IP address types are available in `core`, so they can be used also in
eBPF programs. This change adds support of these types in aya-log.
* Add implementation of `WriteTuBuf` to these types.
* Support these types in `Ipv4Formatter` and `Ipv6Formatter`.
* Support them with `DisplayHint::Ip`.
* Add support for formatting `[u8; 4]`, to be able to handle
`Ipv4Addr::octets`.
warning: doc list item missing indentation
--> test/integration-test/build.rs:20:5
|
20 | /// prevent their use for the time being.
| ^
|
= help: if this is supposed to be its own paragraph, add a blank line
= help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#doc_lazy_continuation
= note: `#[warn(clippy::doc_lazy_continuation)]` on by default
help: indent this line
|
20 | /// prevent their use for the time being.
| ++
And BpfLoader to EbpfLoader.
This also adds type aliases to preserve the use of the old names, making
updating to a new Aya release less of a burden. These aliases are marked
as deprecated since we'll likely remove them in a later release.
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dave@dtucker.co.uk>
This moves the path dependencies back into the per-crate Cargo.toml.
It is required such that the release tooling can correctly calculate
which version constraints require changing when we perform a release.
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dave@dtucker.co.uk>
This allows for inheritance of common fields from the workspace root.
The following fields have been made common:
- authors
- license
- repository
- homepage
- edition
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dave@dtucker.co.uk>
The cargo::warning seems to ignore output after a newline.
Iterate over the entire rendered message and print it line-by-line.
Signed-off-by: Dave Tucker <dave@dtucker.co.uk>
When comparing `local_spec` with `target_spec` for enum relocations,
we can encounter a situation when a matchinng variant in a candidate
spec doesn't exist.
Before this change, such case wasn't handled explicitly, therefore
resulted in returning currently constructed `target_spec` at the
end. The problem is that such `target_spec` was, due to lack of
match, incomplete. It didn't contain any `accessors` nor `parts`.
Later usage of such incomplete `target_spec` was leading to panics,
since the code operating on enums' `target_spec` expects at least
one `accessor` to be available.
Fixes#868
Implement pinning for perf_event_array and async_perf_event_array.
Additionally make the core MapData.pin method operate on a reference
rather than a mutable reference.
Signed-off-by: astoycos <astoycos@redhat.com>
This implements the userspace binding for RingBuf.
Instead of streaming the samples as heap buffers, the process_ring
function takes a callback to which we pass the event's byte region,
roughly following [libbpf]'s API design. This avoids a copy and allows
marking the consumer pointer in a timely manner.
[libbpf]: https://github.com/libbpf/libbpf/blob/master/src/ringbuf.c
Additionally, integration tests are added to demonstrate the usage
of the new APIs and to ensure that they work end-to-end.
Co-authored-by: William Findlay <william@williamfindlay.com>
Co-authored-by: Tatsuyuki Ishi <ishitatsuyuki@gmail.com>
Add coverage to the new public api's for
map pinning (pin and unpin) which can be called
on the generic aya::Map type OR explit map types.
Additionally add coverage for the new libbpf
LIBBPF_PIN_BY_NAME behavior.
Signed-off-by: astoycos <astoycos@redhat.com>
Time since boot is defined as the UNIX_EPOCH plus the duration
since boot. which is realtime - boottime NOT boottime - realtime.
Add a integration test to ensure this doesn't happen again.
Signed-off-by: astoycos <astoycos@redhat.com>
`MapData::fd` is now a `MapFd`. This means that `MapData` now closes the
file descriptor on drop. In the future we might consider making `MapFd`
hold a `BorrowedFd` but this requires API design work due to overlapping
borrows.
Since `SockMapFd` is no longer `Copy`, attach methods to take it by
reference to allow callers to use it multiple times as they are
accustomed to doing.
`SockMapFd` implements `try_clone`. `MapFd` and `SockMapFd` are now
returned by reference to allow callers to avoid file descriptor cloning
when desired.
This is an API breaking change.
Updates #612.
The primary driver of change here is that `MapData::create` is now a
factory function that returns `Result<Self, _>` rather than mutating
`&mut self`. The remaining changes are consequences of that change, the
most notable of which is the removal of several errors which are no
longer possible.
- Add helper methods to get useful information from the ProgramInfo
object which is returned by the `loaded_programs()` API. Specifically
this code mirrors the `bpftool prog` command in terms of useful fields.
- Add a new API macro to each aya `Program` type to allow us to fetch
its accompanying `ProgramInfo` metadata after its been loaded.
- Add a new ProgramInfo constructor that builds a new instance using
a raw fd.
- Add a smoke test for the loaded_programs() API as well as
all the relevant methods on the ProgramInfo type.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Stoycos <astoycos@redhat.com>
Some of these functions fail to compile when not inlined, so we should
be explicit.
Before deciding on this approach I tried various ways of making all
these functions #[inline(never)] to save instructions but I ran into
blockers:
- These functions currently return Result, which is a structure. This is
not permitted in BPF.
- I tried inventing a newtype that is a #[repr(transparent)] wrapper of
u16, and having these functions return that; however it seems that
even if the object code is legal, the verifier will reject such
functions because the BTF (if present, and it was in my local
experiments) would indicate that the return is a structure.
- I tried having these functions return a plain u16 where 0 means error,
but the verifier still rejected the BTF because the receiver (even if
made into &self) is considered a structure, and forbidden.
We can eventually overcome these problems by "lying" in our BTF once
support for it matures in the bpf-linker repo (e.g. Option<NonZeroU16>
should be perfectly legal as it is guaranteed to be word-sized), but we
aren't there yet, and this is the safest thing we can do for now.
The struct_flavors test previously expected the same thing with and
without relocations. It now expects different values.
Also rename an enum variant "u64" to "S64". This was a typo. Turns out
that U32 is a type that exists in kernel headers, so all enum values are
suffixed with "_VAL".
Remove stdlib.h and the call to exit(). This alone makes the test fail
with a poisoned relocation. Bringing over the map definition makes the
test work again.