply the KASLR offset to get
their real address. The `System.map` file is not provided in the kernel
package by default, so we need to extract it from the corresponding
debug package. The KASLR offset is computed using `gunzip` which appears
in kallsyms on all Debian kernels tested.
Co-authored-by: Tamir Duberstein <tamird@gmail.com>
The traits `FromBtfArgument`, `FromRawTracepointArgs`, `FromPtRegs` are
all fancy ways of saying `Argument` - so replace these traits with it.
This also removes the use of `bpf_probe_read` which was introduced in
05c1586202 because I can't reproduce the
need for it.
Before this change, Aya supported only legacy BPF map definitions, which
are instances of the `bpf_map_def` struct and end up in the `maps` ELF
section.
This change introduces a BTF map definition for arrays, with custom
structs indicating the metadata of the map, which end up in the `.maps`
section.
Co-authored-by: Tamir Duberstein <tamird@gmail.com>
Change FromRawTracepointArgs::arg to return T rather than *const T which
seems to have been returning a dangling pointer.
Arguably this is not strictly necessary; edition 2024 seems to be
focused on increased strictness around unsafe code which doesn't unlock
new functionality for our users. That said, this work revealed an
apparent bug (see above) that we wouldn't otherwise catch due to
allow-by-default lints.
This change exposes the ifindex field from the underlying xdp_md
data structure to the XdpContext in Aya. The ifindex represents the
unique OS-provided index for a network interface.
Fixes#1140
Provide an `arg()` method in `RawTracepointArgs` wrapper of
`bpf_raw_tracepoint_args` and also in `RawTracepointContext`, so
it's directly available in raw tracepoint programs.
The methods and traits implemented here are unsafe. There is no
way to reliably check the number of available arguments, so
requesting a non-existing one leads to undefined behavior.
The const-assert crate doesn't even compile with stable rust, so we
shouldn't depend on it. Instead we replicate its functionality behind
cfg(unstable) which is set at build time based on the toolchain in use.
This API doesn't make sense as the max_entries needs to be set to the
number of online CPUs by the loader.
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dave@dtucker.co.uk>