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bpftool.29166
libbpf-Fix-BTF-to-C-converter-s-padding-logic.p...
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File libbpf-Fix-BTF-to-C-converter-s-padding-logic.patch of Package bpftool.29166
From: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@kernel.org> Date: Mon, 12 Dec 2022 13:15:04 -0800 Subject: libbpf: Fix BTF-to-C converter's padding logic MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Patch-mainline: v6.3-rc1 Git-commit: ea2ce1ba99aa6a60c8d8a706e3abadf3de372163 References: jsc#PED-3924 X-Info: missing context from d503f1176b14 "selftests/bpf: Test btf dump for struct with padding only fields" X-Info: drop selftests changes Turns out that btf_dump API doesn't handle a bunch of tricky corner cases, as reported by Per, and further discovered using his testing Python script ([0]). This patch revamps btf_dump's padding logic significantly, making it more correct and also avoiding unnecessary explicit padding, where compiler would pad naturally. This overall topic turned out to be very tricky and subtle, there are lots of subtle corner cases. The comments in the code tries to give some clues, but comments themselves are supposed to be paired with good understanding of C alignment and padding rules. Plus some experimentation to figure out subtle things like whether `long :0;` means that struct is now forced to be long-aligned (no, it's not, turns out). Anyways, Per's script, while not completely correct in some known situations, doesn't show any obvious cases where this logic breaks, so this is a nice improvement over the previous state of this logic. Some selftests had to be adjusted to accommodate better use of natural alignment rules, eliminating some unnecessary padding, or changing it to `type: 0;` alignment markers. Note also that for when we are in between bitfields, we emit explicit bit size, while otherwise we use `: 0`, this feels much more natural in practice. Next patch will add few more test cases, found through randomized Per's script. [0] https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/85f83c333f5355c8ac026f835b18d15060725fcb.camel@ericsson.com/ Reported-by: Per Sundström XP <per.xp.sundstrom@ericsson.com> Signed-off-by: Andrii Nakryiko <andrii@kernel.org> Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/bpf/20221212211505.558851-6-andrii@kernel.org Acked-by: Shung-Hsi Yu <shung-hsi.yu@suse.com> --- tools/lib/bpf/btf_dump.c | 171 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------- 1 file changed, 124 insertions(+), 47 deletions(-) --- a/tools/lib/bpf/btf_dump.c +++ b/tools/lib/bpf/btf_dump.c @@ -779,6 +779,25 @@ static void btf_dump_emit_type(struct bt } } +static int btf_natural_align_of(const struct btf *btf, __u32 id) +{ + const struct btf_type *t = btf__type_by_id(btf, id); + int i, align, vlen; + const struct btf_member *m; + + if (!btf_is_composite(t)) + return btf__align_of(btf, id); + + align = 1; + m = btf_members(t); + vlen = btf_vlen(t); + for (i = 0; i < vlen; i++, m++) { + align = max(align, btf__align_of(btf, m->type)); + } + + return align; +} + static bool btf_is_struct_packed(const struct btf *btf, __u32 id, const struct btf_type *t) { @@ -786,16 +805,16 @@ static bool btf_is_struct_packed(const s int align, i, bit_sz; __u16 vlen; - align = btf__align_of(btf, id); - /* size of a non-packed struct has to be a multiple of its alignment*/ - if (align && t->size % align) + align = btf_natural_align_of(btf, id); + /* size of a non-packed struct has to be a multiple of its alignment */ + if (align && (t->size % align) != 0) return true; m = btf_members(t); vlen = btf_vlen(t); /* all non-bitfield fields have to be naturally aligned */ for (i = 0; i < vlen; i++, m++) { - align = btf__align_of(btf, m->type); + align = btf_natural_align_of(btf, m->type); bit_sz = btf_member_bitfield_size(t, i); if (align && bit_sz == 0 && m->offset % (8 * align) != 0) return true; @@ -808,44 +827,97 @@ static bool btf_is_struct_packed(const s return false; } -static int chip_away_bits(int total, int at_most) -{ - return total % at_most ? : at_most; -} - static void btf_dump_emit_bit_padding(const struct btf_dump *d, - int cur_off, int m_off, int m_bit_sz, - int align, int lvl) + int cur_off, int next_off, int next_align, + bool in_bitfield, int lvl) { - int off_diff = m_off - cur_off; - int ptr_bits = d->ptr_sz * 8; + const struct { + const char *name; + int bits; + } pads[] = { + {"long", d->ptr_sz * 8}, {"int", 32}, {"short", 16}, {"char", 8} + }; + int new_off, pad_bits, bits, i; + const char *pad_type; + + if (cur_off >= next_off) + return; /* no gap */ + + /* For filling out padding we want to take advantage of + * natural alignment rules to minimize unnecessary explicit + * padding. First, we find the largest type (among long, int, + * short, or char) that can be used to force naturally aligned + * boundary. Once determined, we'll use such type to fill in + * the remaining padding gap. In some cases we can rely on + * compiler filling some gaps, but sometimes we need to force + * alignment to close natural alignment with markers like + * `long: 0` (this is always the case for bitfields). Note + * that even if struct itself has, let's say 4-byte alignment + * (i.e., it only uses up to int-aligned types), using `long: + * X;` explicit padding doesn't actually change struct's + * overall alignment requirements, but compiler does take into + * account that type's (long, in this example) natural + * alignment requirements when adding implicit padding. We use + * this fact heavily and don't worry about ruining correct + * struct alignment requirement. + */ + for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE(pads); i++) { + pad_bits = pads[i].bits; + pad_type = pads[i].name; + + new_off = roundup(cur_off, pad_bits); + if (new_off <= next_off) + break; + } - if (off_diff <= 0) - /* no gap */ - return; - if (m_bit_sz == 0 && off_diff < align * 8) - /* natural padding will take care of a gap */ - return; - - while (off_diff > 0) { - const char *pad_type; - int pad_bits; - - if (ptr_bits > 32 && off_diff > 32) { - pad_type = "long"; - pad_bits = chip_away_bits(off_diff, ptr_bits); - } else if (off_diff > 16) { - pad_type = "int"; - pad_bits = chip_away_bits(off_diff, 32); - } else if (off_diff > 8) { - pad_type = "short"; - pad_bits = chip_away_bits(off_diff, 16); - } else { - pad_type = "char"; - pad_bits = chip_away_bits(off_diff, 8); + if (new_off > cur_off && new_off <= next_off) { + /* We need explicit `<type>: 0` aligning mark if next + * field is right on alignment offset and its + * alignment requirement is less strict than <type>'s + * alignment (so compiler won't naturally align to the + * offset we expect), or if subsequent `<type>: X`, + * will actually completely fit in the remaining hole, + * making compiler basically ignore `<type>: X` + * completely. + */ + if (in_bitfield || + (new_off == next_off && roundup(cur_off, next_align * 8) != new_off) || + (new_off != next_off && next_off - new_off <= new_off - cur_off)) + /* but for bitfields we'll emit explicit bit count */ + btf_dump_printf(d, "\n%s%s: %d;", pfx(lvl), pad_type, + in_bitfield ? new_off - cur_off : 0); + cur_off = new_off; + } + + /* Now we know we start at naturally aligned offset for a chosen + * padding type (long, int, short, or char), and so the rest is just + * a straightforward filling of remaining padding gap with full + * `<type>: sizeof(<type>);` markers, except for the last one, which + * might need smaller than sizeof(<type>) padding. + */ + while (cur_off != next_off) { + bits = min(next_off - cur_off, pad_bits); + if (bits == pad_bits) { + btf_dump_printf(d, "\n%s%s: %d;", pfx(lvl), pad_type, pad_bits); + cur_off += bits; + continue; + } + /* For the remainder padding that doesn't cover entire + * pad_type bit length, we pick the smallest necessary type. + * This is pure aesthetics, we could have just used `long`, + * but having smallest necessary one communicates better the + * scale of the padding gap. + */ + for (i = ARRAY_SIZE(pads) - 1; i >= 0; i--) { + pad_type = pads[i].name; + pad_bits = pads[i].bits; + if (pad_bits < bits) + continue; + + btf_dump_printf(d, "\n%s%s: %d;", pfx(lvl), pad_type, bits); + cur_off += bits; + break; } - btf_dump_printf(d, "\n%s%s: %d;", pfx(lvl), pad_type, pad_bits); - off_diff -= pad_bits; } } @@ -864,9 +936,11 @@ static void btf_dump_emit_struct_def(str { const struct btf_member *m = btf_members(t); bool is_struct = btf_is_struct(t); - int align, i, packed, off = 0; + bool packed, prev_bitfield = false; + int align, i, off = 0; __u16 vlen = btf_vlen(t); + align = btf__align_of(d->btf, id); packed = is_struct ? btf_is_struct_packed(d->btf, id, t) : 0; btf_dump_printf(d, "%s%s%s {", @@ -876,33 +950,36 @@ static void btf_dump_emit_struct_def(str for (i = 0; i < vlen; i++, m++) { const char *fname; - int m_off, m_sz; + int m_off, m_sz, m_align; + bool in_bitfield; fname = btf_name_of(d, m->name_off); m_sz = btf_member_bitfield_size(t, i); m_off = btf_member_bit_offset(t, i); - align = packed ? 1 : btf__align_of(d->btf, m->type); + m_align = packed ? 1 : btf__align_of(d->btf, m->type); - btf_dump_emit_bit_padding(d, off, m_off, m_sz, align, lvl + 1); + in_bitfield = prev_bitfield && m_sz != 0; + + btf_dump_emit_bit_padding(d, off, m_off, m_align, in_bitfield, lvl + 1); btf_dump_printf(d, "\n%s", pfx(lvl + 1)); btf_dump_emit_type_decl(d, m->type, fname, lvl + 1); if (m_sz) { btf_dump_printf(d, ": %d", m_sz); off = m_off + m_sz; + prev_bitfield = true; } else { m_sz = max((__s64)0, btf__resolve_size(d->btf, m->type)); off = m_off + m_sz * 8; + prev_bitfield = false; } + btf_dump_printf(d, ";"); } /* pad at the end, if necessary */ - if (is_struct) { - align = packed ? 1 : btf__align_of(d->btf, id); - btf_dump_emit_bit_padding(d, off, t->size * 8, 0, align, - lvl + 1); - } + if (is_struct) + btf_dump_emit_bit_padding(d, off, t->size * 8, align, false, lvl + 1); if (vlen) btf_dump_printf(d, "\n");
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