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BPF-HELPERS(7)             Linux Programmer's Manual            BPF-HELPERS(7)

NAME
       BPF-HELPERS - list of eBPF helper functions

DESCRIPTION
       The  extended  Berkeley Packet Filter (eBPF) subsystem consists in pro-
       grams written in a pseudo-assembly language, then attached  to  one  of
       the  several  kernel hooks and run in reaction of specific events. This
       framework differs from the older, "classic" BPF (or "cBPF") in  several
       aspects,  one  of  them being the ability to call special functions (or
       "helpers") from within a program.  These functions are restricted to  a
       white-list of helpers defined in the kernel.

       These helpers are used by eBPF programs to interact with the system, or
       with the context in which they work. For instance, they can be used  to
       print  debugging messages, to get the time since the system was booted,
       to interact with eBPF maps, or to  manipulate  network  packets.  Since
       there  are  several eBPF program types, and that they do not run in the
       same context, each program  type  can  only  call  a  subset  of  those
       helpers.

       Due  to  eBPF  conventions,  a helper can not have more than five argu-
       ments.

       Internally, eBPF programs call directly into the compiled helper  func-
       tions  without  requiring  any foreign-function interface. As a result,
       calling helpers introduces no overhead, thus offering excellent perfor-
       mance.

       This  document is an attempt to list and document the helpers available
       to eBPF developers. They are sorted by chronological order (the  oldest
       helpers in the kernel at the top).

HELPERS
       void *bpf_map_lookup_elem(struct bpf_map *map, const void *key)

              Description
                     Perform a lookup in map for an entry associated to key.

              Return Map  value  associated  to  key,  or NULL if no entry was
                     found.

       int bpf_map_update_elem(struct bpf_map *map,  const  void  *key,  const
       void *value, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Add or update the value of the entry associated to key in
                     map with value. flags is one of:

                     BPF_NOEXIST
                            The entry for key must not exist in the map.

                     BPF_EXIST
                            The entry for key must already exist in the map.

                     BPF_ANY
                            No condition on the existence  of  the  entry  for
                            key.

                     Flag  value  BPF_NOEXIST cannot be used for maps of types
                     BPF_MAP_TYPE_ARRAY or BPF_MAP_TYPE_PERCPU_ARRAY  (all el-
                     ements always exist), the helper would return an error.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_map_delete_elem(struct bpf_map *map, const void *key)

              Description
                     Delete entry with key from map.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_probe_read(void *dst, u32 size, const void *src)

              Description
                     For  tracing  programs, safely attempt to read size bytes
                     from address src and store the data in dst.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       u64 bpf_ktime_get_ns(void)

              Description
                     Return the time elapsed since system  boot,  in  nanosec-
                     onds.

              Return Current ktime.

       int bpf_trace_printk(const char *fmt, u32 fmt_size, ...)

              Description
                     This  helper is a "printk()-like" facility for debugging.
                     It prints a  message  defined  by  format  fmt  (of  size
                     fmt_size)  to  file  /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace from
                     DebugFS, if available. It can take up to three additional
                     u64  arguments  (as  an eBPF helpers, the total number of
                     arguments is limited to five).

                     Each time the helper is called, it appends a line to  the
                     trace.  Lines are discarded while /sys/kernel/debug/trac-
                     ing/trace   is    open,    use    /sys/kernel/debug/trac-
                     ing/trace_pipe to avoid this.  The format of the trace is
                     customizable, and the exact output one will  get  depends
                     on the options set in /sys/kernel/debug/tracing/trace_op-
                     tions (see also the README file  under  the  same  direc-
                     tory). However, it usually defaults to something like:

                        telnet-470   [001] .N.. 419421.045894: 0x00000001: <formatted msg>

                     In the above:

                        o telnet is the name of the current task.

                        o 470 is the PID of the current task.

                        o 001 is the CPU number on which the task is running.

                        o In  .N..,  each character refers to a set of options
                          (whether  irqs  are  enabled,  scheduling   options,
                          whether  hard/softirqs  are  running,  level of pre-
                          empt_disabled   respectively).    N    means    that
                          TIF_NEED_RESCHED and PREEMPT_NEED_RESCHED are set.

                        o 419421.045894 is a timestamp.

                        o 0x00000001  is  a fake value used by BPF for the in-
                          struction pointer register.

                        o <formatted msg> is the message formatted with fmt.

                     The conversion specifiers supported by fmt  are  similar,
                     but  more limited than for printk(). They are %d, %i, %u,
                     %x, %ld, %li, %lu, %lx, %lld, %lli, %llu, %llx,  %p,  %s.
                     No modifier (size of field, padding with zeroes, etc.) is
                     available, and the helper will return -EINVAL (but  print
                     nothing) if it encounters an unknown specifier.

                     Also,  note  that  bpf_trace_printk() is slow, and should
                     only be used for debugging purposes. For this  reason,  a
                     notice bloc (spanning several lines) is printed to kernel
                     logs and states that the helper should not be  used  "for
                     production  use"  the  first time this helper is used (or
                     more precisely, when  trace_printk()  buffers  are  allo-
                     cated).  For  passing  values  to user space, perf events
                     should be preferred.

              Return The number of bytes written to the buffer, or a  negative
                     error in case of failure.

       u32 bpf_get_prandom_u32(void)

              Description
                     Get a pseudo-random number.

                     From  a  security point of view, this helper uses its own
                     pseudo-random internal state, and cannot be used to infer
                     the  seed  of  other random functions in the kernel. How-
                     ever, it is essential to note that the generator used  by
                     the helper is not cryptographically secure.

              Return A random 32-bit unsigned value.

       u32 bpf_get_smp_processor_id(void)

              Description
                     Get  the  SMP  (symmetric  multiprocessing) processor id.
                     Note that all  programs  run  with  preemption  disabled,
                     which  means  that  the SMP processor id is stable during
                     all the execution of the program.

              Return The SMP id of the processor running the program.

       int bpf_skb_store_bytes(struct sk_buff *skb,  u32  offset,  const  void
       *from, u32 len, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Store len bytes from address from into the packet associ-
                     ated to skb,  at  offset.  flags  are  a  combination  of
                     BPF_F_RECOMPUTE_CSUM  (automatically recompute the check-
                     sum for the packet after storing the bytes) and BPF_F_IN-
                     VALIDATE_HASH (set skb->hash, skb->swhash and skb->l4hash
                     to 0).

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_l3_csum_replace(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 offset, u64 from,  u64
       to, u64 size)

              Description
                     Recompute  the  layer 3 (e.g. IP) checksum for the packet
                     associated to skb. Computation  is  incremental,  so  the
                     helper  must  know  the  former value of the header field
                     that was modified (from), the new  value  of  this  field
                     (to),  and  the  number of bytes (2 or 4) for this field,
                     stored in size.  Alternatively, it is possible  to  store
                     the difference between the previous and the new values of
                     the header field in to, by setting from and  size  to  0.
                     For both methods, offset indicates the location of the IP
                     checksum within the packet.

                     This helper works in  combination  with  bpf_csum_diff(),
                     which  does  not update the checksum in-place, but offers
                     more flexibility and can handle sizes larger than 2 or  4
                     for the checksum to update.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all  checks
                     on  pointers  previously done by the verifier are invali-
                     dated and must be performed again, if the helper is  used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int  bpf_l4_csum_replace(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 offset, u64 from, u64
       to, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Recompute the layer 4 (e.g. TCP, UDP  or  ICMP)  checksum
                     for  the  packet associated to skb. Computation is incre-
                     mental, so the helper must know the former value  of  the
                     header  field  that was modified (from), the new value of
                     this field (to), and the number of bytes  (2  or  4)  for
                     this  field, stored on the lowest four bits of flags. Al-
                     ternatively, it is possible to store the  difference  be-
                     tween the previous and the new values of the header field
                     in to, by setting from and the four lowest bits of  flags
                     to  0. For both methods, offset indicates the location of
                     the IP checksum within the packet.  In  addition  to  the
                     size of the field, flags can be added (bitwise OR) actual
                     flags. With BPF_F_MARK_MANGLED_0, a null checksum is left
                     untouched  (unless  BPF_F_MARK_ENFORCE is added as well),
                     and for updates resulting in a null checksum the value is
                     set  to CSUM_MANGLED_0 instead. Flag BPF_F_PSEUDO_HDR in-
                     dicates  the  checksum  is  to  be  computed  against   a
                     pseudo-header.

                     This  helper  works  in combination with bpf_csum_diff(),
                     which does not update the checksum in-place,  but  offers
                     more  flexibility and can handle sizes larger than 2 or 4
                     for the checksum to update.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_tail_call(void *ctx, struct bpf_map *prog_array_map, u32 index)

              Description
                     This special helper is used to trigger a "tail call",  or
                     in  other  words,  to jump into another eBPF program. The
                     same stack frame is used (but values on stack and in reg-
                     isters  for the caller are not accessible to the callee).
                     This mechanism allows for program  chaining,  either  for
                     raising  the  maximum  number  of available eBPF instruc-
                     tions,  or  to  execute  given  programs  in  conditional
                     blocks.  For security reasons, there is an upper limit to
                     the number of successive tail  calls  that  can  be  per-
                     formed.

                     Upon  call  of  this helper, the program attempts to jump
                     into a program referenced  at  index  index  in  prog_ar-
                     ray_map,  a  special map of type BPF_MAP_TYPE_PROG_ARRAY,
                     and passes ctx, a pointer to the context.

                     If the call succeeds, the  kernel  immediately  runs  the
                     first instruction of the new program. This is not a func-
                     tion call, and it never returns to the previous  program.
                     If the call fails, then the helper has no effect, and the
                     caller continues to run its  subsequent  instructions.  A
                     call  can  fail  if  the destination program for the jump
                     does not exist (i.e. index is superior to the  number  of
                     entries  in  prog_array_map), or if the maximum number of
                     tail calls has been reached for this chain  of  programs.
                     This  limit  is  defined  in  the  kernel  by  the  macro
                     MAX_TAIL_CALL_CNT (not accessible to user  space),  which
                     is currently set to 32.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_clone_redirect(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 ifindex, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Clone  and  redirect  the packet associated to skb to an-
                     other net device  of  index  ifindex.  Both  ingress  and
                     egress  interfaces  can  be  used  for  redirection.  The
                     BPF_F_INGRESS value in flags is used to make the distinc-
                     tion  (ingress  path  is selected if the flag is present,
                     egress path otherwise).  This is the only flag  supported
                     for now.

                     In comparison with bpf_redirect() helper, bpf_clone_redi-
                     rect() has the associated cost of duplicating the  packet
                     buffer, but this can be executed out of the eBPF program.
                     Conversely, bpf_redirect() is more efficient, but  it  is
                     handled through an action code where the redirection hap-
                     pens only after the eBPF program has returned.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       u64 bpf_get_current_pid_tgid(void)

              Return A 64-bit integer containing the current tgid and pid, and
                     created   as   such:  current_task->tgid  <<  32  |  cur-
                     rent_task->pid.

       u64 bpf_get_current_uid_gid(void)

              Return A 64-bit integer containing the current GID and UID,  and
                     created as such: current_gid << 32 | current_uid.

       int bpf_get_current_comm(char *buf, u32 size_of_buf)

              Description
                     Copy  the  comm attribute of the current task into buf of
                     size_of_buf. The comm attribute contains the name of  the
                     executable (excluding the path) for the current task. The
                     size_of_buf must be strictly positive.  On  success,  the
                     helper  makes  sure  that  the  buf is NUL-terminated. On
                     failure, it is filled with zeroes.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       u32 bpf_get_cgroup_classid(struct sk_buff *skb)

              Description
                     Retrieve the classid for the current task, i.e.  for  the
                     net_cls cgroup to which skb belongs.

                     This  helper  can  be  used on TC egress path, but not on
                     ingress.

                     The net_cls cgroup provides an interface to  tag  network
                     packets based on a user-provided identifier for all traf-
                     fic coming  from  the  tasks  belonging  to  the  related
                     cgroup. See also the related kernel documentation, avail-
                     able from the Linux  sources  in  file  Documentation/ad-
                     min-guide/cgroup-v1/net_cls.rst.

                     The  Linux kernel has two versions for cgroups: there are
                     cgroups v1 and cgroups v2. Both are available  to  users,
                     who  can use a mixture of them, but note that the net_cls
                     cgroup is for cgroup v1 only. This makes it  incompatible
                     with   BPF   programs   run   on   cgroups,  which  is  a
                     cgroup-v2-only feature (a socket can only hold  data  for
                     one version of cgroups at a time).

                     This  helper is only available is the kernel was compiled
                     with the CONFIG_CGROUP_NET_CLASSID  configuration  option
                     set to "y" or to "m".

              Return The classid, or 0 for the default unconfigured classid.

       int  bpf_skb_vlan_push(struct  sk_buff  *skb,  __be16  vlan_proto,  u16
       vlan_tci)

              Description
                     Push a vlan_tci (VLAN tag control information) of  proto-
                     col  vlan_proto to the packet associated to skb, then up-
                     date the checksum. Note that if vlan_proto  is  different
                     from ETH_P_8021Q and ETH_P_8021AD, it is considered to be
                     ETH_P_8021Q.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_skb_vlan_pop(struct sk_buff *skb)

              Description
                     Pop a VLAN header from the packet associated to skb.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_skb_get_tunnel_key(struct sk_buff *skb,  struct  bpf_tunnel_key
       *key, u32 size, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Get  tunnel  metadata. This helper takes a pointer key to
                     an empty struct bpf_tunnel_key  of  size,  that  will  be
                     filled  with tunnel metadata for the packet associated to
                     skb.  The flags can be set to  BPF_F_TUNINFO_IPV6,  which
                     indicates  that  the tunnel is based on IPv6 protocol in-
                     stead of IPv4.

                     The struct bpf_tunnel_key is an object  that  generalizes
                     the principal parameters used by various tunneling proto-
                     cols into a single struct. This way, it can  be  used  to
                     easily  make  a decision based on the contents of the en-
                     capsulation header, "summarized" in this struct. In  par-
                     ticular,  it holds the IP address of the remote end (IPv4
                     or IPv6, depending on the case)  in  key->remote_ipv4  or
                     key->remote_ipv6. Also, this struct exposes the key->tun-
                     nel_id, which is generally mapped to a VNI (Virtual  Net-
                     work  Identifier),  making  it programmable together with
                     the bpf_skb_set_tunnel_key() helper.

                     Let's imagine that the following code is part of  a  pro-
                     gram  attached to the TC ingress interface, on one end of
                     a GRE tunnel, and is supposed to filter out all  messages
                     coming  from  remote  ends  with  IPv4 address other than
                     10.0.0.1:

                        int ret;
                        struct bpf_tunnel_key key = {};

                        ret = bpf_skb_get_tunnel_key(skb, &key, sizeof(key), 0);
                        if (ret < 0)
                                return TC_ACT_SHOT;     // drop packet

                        if (key.remote_ipv4 != 0x0a000001)
                                return TC_ACT_SHOT;     // drop packet

                        return TC_ACT_OK;               // accept packet

                     This interface can also be used  with  all  encapsulation
                     devices  that can operate in "collect metadata" mode: in-
                     stead of having one network device per specific  configu-
                     ration,  the "collect metadata" mode only requires a sin-
                     gle device where the configuration can be extracted  from
                     this helper.

                     This  can  be  used together with various tunnels such as
                     VXLan, Geneve, GRE or IP in IP (IPIP).

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_skb_set_tunnel_key(struct sk_buff *skb,  struct  bpf_tunnel_key
       *key, u32 size, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Populate  tunnel  metadata  for packet associated to skb.
                     The tunnel metadata is set to the  contents  of  key,  of
                     size.  The  flags can be set to a combination of the fol-
                     lowing values:

                     BPF_F_TUNINFO_IPV6
                            Indicate that the tunnel is based on IPv6 protocol
                            instead of IPv4.

                     BPF_F_ZERO_CSUM_TX
                            For  IPv4  packets,  add a flag to tunnel metadata
                            indicating that  checksum  computation  should  be
                            skipped and checksum set to zeroes.

                     BPF_F_DONT_FRAGMENT
                            Add  a flag to tunnel metadata indicating that the
                            packet should not be fragmented.

                     BPF_F_SEQ_NUMBER
                            Add a flag to tunnel metadata  indicating  that  a
                            sequence  number  should be added to tunnel header
                            before sending the packet. This flag was added for
                            GRE  encapsulation,  but  might be used with other
                            protocols as well in the future.

                     Here is a typical usage on the transmit path:

                        struct bpf_tunnel_key key;
                             populate key ...
                        bpf_skb_set_tunnel_key(skb, &key, sizeof(key), 0);
                        bpf_clone_redirect(skb, vxlan_dev_ifindex, 0);

                     See also the description of the  bpf_skb_get_tunnel_key()
                     helper for additional information.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       u64 bpf_perf_event_read(struct bpf_map *map, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Read  the  value of a perf event counter. This helper re-
                     lies on a map of type BPF_MAP_TYPE_PERF_EVENT_ARRAY.  The
                     nature  of the perf event counter is selected when map is
                     updated with perf event file descriptors. The map  is  an
                     array  whose  size  is  the number of available CPUs, and
                     each cell contains a value relative to one CPU. The value
                     to  retrieve is indicated by flags, that contains the in-
                     dex of the CPU to look up, masked with  BPF_F_INDEX_MASK.
                     Alternatively,  flags  can be set to BPF_F_CURRENT_CPU to
                     indicate that the value for the current CPU should be re-
                     trieved.

                     Note that before Linux 4.13, only hardware perf event can
                     be retrieved.

                     Also,    be    aware    that     the     newer     helper
                     bpf_perf_event_read_value()     is    recommended    over
                     bpf_perf_event_read() in general. The latter has some ABI
                     quirks where error and counter value are used as a return
                     code (which is wrong to do  since  ranges  may  overlap).
                     This  issue  is  fixed  with bpf_perf_event_read_value(),
                     which at the same time provides more  features  over  the
                     bpf_perf_event_read()  interface. Please refer to the de-
                     scription of bpf_perf_event_read_value() for details.

              Return The value of the perf event counter read from the map, or
                     a negative error code in case of failure.

       int bpf_redirect(u32 ifindex, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Redirect  the  packet  to  another  net  device  of index
                     ifindex.    This   helper   is   somewhat   similar    to
                     bpf_clone_redirect(),  except  that  the  packet  is  not
                     cloned, which provides increased performance.

                     Except for XDP, both ingress and egress interfaces can be
                     used for redirection. The BPF_F_INGRESS value in flags is
                     used to make the distinction (ingress path is selected if
                     the  flag  is present, egress path otherwise). Currently,
                     XDP only supports redirection to  the  egress  interface,
                     and accepts no flag at all.

                     The  same  effect  can  be attained with the more generic
                     bpf_redirect_map(), which requires specific  maps  to  be
                     used but offers better performance.

              Return For  XDP,  the  helper returns XDP_REDIRECT on success or
                     XDP_ABORTED on error. For other program types, the values
                     are TC_ACT_REDIRECT on success or TC_ACT_SHOT on error.

       u32 bpf_get_route_realm(struct sk_buff *skb)

              Description
                     Retrieve  the  realm  or  the  route,  that is to say the
                     tclassid field of the destination for the skb. The inden-
                     tifier  retrieved  is a user-provided tag, similar to the
                     one used with the net_cls  cgroup  (see  description  for
                     bpf_get_cgroup_classid()  helper),  but  here this tag is
                     held by a route (a destination entry), not by a task.

                     Retrieving this  identifier  works  with  the  clsact  TC
                     egress  hook  (see  also  tc-bpf(8)), or alternatively on
                     conventional  classful  egress  qdiscs,  but  not  on  TC
                     ingress  path. In case of clsact TC egress hook, this has
                     the advantage that, internally, the destination entry has
                     not been dropped yet in the transmit path. Therefore, the
                     destination entry does not need to be  artificially  held
                     via  netif_keep_dst()  for a classful qdisc until the skb
                     is freed.

                     This helper is available only if the kernel was  compiled
                     with CONFIG_IP_ROUTE_CLASSID configuration option.

              Return The  realm of the route for the packet associated to skb,
                     or 0 if none was found.

       int bpf_perf_event_output(struct pt_regs *ctx, struct bpf_map *map, u64
       flags, void *data, u64 size)

              Description
                     Write raw data blob into a special BPF perf event held by
                     map  of  type  BPF_MAP_TYPE_PERF_EVENT_ARRAY.  This  perf
                     event must have the following attributes: PERF_SAMPLE_RAW
                     as   sample_type,   PERF_TYPE_SOFTWARE   as   type,   and
                     PERF_COUNT_SW_BPF_OUTPUT as config.

                     The flags are used to indicate the index in map for which
                     the value must be put, masked with BPF_F_INDEX_MASK.  Al-
                     ternatively, flags can be set to BPF_F_CURRENT_CPU to in-
                     dicate that the index of the current CPU core  should  be
                     used.

                     The value to write, of size, is passed through eBPF stack
                     and pointed by data.

                     The context of the program ctx needs also  be  passed  to
                     the helper.

                     On user space, a program willing to read the values needs
                     to call perf_event_open() on the perf event  (either  for
                     one  or  for  all  CPUs) and to store the file descriptor
                     into the map. This must be done before the  eBPF  program
                     can  send  data  into it. An example is available in file
                     samples/bpf/trace_output_user.c  in  the   Linux   kernel
                     source  tree  (the  eBPF  program  counterpart is in sam-
                     ples/bpf/trace_output_kern.c).

                     bpf_perf_event_output() achieves better performance  than
                     bpf_trace_printk()  for sharing data with user space, and
                     is much better suitable for streaming data from eBPF pro-
                     grams.

                     Note  that  this  helper is not restricted to tracing use
                     cases and can be used with programs attached to TC or XDP
                     as  well,  where it allows for passing data to user space
                     listeners. Data can be:

                     o Only custom structs,

                     o Only the packet payload, or

                     o A combination of both.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_skb_load_bytes(const struct sk_buff *skb, u32 offset, void *to,
       u32 len)

              Description
                     This helper was provided as an easy way to load data from
                     a packet. It can be used to load len  bytes  from  offset
                     from  the  packet  associated  to  skb,  into  the buffer
                     pointed by to.

                     Since Linux 4.7, usage of this helper has mostly been re-
                     placed by "direct packet access", enabling packet data to
                     be manipulated with skb->data and skb->data_end  pointing
                     respectively  to the first byte of packet data and to the
                     byte after the last byte of packet data. However, it  re-
                     mains  useful  if  one wishes to read large quantities of
                     data at once from a packet into the eBPF stack.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_get_stackid(struct  pt_regs  *ctx,  struct  bpf_map  *map,  u64
       flags)

              Description
                     Walk  a  user  or  a  kernel  stack and return its id. To
                     achieve this, the helper needs ctx, which is a pointer to
                     the context on which the tracing program is executed, and
                     a pointer to a map of type BPF_MAP_TYPE_STACK_TRACE.

                     The last argument,  flags,  holds  the  number  of  stack
                     frames   to   skip   (from   0   to   255),  masked  with
                     BPF_F_SKIP_FIELD_MASK. The next bits can be used to set a
                     combination of the following flags:

                     BPF_F_USER_STACK
                            Collect  a  user  space  stack instead of a kernel
                            stack.

                     BPF_F_FAST_STACK_CMP
                            Compare stacks by hash only.

                     BPF_F_REUSE_STACKID
                            If  two  different  stacks  hash  into  the   same
                            stackid, discard the old one.

                     The  stack  id  retrieved is a 32 bit long integer handle
                     which can be further combined with other data  (including
                     other stack ids) and used as a key into maps. This can be
                     useful for generating a variety of graphs (such as  flame
                     graphs or off-cpu graphs).

                     For  walking  a stack, this helper is an improvement over
                     bpf_probe_read(), which can be used with  unrolled  loops
                     but  is not efficient and consumes a lot of eBPF instruc-
                     tions.  Instead,  bpf_get_stackid()  can  collect  up  to
                     PERF_MAX_STACK_DEPTH  both  kernel  and user frames. Note
                     that this limit can be controlled with  the  sysctl  pro-
                     gram,  and  that it should be manually increased in order
                     to profile long user stacks (such as stacks for Java pro-
                     grams). To do so, use:

                        # sysctl kernel.perf_event_max_stack=<new value>

              Return The  positive  or null stack id on success, or a negative
                     error in case of failure.

       s64 bpf_csum_diff(__be32 *from, u32 from_size, __be32 *to, u32 to_size,
       __wsum seed)

              Description
                     Compute  a  checksum  difference,  from  the  raw  buffer
                     pointed by from, of length from_size (that must be a mul-
                     tiple  of  4),  towards  the raw buffer pointed by to, of
                     size to_size (same remark). An optional seed can be added
                     to  the  value  (this  can be cascaded, the seed may come
                     from a previous call to the helper).

                     This is flexible enough to be used in several ways:

                     o With from_size == 0, to_size > 0 and seed set to check-
                       sum, it can be used when pushing new data.

                     o With from_size > 0, to_size == 0 and seed set to check-
                       sum, it can be used when removing data from a packet.

                     o With from_size > 0, to_size > 0 and seed set to  0,  it
                       can  be used to compute a diff. Note that from_size and
                       to_size do not need to be equal.

                     This   helper   can   be   used   in   combination   with
                     bpf_l3_csum_replace() and bpf_l4_csum_replace(), to which
                     one  can   feed   in   the   difference   computed   with
                     bpf_csum_diff().

              Return The  checksum result, or a negative error code in case of
                     failure.

       int bpf_skb_get_tunnel_opt(struct sk_buff *skb, u8 *opt, u32 size)

              Description
                     Retrieve tunnel options metadata for the  packet  associ-
                     ated  to skb, and store the raw tunnel option data to the
                     buffer opt of size.

                     This helper can be used with encapsulation  devices  that
                     can  operate  in "collect metadata" mode (please refer to
                     the related note in the description  of  bpf_skb_get_tun-
                     nel_key()  for  more details). A particular example where
                     this can be used is in combination with the Geneve encap-
                     sulation  protocol,  where  it  allows  for pushing (with
                     bpf_skb_get_tunnel_opt() helper) and retrieving arbitrary
                     TLVs  (Type-Length-Value  headers) from the eBPF program.
                     This allows for full customization of these headers.

              Return The size of the option data retrieved.

       int bpf_skb_set_tunnel_opt(struct sk_buff *skb, u8 *opt, u32 size)

              Description
                     Set tunnel options metadata for the packet associated  to
                     skb to the option data contained in the raw buffer opt of
                     size.

                     See also the description of the  bpf_skb_get_tunnel_opt()
                     helper for additional information.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_skb_change_proto(struct sk_buff *skb, __be16 proto, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Change  the  protocol of the skb to proto. Currently sup-
                     ported are transition from IPv4 to IPv6, and from IPv6 to
                     IPv4.  The  helper  takes  care of the groundwork for the
                     transition, including resizing  the  socket  buffer.  The
                     eBPF program is expected to fill the new headers, if any,
                     via skb_store_bytes() and to recompute the checksums with
                     bpf_l3_csum_replace() and bpf_l4_csum_replace(). The main
                     case for this helper is to perform NAT64  operations  out
                     of an eBPF program.

                     Internally, the GSO type is marked as dodgy so that head-
                     ers are checked and  segments  are  recalculated  by  the
                     GSO/GRO  engine.   The  size for GSO target is adapted as
                     well.

                     All values for flags are reserved for future  usage,  and
                     must be left at zero.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all  checks
                     on  pointers  previously done by the verifier are invali-
                     dated and must be performed again, if the helper is  used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_skb_change_type(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 type)

              Description
                     Change  the packet type for the packet associated to skb.
                     This comes down to setting skb->pkt_type to type,  except
                     the  eBPF  program  does  not  have  a  write  access  to
                     skb->pkt_type beside this helper. Using a helper here al-
                     lows for graceful handling of errors.

                     The  major  use  case  is  to  change  incoming  skb*s to
                     **PACKET_HOST* in a programmatic way instead of having to
                     recirculate  via  redirect(..., BPF_F_INGRESS), for exam-
                     ple.

                     Note that type only allows certain values. At this  time,
                     they are:

                     PACKET_HOST
                            Packet is for us.

                     PACKET_BROADCAST
                            Send packet to all.

                     PACKET_MULTICAST
                            Send packet to group.

                     PACKET_OTHERHOST
                            Send packet to someone else.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int  bpf_skb_under_cgroup(struct sk_buff *skb, struct bpf_map *map, u32
       index)

              Description
                     Check whether skb is a descendant of the cgroup2 held  by
                     map of type BPF_MAP_TYPE_CGROUP_ARRAY, at index.

              Return The  return  value depends on the result of the test, and
                     can be:

                     o 0, if the skb failed the cgroup2 descendant test.

                     o 1, if the skb succeeded the cgroup2 descendant test.

                     o A negative error code, if an error occurred.

       u32 bpf_get_hash_recalc(struct sk_buff *skb)

              Description
                     Retrieve the hash of the packet, skb->hash. If it is  not
                     set,  in  particular  if the hash was cleared due to man-
                     gling, recompute this hash. Later accesses  to  the  hash
                     can be done directly with skb->hash.

                     Calling  bpf_set_hash_invalid(), changing a packet proto-
                     type    with    bpf_skb_change_proto(),    or     calling
                     bpf_skb_store_bytes()  with the BPF_F_INVALIDATE_HASH are
                     actions susceptible to clear the hash and  to  trigger  a
                     new  computation  for  the  next call to bpf_get_hash_re-
                     calc().

              Return The 32-bit hash.

       u64 bpf_get_current_task(void)

              Return A pointer to the current task struct.

       int bpf_probe_write_user(void *dst, const void *src, u32 len)

              Description
                     Attempt in a safe way to write len bytes from the  buffer
                     src  to dst in memory. It only works for threads that are
                     in user context, and dst must be a valid user  space  ad-
                     dress.

                     This  helper  should not be used to implement any kind of
                     security mechanism because of TOC-TOU attacks, but rather
                     to  debug, divert, and manipulate execution of semi-coop-
                     erative processes.

                     Keep in mind that this feature is meant for  experiments,
                     and it has a risk of crashing the system and running pro-
                     grams.  Therefore, when an eBPF program using this helper
                     is  attached, a warning including PID and process name is
                     printed to kernel logs.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_current_task_under_cgroup(struct bpf_map *map, u32 index)

              Description
                     Check whether the probe is being run is the context of  a
                     given  subset  of  the  cgroup2 hierarchy. The cgroup2 to
                     test is held by map of type BPF_MAP_TYPE_CGROUP_ARRAY, at
                     index.

              Return The  return  value depends on the result of the test, and
                     can be:

                     o 0, if the skb task belongs to the cgroup2.

                     o 1, if the skb task does not belong to the cgroup2.

                     o A negative error code, if an error occurred.

       int bpf_skb_change_tail(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 len, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Resize (trim or grow) the packet associated to skb to the
                     new  len.  The  flags  are reserved for future usage, and
                     must be left at zero.

                     The basic idea is that the  helper  performs  the  needed
                     work to change the size of the packet, then the eBPF pro-
                     gram    rewrites    the    rest    via    helpers    like
                     bpf_skb_store_bytes(),             bpf_l3_csum_replace(),
                     bpf_l3_csum_replace() and others. This helper is  a  slow
                     path  utility intended for replies with control messages.
                     And because it is targeted for slow path, the helper  it-
                     self can afford to be slow: it implicitly linearizes, un-
                     clones and drops offloads from the skb.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_skb_pull_data(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 len)

              Description
                     Pull in non-linear data in case the skb is non-linear and
                     not  all  of len are part of the linear section. Make len
                     bytes from skb readable and writable. If a zero value  is
                     passed  for  len,  then  the  whole  length of the skb is
                     pulled.

                     This helper is only needed for reading and  writing  with
                     direct packet access.

                     For  direct packet access, testing that offsets to access
                     are within packet boundaries (test on  skb->data_end)  is
                     susceptible to fail if offsets are invalid, or if the re-
                     quested data is in non-linear parts of the skb. On  fail-
                     ure  the  program  can just bail out, or in the case of a
                     non-linear buffer, use a helper to make the  data  avail-
                     able. The bpf_skb_load_bytes() helper is a first solution
                     to  access  the  data.  Another  one  consists  in  using
                     bpf_skb_pull_data  to  pull in once the non-linear parts,
                     then retesting and eventually access the data.

                     At the same time, this also makes sure  the  skb  is  un-
                     cloned,  which is a necessary condition for direct write.
                     As this needs to be an invariant for the write part only,
                     the  verifier  detects writes and adds a prologue that is
                     calling bpf_skb_pull_data() to  effectively  unclone  the
                     skb from the very beginning in case it is indeed cloned.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all  checks
                     on  pointers  previously done by the verifier are invali-
                     dated and must be performed again, if the helper is  used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       s64 bpf_csum_update(struct sk_buff *skb, __wsum csum)

              Description
                     Add  the  checksum csum into skb->csum in case the driver
                     has supplied a checksum for the entire packet  into  that
                     field. Return an error otherwise. This helper is intended
                     to be used in combination with bpf_csum_diff(),  in  par-
                     ticular  when the checksum needs to be updated after data
                     has been written into the packet  through  direct  packet
                     access.

              Return The checksum on success, or a negative error code in case
                     of failure.

       void bpf_set_hash_invalid(struct sk_buff *skb)

              Description
                     Invalidate the current skb->hash. It can  be  used  after
                     mangling  on headers through direct packet access, in or-
                     der to indicate that the hash is outdated and to  trigger
                     a  recalculation the next time the kernel tries to access
                     this hash or when  the  bpf_get_hash_recalc()  helper  is
                     called.

       int bpf_get_numa_node_id(void)

              Description
                     Return  the  id of the current NUMA node. The primary use
                     case for this helper is the selection of sockets for  the
                     local  NUMA node, when the program is attached to sockets
                     using  the  SO_ATTACH_REUSEPORT_EBPF  option  (see   also
                     socket(7)),  but  the  helper  is also available to other
                     eBPF  program  types,  similarly  to  bpf_get_smp_proces-
                     sor_id().

              Return The id of current NUMA node.

       int bpf_skb_change_head(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 len, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Grows  headroom  of  packet associated to skb and adjusts
                     the offset of the  MAC  header  accordingly,  adding  len
                     bytes  of space. It automatically extends and reallocates
                     memory as required.

                     This helper can be used on a layer 3 skb to  push  a  MAC
                     header for redirection into a layer 2 device.

                     All  values  for flags are reserved for future usage, and
                     must be left at zero.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_xdp_adjust_head(struct xdp_buff *xdp_md, int delta)

              Description
                     Adjust (move) xdp_md->data by delta bytes. Note  that  it
                     is  possible  to  use  a  negative  value for delta. This
                     helper can be used to prepare the packet for  pushing  or
                     popping headers.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all  checks
                     on  pointers  previously done by the verifier are invali-
                     dated and must be performed again, if the helper is  used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_probe_read_str(void *dst, int size, const void *unsafe_ptr)

              Description
                     Copy  a  NUL terminated string from an unsafe address un-
                     safe_ptr to dst. The size should include the  terminating
                     NUL byte. In case the string length is smaller than size,
                     the target is not padded with further NUL bytes.  If  the
                     string  length is larger than size, just size-1 bytes are
                     copied and the last byte is set to NUL.

                     On success, the length of the copied string is  returned.
                     This  makes  this  helper  useful in tracing programs for
                     reading strings, and more importantly to get  its  length
                     at runtime. See the following snippet:

                        SEC("kprobe/sys_open")
                        void bpf_sys_open(struct pt_regs *ctx)
                        {
                                char buf[PATHLEN]; // PATHLEN is defined to 256
                                int res = bpf_probe_read_str(buf, sizeof(buf),
                                                             ctx->di);

                                // Consume buf, for example push it to
                                // userspace via bpf_perf_event_output(); we
                                // can use res (the string length) as event
                                // size, after checking its boundaries.
                        }

                     In comparison, using bpf_probe_read() helper here instead
                     to read the string would require to estimate  the  length
                     at  compile  time, and would often result in copying more
                     memory than necessary.

                     Another  useful  use  case  is  when  parsing  individual
                     process  arguments  or  individual  environment variables
                     navigating      current->mm->arg_start      and      cur-
                     rent->mm->env_start:  using  this  helper  and the return
                     value, one can quickly iterate at the right offset of the
                     memory area.

              Return On  success,  the strictly positive length of the string,
                     including the trailing NUL character. On error,  a  nega-
                     tive value.

       u64 bpf_get_socket_cookie(struct sk_buff *skb)

              Description
                     If  the struct sk_buff pointed by skb has a known socket,
                     retrieve the cookie (generated by  the  kernel)  of  this
                     socket.   If  no  cookie has been set yet, generate a new
                     cookie. Once generated, the socket cookie remains  stable
                     for the life of the socket. This helper can be useful for
                     monitoring per socket networking traffic statistics as it
                     provides  a  global socket identifier that can be assumed
                     unique.

              Return A 8-byte long non-decreasing number on success, or  0  if
                     the socket field is missing inside skb.

       u64 bpf_get_socket_cookie(struct bpf_sock_addr *ctx)

              Description
                     Equivalent to bpf_get_socket_cookie() helper that accepts
                     skb, but gets socket from struct bpf_sock_addr context.

              Return A 8-byte long non-decreasing number.

       u64 bpf_get_socket_cookie(struct bpf_sock_ops *ctx)

              Description
                     Equivalent to bpf_get_socket_cookie() helper that accepts
                     skb, but gets socket from struct bpf_sock_ops context.

              Return A 8-byte long non-decreasing number.

       u32 bpf_get_socket_uid(struct sk_buff *skb)

              Return The  owner  UID  of  the socket associated to skb. If the
                     socket is NULL, or if it is not a full socket (i.e. if it
                     is  a time-wait or a request socket instead), overflowuid
                     value is returned (note that overflowuid  might  also  be
                     the actual UID value for the socket).

       u32 bpf_set_hash(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 hash)

              Description
                     Set  the  full  hash for skb (set the field skb->hash) to
                     value hash.

              Return 0

       int bpf_setsockopt(struct bpf_sock_ops *bpf_socket, int level, int opt-
       name, char *optval, int optlen)

              Description
                     Emulate  a  call to setsockopt() on the socket associated
                     to bpf_socket, which must be a full socket. The level  at
                     which  the option resides and the name optname of the op-
                     tion must be specified, see setsockopt(2) for more infor-
                     mation.   The option value of length optlen is pointed by
                     optval.

                     This helper actually implements a subset of setsockopt().
                     It supports the following levels:

                     o SOL_SOCKET,  which  supports  the  following  optnames:
                       SO_RCVBUF, SO_SNDBUF, SO_MAX_PACING_RATE,  SO_PRIORITY,
                       SO_RCVLOWAT, SO_MARK.

                     o IPPROTO_TCP,  which  supports  the  following optnames:
                       TCP_CONGESTION, TCP_BPF_IW, TCP_BPF_SNDCWND_CLAMP.

                     o IPPROTO_IP, which supports optname IP_TOS.

                     o IPPROTO_IPV6, which supports optname IPV6_TCLASS.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_skb_adjust_room(struct sk_buff *skb, s32  len_diff,  u32  mode,
       u64 flags)

              Description
                     Grow or shrink the room for data in the packet associated
                     to skb by len_diff, and according to the selected mode.

                     There are two supported modes at this time:

                     o BPF_ADJ_ROOM_MAC: Adjust room at the  mac  layer  (room
                       space is added or removed below the layer 2 header).

                     o BPF_ADJ_ROOM_NET:  Adjust  room  at  the  network layer
                       (room space is added  or  removed  below  the  layer  3
                       header).

                     The following flags are supported at this time:

                     o BPF_F_ADJ_ROOM_FIXED_GSO:  Do not adjust gso_size.  Ad-
                       justing mss in this way is not allowed for datagrams.

                     o BPF_F_ADJ_ROOM_ENCAP_L3_IPV4,        BPF_F_ADJ_ROOM_EN-
                       CAP_L3_IPV6: Any new space is reserved to hold a tunnel
                       header.  Configure skb offsets and other fields accord-
                       ingly.

                     o BPF_F_ADJ_ROOM_ENCAP_L4_GRE,         BPF_F_ADJ_ROOM_EN-
                       CAP_L4_UDP: Use with ENCAP_L3 flags to further  specify
                       the tunnel type.

                     o BPF_F_ADJ_ROOM_ENCAP_L2(len):   Use   with  ENCAP_L3/L4
                       flags to further specify the tunnel type;  len  is  the
                       length of the inner MAC header.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all  checks
                     on  pointers  previously done by the verifier are invali-
                     dated and must be performed again, if the helper is  used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_redirect_map(struct bpf_map *map, u32 key, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Redirect  the packet to the endpoint referenced by map at
                     index key. Depending on its type, this  map  can  contain
                     references to net devices (for forwarding packets through
                     other ports), or to CPUs (for redirecting XDP  frames  to
                     another  CPU; but this is only implemented for native XDP
                     (with driver support) as of this writing).

                     The lower two bits of flags are used as the  return  code
                     if the map lookup fails. This is so that the return value
                     can be one of the XDP program return codes up to  XDP_TX,
                     as chosen by the caller. Any higher bits in the flags ar-
                     gument must be unset.

                     When used to redirect packets to net devices, this helper
                     provides a high performance increase over bpf_redirect().
                     This is due to various implementation details of the  un-
                     derlying  mechanisms,  one  of  which  is  the  fact that
                     bpf_redirect_map() tries to send packet as  a  "bulk"  to
                     the device.

              Return XDP_REDIRECT on success, or XDP_ABORTED on error.

       int bpf_sk_redirect_map(struct bpf_map *map, u32 key, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Redirect  the  packet to the socket referenced by map (of
                     type BPF_MAP_TYPE_SOCKMAP) at index key. Both ingress and
                     egress  interfaces  can  be  used  for  redirection.  The
                     BPF_F_INGRESS value in flags is used to make the distinc-
                     tion  (ingress  path  is selected if the flag is present,
                     egress path otherwise). This is the only  flag  supported
                     for now.

              Return SK_PASS on success, or SK_DROP on error.

       int  bpf_sock_map_update(struct  bpf_sock_ops  *skops,  struct  bpf_map
       *map, void *key, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Add an entry to, or update a map referencing sockets. The
                     skops  is used as a new value for the entry associated to
                     key. flags is one of:

                     BPF_NOEXIST
                            The entry for key must not exist in the map.

                     BPF_EXIST
                            The entry for key must already exist in the map.

                     BPF_ANY
                            No condition on the existence  of  the  entry  for
                            key.

                     If  the map has eBPF programs (parser and verdict), those
                     will be inherited by  the  socket  being  added.  If  the
                     socket is already attached to eBPF programs, this results
                     in an error.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_xdp_adjust_meta(struct xdp_buff *xdp_md, int delta)

              Description
                     Adjust the address pointed by xdp_md->data_meta by  delta
                     (which can be positive or negative). Note that this oper-
                     ation modifies the address stored in xdp_md->data, so the
                     latter  must  be  loaded  only  after the helper has been
                     called.

                     The use of xdp_md->data_meta is optional and programs are
                     not  required  to  use it. The rationale is that when the
                     packet is processed with XDP (e.g. as DoS filter), it  is
                     possible  to  push further meta data along with it before
                     passing to the stack, and to give the guarantee  that  an
                     ingress  eBPF  program attached as a TC classifier on the
                     same device can pick this up for further post-processing.
                     Since  TC  works with socket buffers, it remains possible
                     to set from XDP the mark or priority pointers,  or  other
                     pointers  for  the  socket  buffer.   Having this scratch
                     space generic and programmable allows for more  flexibil-
                     ity  as the user is free to store whatever meta data they
                     need.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_perf_event_read_value(struct bpf_map *map,  u64  flags,  struct
       bpf_perf_event_value *buf, u32 buf_size)

              Description
                     Read the value of a perf event counter, and store it into
                     buf of size buf_size. This helper relies on a map of type
                     BPF_MAP_TYPE_PERF_EVENT_ARRAY.  The  nature  of  the perf
                     event counter is selected when map is updated  with  perf
                     event file descriptors. The map is an array whose size is
                     the number of available CPUs, and each  cell  contains  a
                     value relative to one CPU. The value to retrieve is indi-
                     cated by flags, that contains the index  of  the  CPU  to
                     look  up,  masked  with  BPF_F_INDEX_MASK. Alternatively,
                     flags can be set to BPF_F_CURRENT_CPU  to  indicate  that
                     the value for the current CPU should be retrieved.

                     This    helper    behaves    in    a    way    close   to
                     bpf_perf_event_read() helper, save that instead  of  just
                     returning the value observed, it fills the buf structure.
                     This allows for additional data to be retrieved: in  par-
                     ticular,  the  enabled and running times (in buf->enabled
                     and buf->running, respectively) are copied.  In  general,
                     bpf_perf_event_read_value()     is    recommended    over
                     bpf_perf_event_read(), which has some ABI issues and pro-
                     vides fewer functionalities.

                     These  values are interesting, because hardware PMU (Per-
                     formance Monitoring Unit) counters are limited resources.
                     When  there  are  more  PMU based perf events opened than
                     available counters, kernel will multiplex these events so
                     each  event  gets certain percentage (but not all) of the
                     PMU time. In case that multiplexing happens,  the  number
                     of  samples  or  counter  value will not reflect the case
                     compared to when no multiplexing occurs. This makes  com-
                     parison between different runs difficult.  Typically, the
                     counter value should be normalized  before  comparing  to
                     other  experiments.  The  usual  normalization is done as
                     follows.

                        normalized_counter = counter * t_enabled / t_running

                     Where t_enabled is the time enabled for event and  t_run-
                     ning  is the time running for event since last normaliza-
                     tion. The enabled and running times are accumulated since
                     the  perf  event  open. To achieve scaling factor between
                     two invocations of an eBPF program, users can can use CPU
                     id  as  the  key  (which  is typical for perf array usage
                     model) to remember the previous value and do the calcula-
                     tion inside the eBPF program.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int  bpf_perf_prog_read_value(struct  bpf_perf_event_data  *ctx, struct
       bpf_perf_event_value *buf, u32 buf_size)

              Description
                     For en eBPF program attached to a  perf  event,  retrieve
                     the  value  of  the  event  counter associated to ctx and
                     store it in the structure pointed  by  buf  and  of  size
                     buf_size.  Enabled  and  running times are also stored in
                     the    structure    (see    description     of     helper
                     bpf_perf_event_read_value() for more details).

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_getsockopt(struct bpf_sock_ops *bpf_socket, int level, int opt-
       name, char *optval, int optlen)

              Description
                     Emulate a call to getsockopt() on the  socket  associated
                     to  bpf_socket, which must be a full socket. The level at
                     which the option resides and the name optname of the  op-
                     tion must be specified, see getsockopt(2) for more infor-
                     mation.  The retrieved value is stored in  the  structure
                     pointed by opval and of length optlen.

                     This helper actually implements a subset of getsockopt().
                     It supports the following levels:

                     o IPPROTO_TCP, which supports optname TCP_CONGESTION.

                     o IPPROTO_IP, which supports optname IP_TOS.

                     o IPPROTO_IPV6, which supports optname IPV6_TCLASS.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_override_return(struct pt_regs *regs, u64 rc)

              Description
                     Used for error injection, this  helper  uses  kprobes  to
                     override  the return value of the probed function, and to
                     set it to rc.  The first argument is the context regs  on
                     which the kprobe works.

                     This  helper  works  by  setting  setting the PC (program
                     counter) to an override function which is run in place of
                     the original probed function. This means the probed func-
                     tion is not run at all. The replacement function just re-
                     turns with the required value.

                     This  helper  has security implications, and thus is sub-
                     ject to restrictions. It is only available if the  kernel
                     was compiled with the CONFIG_BPF_KPROBE_OVERRIDE configu-
                     ration option, and in this case it only  works  on  func-
                     tions  tagged  with  ALLOW_ERROR_INJECTION  in the kernel
                     code.

                     Also, the helper is only available for the  architectures
                     having  the CONFIG_FUNCTION_ERROR_INJECTION option. As of
                     this writing, x86 architecture is the only one to support
                     this feature.

              Return 0

       int   bpf_sock_ops_cb_flags_set(struct   bpf_sock_ops   *bpf_sock,  int
       argval)

              Description
                     Attempt to set the  value  of  the  bpf_sock_ops_cb_flags
                     field  for the full TCP socket associated to bpf_sock_ops
                     to argval.

                     The primary use of this field is to  determine  if  there
                     should    be    calls    to   eBPF   programs   of   type
                     BPF_PROG_TYPE_SOCK_OPS at various points in the TCP code.
                     A program of the same type can change its value, per con-
                     nection and as necessary, when the connection  is  estab-
                     lished.  This  field  is directly accessible for reading,
                     but this helper must be used for updates in order to  re-
                     turn  an error if an eBPF program tries to set a callback
                     that is not supported in the current kernel.

                     argval is a flag array which can combine these flags:

                     o BPF_SOCK_OPS_RTO_CB_FLAG (retransmission time out)

                     o BPF_SOCK_OPS_RETRANS_CB_FLAG (retransmission)

                     o BPF_SOCK_OPS_STATE_CB_FLAG (TCP state change)

                     o BPF_SOCK_OPS_RTT_CB_FLAG (every RTT)

                     Therefore, this function can be used to clear a  callback
                     flag by setting the appropriate bit to zero. e.g. to dis-
                     able the RTO callback:

                     bpf_sock_ops_cb_flags_set(bpf_sock,
                            bpf_sock->bpf_sock_ops_cb_flags                  &
                            ~BPF_SOCK_OPS_RTO_CB_FLAG)

                     Here  are some examples of where one could call such eBPF
                     program:

                     o When RTO fires.

                     o When a packet is retransmitted.

                     o When the connection terminates.

                     o When a packet is sent.

                     o When a packet is received.

              Return Code -EINVAL if the socket is not a full TCP socket; oth-
                     erwise,  a positive number containing the bits that could
                     not be set is returned (which comes down to 0 if all bits
                     were set as required).

       int  bpf_msg_redirect_map(struct sk_msg_buff *msg, struct bpf_map *map,
       u32 key, u64 flags)

              Description
                     This helper is used in programs implementing policies  at
                     the  socket  level. If the message msg is allowed to pass
                     (i.e. if the verdict eBPF program returns SK_PASS), redi-
                     rect  it  to  the  socket  referenced  by  map  (of  type
                     BPF_MAP_TYPE_SOCKMAP) at  index  key.  Both  ingress  and
                     egress  interfaces  can  be  used  for  redirection.  The
                     BPF_F_INGRESS value in flags is used to make the distinc-
                     tion  (ingress  path  is selected if the flag is present,
                     egress path otherwise). This is the only  flag  supported
                     for now.

              Return SK_PASS on success, or SK_DROP on error.

       int bpf_msg_apply_bytes(struct sk_msg_buff *msg, u32 bytes)

              Description
                     For  socket  policies, apply the verdict of the eBPF pro-
                     gram to the next bytes (number of bytes) of message msg.

                     For example, this helper can be  used  in  the  following
                     cases:

                     o A  single  sendmsg() or sendfile() system call contains
                       multiple logical messages that the eBPF program is sup-
                       posed to read and for which it should apply a verdict.

                     o An eBPF program only cares to read the first bytes of a
                       msg. If the message has a large payload,  then  setting
                       up  and  calling  the  eBPF  program repeatedly for all
                       bytes, even though the verdict is already known,  would
                       create unnecessary overhead.

                     When  called from within an eBPF program, the helper sets
                     a counter internal to the  BPF  infrastructure,  that  is
                     used  to  apply  the  last  verdict to the next bytes. If
                     bytes is smaller than the current  data  being  processed
                     from  a  sendmsg()  or  sendfile() system call, the first
                     bytes will be sent and the eBPF program  will  be  re-run
                     with  the pointer for start of data pointing to byte num-
                     ber bytes + 1. If bytes is larger than the  current  data
                     being processed, then the eBPF verdict will be applied to
                     multiple sendmsg() or sendfile() calls  until  bytes  are
                     consumed.

                     Note  that  if  a socket closes with the internal counter
                     holding a non-zero value, this is not a  problem  because
                     data is not being buffered for bytes and is sent as it is
                     received.

              Return 0

       int bpf_msg_cork_bytes(struct sk_msg_buff *msg, u32 bytes)

              Description
                     For socket policies, prevent the execution of the verdict
                     eBPF  program  for  message msg until bytes (byte number)
                     have been accumulated.

                     This can be used when one  needs  a  specific  number  of
                     bytes  before a verdict can be assigned, even if the data
                     spans multiple sendmsg() or sendfile() calls. The extreme
                     case  would  be  a user calling sendmsg() repeatedly with
                     1-byte long message segments. Obviously, this is bad  for
                     performance,  but  it is still valid. If the eBPF program
                     needs bytes bytes to validate a header, this  helper  can
                     be  used  to  prevent the eBPF program to be called again
                     until bytes have been accumulated.

              Return 0

       int bpf_msg_pull_data(struct sk_msg_buff *msg, u32 start, u32 end,  u64
       flags)

              Description
                     For  socket  policies,  pull in non-linear data from user
                     space  for   msg   and   set   pointers   msg->data   and
                     msg->data_end  to  start  and end bytes offsets into msg,
                     respectively.

                     If a program of type BPF_PROG_TYPE_SK_MSG is run on a msg
                     it can only parse data that the (data, data_end) pointers
                     have already consumed. For sendmsg() hooks this is likely
                     the  first  scatterlist element. But for calls relying on
                     the sendpage handler (e.g. sendfile()) this will  be  the
                     range  (0,  0) because the data is shared with user space
                     and by default the objective is to  avoid  allowing  user
                     space to modify data while (or after) eBPF verdict is be-
                     ing decided. This helper can be used to pull in data  and
                     to  set  the  start and end pointer to given values. Data
                     will be copied if necessary (i.e. if data was not  linear
                     and  if  start  and end pointers do not point to the same
                     chunk).

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

                     All values for flags are reserved for future  usage,  and
                     must be left at zero.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int  bpf_bind(struct  bpf_sock_addr  *ctx,  struct  sockaddr *addr, int
       addr_len)

              Description
                     Bind the socket associated to ctx to the address  pointed
                     by  addr, of length addr_len. This allows for making out-
                     going connection from the desired IP address,  which  can
                     be  useful for example when all processes inside a cgroup
                     should use one single IP address on a host that has  mul-
                     tiple IP configured.

                     This helper works for IPv4 and IPv6, TCP and UDP sockets.
                     The  domain  (addr->sa_family)  must   be   AF_INET   (or
                     AF_INET6).  Looking for a free port to bind to can be ex-
                     pensive, therefore binding to port is  not  permitted  by
                     the  helper:  addr->sin_port (or sin6_port, respectively)
                     must be set to zero.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_xdp_adjust_tail(struct xdp_buff *xdp_md, int delta)

              Description
                     Adjust (move) xdp_md->data_end by delta bytes. It is only
                     possible  to shrink the packet as of this writing, there-
                     fore delta must be a negative integer.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int  bpf_skb_get_xfrm_state(struct  sk_buff  *skb,  u32  index,  struct
       bpf_xfrm_state *xfrm_state, u32 size, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Retrieve the XFRM state (IP transform framework, see also
                     ip-xfrm(8)) at index in XFRM "security path" for skb.

                     The   retrieved   value   is   stored   in   the   struct
                     bpf_xfrm_state pointed by xfrm_state and of length size.

                     All  values  for flags are reserved for future usage, and
                     must be left at zero.

                     This helper is available only if the kernel was  compiled
                     with CONFIG_XFRM configuration option.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_get_stack(struct pt_regs *regs, void *buf, u32 size, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Return  a  user or a kernel stack in bpf program provided
                     buffer.  To achieve this, the helper needs ctx, which  is
                     a  pointer to the context on which the tracing program is
                     executed.  To store the stacktrace, the bpf program  pro-
                     vides buf with a nonnegative size.

                     The  last  argument,  flags,  holds  the  number of stack
                     frames  to  skip   (from   0   to   255),   masked   with
                     BPF_F_SKIP_FIELD_MASK.  The  next bits can be used to set
                     the following flags:

                     BPF_F_USER_STACK
                            Collect a user space stack  instead  of  a  kernel
                            stack.

                     BPF_F_USER_BUILD_ID
                            Collect  buildid+offset  instead  of  ips for user
                            stack, only  valid  if  BPF_F_USER_STACK  is  also
                            specified.

                     bpf_get_stack()  can  collect  up to PERF_MAX_STACK_DEPTH
                     both kernel and user frames, subject to sufficient  large
                     buffer  size. Note that this limit can be controlled with
                     the sysctl program, and that it should  be  manually  in-
                     creased  in  order  to  profile long user stacks (such as
                     stacks for Java programs). To do so, use:

                        # sysctl kernel.perf_event_max_stack=<new value>

              Return A non-negative value equal to or less than size  on  suc-
                     cess, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int  bpf_skb_load_bytes_relative(const struct sk_buff *skb, u32 offset,
       void *to, u32 len, u32 start_header)

              Description
                     This helper is similar to bpf_skb_load_bytes() in that it
                     provides  an  easy way to load len bytes from offset from
                     the packet associated to skb, into the buffer pointed  by
                     to.  The  difference  to  bpf_skb_load_bytes()  is that a
                     fifth argument start_header exists in order to  select  a
                     base offset to start from. start_header can be one of:

                     BPF_HDR_START_MAC
                            Base offset to load data from is skb's mac header.

                     BPF_HDR_START_NET
                            Base  offset  to  load  data from is skb's network
                            header.

                     In general,  "direct  packet  access"  is  the  preferred
                     method  to access packet data, however, this helper is in
                     particular useful in socket filters where skb->data  does
                     not always point to the start of the mac header and where
                     "direct packet access" is not available.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_fib_lookup(void *ctx, struct bpf_fib_lookup *params, int  plen,
       u32 flags)

              Description
                     Do  FIB  lookup  in  kernel  tables  using  parameters in
                     params.  If lookup is successful and result shows  packet
                     is  to be forwarded, the neighbor tables are searched for
                     the nexthop.  If successful (ie., FIB lookup  shows  for-
                     warding  and nexthop is resolved), the nexthop address is
                     returned in ipv4_dst or ipv6_dst based on family, smac is
                     set  to mac address of egress device, dmac is set to nex-
                     thop mac address, rt_metric is set to metric  from  route
                     (IPv4/IPv6  only), and ifindex is set to the device index
                     of the nexthop from the FIB lookup.

                     plen argument is the size of the passed in struct.  flags
                     argument  can be a combination of one or more of the fol-
                     lowing values:

                     BPF_FIB_LOOKUP_DIRECT
                            Do a direct table lookup vs full lookup using  FIB
                            rules.

                     BPF_FIB_LOOKUP_OUTPUT
                            Perform lookup from an egress perspective (default
                            is ingress).

                     ctx is either struct xdp_md for XDP  programs  or  struct
                     sk_buff tc cls_act programs.

              Return

                     o < 0 if any input argument is invalid

                     o 0 on success (packet is forwarded, nexthop neighbor ex-
                       ists)

                     o > 0 one of BPF_FIB_LKUP_RET_ codes explaining  why  the
                       packet is not forwarded or needs assist from full stack

       int   bpf_sock_hash_update(struct   bpf_sock_ops_kern   *skops,  struct
       bpf_map *map, void *key, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Add an entry to, or update  a  sockhash  map  referencing
                     sockets.   The skops is used as a new value for the entry
                     associated to key. flags is one of:

                     BPF_NOEXIST
                            The entry for key must not exist in the map.

                     BPF_EXIST
                            The entry for key must already exist in the map.

                     BPF_ANY
                            No condition on the existence  of  the  entry  for
                            key.

                     If  the map has eBPF programs (parser and verdict), those
                     will be inherited by  the  socket  being  added.  If  the
                     socket is already attached to eBPF programs, this results
                     in an error.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_msg_redirect_hash(struct sk_msg_buff *msg, struct bpf_map *map,
       void *key, u64 flags)

              Description
                     This  helper is used in programs implementing policies at
                     the socket level. If the message msg is allowed  to  pass
                     (i.e. if the verdict eBPF program returns SK_PASS), redi-
                     rect  it  to  the  socket  referenced  by  map  (of  type
                     BPF_MAP_TYPE_SOCKHASH)  using  hash key. Both ingress and
                     egress  interfaces  can  be  used  for  redirection.  The
                     BPF_F_INGRESS value in flags is used to make the distinc-
                     tion (ingress path is selected if the  flag  is  present,
                     egress  path  otherwise). This is the only flag supported
                     for now.

              Return SK_PASS on success, or SK_DROP on error.

       int bpf_sk_redirect_hash(struct sk_buff *skb, struct bpf_map *map, void
       *key, u64 flags)

              Description
                     This  helper is used in programs implementing policies at
                     the skb socket level. If the sk_buff skb  is  allowed  to
                     pass   (i.e.    if  the  verdeict  eBPF  program  returns
                     SK_PASS), redirect it to the socket referenced by map (of
                     type  BPF_MAP_TYPE_SOCKHASH) using hash key. Both ingress
                     and egress interfaces can be used  for  redirection.  The
                     BPF_F_INGRESS value in flags is used to make the distinc-
                     tion (ingress path is selected if the  flag  is  present,
                     egress  otherwise).  This  is the only flag supported for
                     now.

              Return SK_PASS on success, or SK_DROP on error.

       int bpf_lwt_push_encap(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 type,  void  *hdr,  u32
       len)

              Description
                     Encapsulate the packet associated to skb within a Layer 3
                     protocol header. This header is provided in the buffer at
                     address  hdr,  with len its size in bytes. type indicates
                     the protocol of the header and can be one of:

                     BPF_LWT_ENCAP_SEG6
                            IPv6 encapsulation  with  Segment  Routing  Header
                            (struct  ipv6_sr_hdr).  hdr only contains the SRH,
                            the IPv6 header is computed by the kernel.

                     BPF_LWT_ENCAP_SEG6_INLINE
                            Only works if skb contains an IPv6 packet.  Insert
                            a  Segment Routing Header (struct ipv6_sr_hdr) in-
                            side the IPv6 header.

                     BPF_LWT_ENCAP_IP
                            IP  encapsulation  (GRE/GUE/IPIP/etc).  The  outer
                            header  must  be IPv4 or IPv6, followed by zero or
                            more additional headers, up  to  LWT_BPF_MAX_HEAD-
                            ROOM  total bytes in all prepended headers. Please
                            note that if skb_is_gso(skb) is true, no more than
                            two  headers  can  be  prepended,  and  the  inner
                            header,  if  present,  should  be  either  GRE  or
                            UDP/GUE.

                     BPF_LWT_ENCAP_SEG6*  types  can be called by BPF programs
                     of type BPF_PROG_TYPE_LWT_IN; BPF_LWT_ENCAP_IP  type  can
                     be  called  by bpf programs of types BPF_PROG_TYPE_LWT_IN
                     and BPF_PROG_TYPE_LWT_XMIT.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_lwt_seg6_store_bytes(struct sk_buff  *skb,  u32  offset,  const
       void *from, u32 len)

              Description
                     Store len bytes from address from into the packet associ-
                     ated to skb, at offset. Only the flags, tag and TLVs  in-
                     side  the  outermost  IPv6  Segment Routing Header can be
                     modified through this helper.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_lwt_seg6_adjust_srh(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 offset, s32 delta)

              Description
                     Adjust the size allocated to TLVs in the  outermost  IPv6
                     Segment Routing Header contained in the packet associated
                     to skb, at position offset by delta bytes.  Only  offsets
                     after  the  segments  are  accepted. delta can be as well
                     positive (growing) as negative (shrinking).

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying  packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all checks
                     on pointers previously done by the verifier  are  invali-
                     dated  and must be performed again, if the helper is used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_lwt_seg6_action(struct sk_buff *skb, u32 action,  void  *param,
       u32 param_len)

              Description
                     Apply  an  IPv6  Segment Routing action of type action to
                     the packet associated to skb. Each action takes a parame-
                     ter  contained  at address param, and of length param_len
                     bytes.  action can be one of:

                     SEG6_LOCAL_ACTION_END_X
                            End.X action: Endpoint with Layer-3 cross-connect.
                            Type of param: struct in6_addr.

                     SEG6_LOCAL_ACTION_END_T
                            End.T  action:  Endpoint  with specific IPv6 table
                            lookup.  Type of param: int.

                     SEG6_LOCAL_ACTION_END_B6
                            End.B6 action: Endpoint bound to an  SRv6  policy.
                            Type of param: struct ipv6_sr_hdr.

                     SEG6_LOCAL_ACTION_END_B6_ENCAP
                            End.B6.Encap action: Endpoint bound to an SRv6 en-
                            capsulation  policy.   Type   of   param:   struct
                            ipv6_sr_hdr.

                     A call to this helper is susceptible to change the under-
                     lying packet buffer. Therefore, at load time, all  checks
                     on  pointers  previously done by the verifier are invali-
                     dated and must be performed again, if the helper is  used
                     in combination with direct packet access.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_rc_repeat(void *ctx)

              Description
                     This helper is used in programs implementing IR decoding,
                     to report a successfully decoded repeat key message. This
                     delays  the  generation  of a key up event for previously
                     generated key down event.

                     Some IR protocols like NEC have a special IR message  for
                     repeating last button, for when a button is held down.

                     The  ctx  should  point to the lirc sample as passed into
                     the program.

                     This helper is only available is the kernel was  compiled
                     with  the  CONFIG_BPF_LIRC_MODE2 configuration option set
                     to "y".

              Return 0

       int bpf_rc_keydown(void *ctx, u32 protocol, u64 scancode, u32 toggle)

              Description
                     This helper is used in programs implementing IR decoding,
                     to report a successfully decoded key press with scancode,
                     toggle value in the given protocol. The scancode will  be
                     translated to a keycode using the rc keymap, and reported
                     as an input key down event. After a period a key up event
                     is  generated. This period can be extended by calling ei-
                     ther bpf_rc_keydown() again  with  the  same  values,  or
                     calling bpf_rc_repeat().

                     Some  protocols  include a toggle bit, in case the button
                     was released and pressed again between consecutive  scan-
                     codes.

                     The  ctx  should  point to the lirc sample as passed into
                     the program.

                     The protocol is the decoded  protocol  number  (see  enum
                     rc_proto for some predefined values).

                     This  helper is only available is the kernel was compiled
                     with the CONFIG_BPF_LIRC_MODE2 configuration  option  set
                     to "y".

              Return 0

       u64 bpf_skb_cgroup_id(struct sk_buff *skb)

              Description
                     Return the cgroup v2 id of the socket associated with the
                     skb.  This is roughly similar to the bpf_get_cgroup_clas-
                     sid() helper for cgroup v1 by providing a tag resp. iden-
                     tifier that can be matched on or  used  for  map  lookups
                     e.g.  to  implement  policy.  The cgroup v2 id of a given
                     path in the hierarchy is exposed in  user  space  through
                     the f_handle API in order to get to the same 64-bit id.

                     This  helper  can  be  used on TC egress path, but not on
                     ingress, and is available only if the kernel was compiled
                     with the CONFIG_SOCK_CGROUP_DATA configuration option.

              Return The  id  is returned or 0 in case the id could not be re-
                     trieved.

       u64 bpf_get_current_cgroup_id(void)

              Return A 64-bit integer containing the current cgroup  id  based
                     on the cgroup within which the current task is running.

       void *bpf_get_local_storage(void *map, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Get  the pointer to the local storage area.  The type and
                     the size of the local storage is defined by the map argu-
                     ment.   The  flags meaning is specific for each map type,
                     and has to be 0 for cgroup local storage.

                     Depending on the BPF program type, a local  storage  area
                     can  be shared between multiple instances of the BPF pro-
                     gram, running simultaneously.

                     A user should care about the synchronization by  himself.
                     For example, by using the BPF_STX_XADD instruction to al-
                     ter the shared data.

              Return A pointer to the local storage area.

       int  bpf_sk_select_reuseport(struct  sk_reuseport_md   *reuse,   struct
       bpf_map *map, void *key, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Select  a  SO_REUSEPORT socket from a BPF_MAP_TYPE_REUSE-
                     PORT_ARRAY map.  It checks the selected socket is  match-
                     ing the incoming request in the socket buffer.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       u64 bpf_skb_ancestor_cgroup_id(struct sk_buff *skb, int ancestor_level)

              Description
                     Return id of cgroup v2 that is ancestor of cgroup associ-
                     ated with the skb at the ancestor_level.  The root cgroup
                     is  at ancestor_level zero and each step down the hierar-
                     chy increments the level. If ancestor_level ==  level  of
                     cgroup  associated  with  skb,  then return value will be
                     same as that of bpf_skb_cgroup_id().

                     The helper is  useful  to  implement  policies  based  on
                     cgroups that are upper in hierarchy than immediate cgroup
                     associated with skb.

                     The format of returned id and helper limitations are same
                     as in bpf_skb_cgroup_id().

              Return The  id  is returned or 0 in case the id could not be re-
                     trieved.

       struct bpf_sock  *bpf_sk_lookup_tcp(void  *ctx,  struct  bpf_sock_tuple
       *tuple, u32 tuple_size, u64 netns, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Look for TCP socket matching tuple, optionally in a child
                     network  namespace  netns.  The  return  value  must   be
                     checked, and if non-NULL, released via bpf_sk_release().

                     The  ctx should point to the context of the program, such
                     as the skb or socket (depending on the hook in use). This
                     is  used  to determine the base network namespace for the
                     lookup.

                     tuple_size must be one of:

                     sizeof(tuple->ipv4)
                            Look for an IPv4 socket.

                     sizeof(tuple->ipv6)
                            Look for an IPv6 socket.

                     If the netns is a negative signed  32-bit  integer,  then
                     the  socket lookup table in the netns associated with the
                     ctx will will be used. For the  TC  hooks,  this  is  the
                     netns of the device in the skb. For socket hooks, this is
                     the netns of the socket.  If netns is  any  other  signed
                     32-bit value greater than or equal to zero then it speci-
                     fies the ID of the netns relative to the netns associated
                     with the ctx. netns values beyond the range of 32-bit in-
                     tegers are reserved for future use.

                     All values for flags are reserved for future  usage,  and
                     must be left at zero.

                     This  helper is available only if the kernel was compiled
                     with CONFIG_NET configuration option.

              Return Pointer to struct bpf_sock, or NULL in case  of  failure.
                     For  sockets  with  reuseport option, the struct bpf_sock
                     result is from reuse->socks[] using the hash of  the  tu-
                     ple.

       struct  bpf_sock  *bpf_sk_lookup_udp(void  *ctx,  struct bpf_sock_tuple
       *tuple, u32 tuple_size, u64 netns, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Look for UDP socket matching tuple, optionally in a child
                     network   namespace  netns.  The  return  value  must  be
                     checked, and if non-NULL, released via bpf_sk_release().

                     The ctx should point to the context of the program,  such
                     as the skb or socket (depending on the hook in use). This
                     is used to determine the base network namespace  for  the
                     lookup.

                     tuple_size must be one of:

                     sizeof(tuple->ipv4)
                            Look for an IPv4 socket.

                     sizeof(tuple->ipv6)
                            Look for an IPv6 socket.

                     If  the  netns  is a negative signed 32-bit integer, then
                     the socket lookup table in the netns associated with  the
                     ctx  will  will  be  used.  For the TC hooks, this is the
                     netns of the device in the skb. For socket hooks, this is
                     the  netns  of  the socket.  If netns is any other signed
                     32-bit value greater than or equal to zero then it speci-
                     fies the ID of the netns relative to the netns associated
                     with the ctx. netns values beyond the range of 32-bit in-
                     tegers are reserved for future use.

                     All  values  for flags are reserved for future usage, and
                     must be left at zero.

                     This helper is available only if the kernel was  compiled
                     with CONFIG_NET configuration option.

              Return Pointer  to  struct bpf_sock, or NULL in case of failure.
                     For sockets with reuseport option,  the  struct  bpf_sock
                     result  is  from reuse->socks[] using the hash of the tu-
                     ple.

       int bpf_sk_release(struct bpf_sock *sock)

              Description
                     Release the reference  held  by  sock.  sock  must  be  a
                     non-NULL     pointer     that     was    returned    from
                     bpf_sk_lookup_xxx().

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_map_push_elem(struct  bpf_map  *map,  const  void  *value,  u64
       flags)

              Description
                     Push an element value in map. flags is one of:

                     BPF_EXIST
                            If  the queue/stack is full, the oldest element is
                            removed to make room for this.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_map_pop_elem(struct bpf_map *map, void *value)

              Description
                     Pop an element from map.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_map_peek_elem(struct bpf_map *map, void *value)

              Description
                     Get an element from map without removing it.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_msg_push_data(struct sk_buff *skb,  u32  start,  u32  len,  u64
       flags)

              Description
                     For  socket policies, insert len bytes into msg at offset
                     start.

                     If a program of type BPF_PROG_TYPE_SK_MSG is run on a msg
                     it  may  want to insert metadata or options into the msg.
                     This can later be read and used by any of the lower layer
                     BPF hooks.

                     This  helper  may fail if under memory pressure (a malloc
                     fails) in these cases BPF programs will get an  appropri-
                     ate error and BPF programs will need to handle them.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int  bpf_msg_pop_data(struct  sk_msg_buff *msg, u32 start, u32 pop, u64
       flags)

              Description
                     Will remove pop bytes from a msg starting at byte  start.
                     This may result in ENOMEM errors under certain situations
                     if an allocation and copy are required due to a full ring
                     buffer.   However, the helper will try to avoid doing the
                     allocation if possible. Other errors can occur  if  input
                     parameters are invalid either due to start byte not being
                     valid part of msg  payload  and/or  pop  value  being  to
                     large.

              Return 0 on success, or a negative error in case of failure.

       int bpf_rc_pointer_rel(void *ctx, s32 rel_x, s32 rel_y)

              Description
                     This helper is used in programs implementing IR decoding,
                     to report a successfully decoded pointer movement.

                     The ctx should point to the lirc sample  as  passed  into
                     the program.

                     This  helper is only available is the kernel was compiled
                     with the CONFIG_BPF_LIRC_MODE2 configuration  option  set
                     to "y".

              Return 0

       int bpf_spin_lock(struct bpf_spin_lock *lock)

              Description
                     Acquire a spinlock represented by the pointer lock, which
                     is stored as part of a value of a map.  Taking  the  lock
                     allows  to  safely  update the rest of the fields in that
                     value. The spinlock can (and must) later be released with
                     a call to bpf_spin_unlock(lock).

                     Spinlocks  in BPF programs come with a number of restric-
                     tions and constraints:

                     o bpf_spin_lock objects are only allowed inside  maps  of
                       types  BPF_MAP_TYPE_HASH  and  BPF_MAP_TYPE_ARRAY (this
                       list could be extended in the future).

                     o BTF description of the map is mandatory.

                     o The BPF program can take ONE lock at a time, since tak-
                       ing two or more could cause dead locks.

                     o Only  one  struct bpf_spin_lock is allowed per map ele-
                       ment.

                     o When the lock is taken, calls (either  BPF  to  BPF  or
                       helpers) are not allowed.

                     o The  BPF_LD_ABS and BPF_LD_IND instructions are not al-
                       lowed inside a spinlock-ed region.

                     o The BPF program MUST call bpf_spin_unlock() to  release
                       the lock, on all execution paths, before it returns.

                     o The  BPF  program  can access struct bpf_spin_lock only
                       via the bpf_spin_lock() and bpf_spin_unlock()  helpers.
                       Loading  or  storing data into the struct bpf_spin_lock
                       lock; field of a map is not allowed.

                     o To use the bpf_spin_lock() helper, the BTF  description
                       of  the  map  value  must  be  a struct and have struct
                       bpf_spin_lock anyname; field at the top level.   Nested
                       lock inside another struct is not allowed.

                     o The struct bpf_spin_lock lock field in a map value must
                       be aligned on a multiple of 4 bytes in that value.

                     o Syscall with command BPF_MAP_LOOKUP_ELEM does not  copy
                       the bpf_spin_lock field to user space.

                     o Syscall  with  command  BPF_MAP_UPDATE_ELEM,  or update
                       from a BPF program, do  not  update  the  bpf_spin_lock
                       field.

                     o bpf_spin_lock  cannot  be on the stack or inside a net-
                       working packet (it can only be inside of a map values).

                     o bpf_spin_lock is available to root only.

                     o Tracing programs and socket filter programs cannot  use
                       bpf_spin_lock()  due  to insufficient preemption checks
                       (but this may change in the future).

                     o bpf_spin_lock  is  not  allowed  in   inner   maps   of
                       map-in-map.

              Return 0

       int bpf_spin_unlock(struct bpf_spin_lock *lock)

              Description
                     Release   the   lock  previously  locked  by  a  call  to
                     bpf_spin_lock(lock).

              Return 0

       struct bpf_sock *bpf_sk_fullsock(struct bpf_sock *sk)

              Description
                     This helper gets a struct bpf_sock pointer such that  all
                     the fields in this bpf_sock can be accessed.

              Return A  struct bpf_sock pointer on success, or NULL in case of
                     failure.

       struct bpf_tcp_sock *bpf_tcp_sock(struct bpf_sock *sk)

              Description
                     This helper gets a struct  bpf_tcp_sock  pointer  from  a
                     struct bpf_sock pointer.

              Return A struct bpf_tcp_sock pointer on success, or NULL in case
                     of failure.

       int bpf_skb_ecn_set_ce(struct sk_buf *skb)

              Description
                     Set ECN (Explicit Congestion Notification)  field  of  IP
                     header to CE (Congestion Encountered) if current value is
                     ECT (ECN Capable Transport). Otherwise, do nothing. Works
                     with IPv6 and IPv4.

              Return 1  if  the  CE  flag is set (either by the current helper
                     call or because it was already present), 0 if it  is  not
                     set.

       struct bpf_sock *bpf_get_listener_sock(struct bpf_sock *sk)

              Description
                     Return  a  struct  bpf_sock  pointer in TCP_LISTEN state.
                     bpf_sk_release() is unnecessary and not allowed.

              Return A struct bpf_sock pointer on success, or NULL in case  of
                     failure.

       struct  bpf_sock  *bpf_skc_lookup_tcp(void  *ctx, struct bpf_sock_tuple
       *tuple, u32 tuple_size, u64 netns, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Look for TCP socket matching tuple, optionally in a child
                     network   namespace  netns.  The  return  value  must  be
                     checked, and if non-NULL, released via bpf_sk_release().

                     This function is identical to bpf_sk_lookup_tcp(), except
                     that  it  also  returns  timewait or request sockets. Use
                     bpf_sk_fullsock() or bpf_tcp_sock() to  access  the  full
                     structure.

                     This  helper is available only if the kernel was compiled
                     with CONFIG_NET configuration option.

              Return Pointer to struct bpf_sock, or NULL in case  of  failure.
                     For  sockets  with  reuseport option, the struct bpf_sock
                     result is from reuse->socks[] using the hash of  the  tu-
                     ple.

       int   bpf_tcp_check_syncookie(struct   bpf_sock  *sk,  void  *iph,  u32
       iph_len, struct tcphdr *th, u32 th_len)

              Description
                     Check whether iph and th contain a valid SYN  cookie  ACK
                     for the listening socket in sk.

                     iph points to the start of the IPv4 or IPv6 header, while
                     iph_len contains sizeof(struct  iphdr)  or  sizeof(struct
                     ip6hdr).

                     th  points  to  the start of the TCP header, while th_len
                     contains sizeof(struct tcphdr).

              Return 0 if iph and th are a valid SYN cookie ACK, or a negative
                     error otherwise.

       int  bpf_sysctl_get_name(struct  bpf_sysctl  *ctx,  char  *buf,  size_t
       buf_len, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Get name of sysctl in /proc/sys/ and copy  it  into  pro-
                     vided by program buffer buf of size buf_len.

                     The   buffer   is  always  NUL  terminated,  unless  it's
                     zero-sized.

                     If flags is zero, full name (e.g. "net/ipv4/tcp_mem")  is
                     copied. Use BPF_F_SYSCTL_BASE_NAME flag to copy base name
                     only (e.g. "tcp_mem").

              Return Number of character copied (not  including  the  trailing
                     NUL).

                     -E2BIG  if the buffer wasn't big enough (buf will contain
                     truncated name in this case).

       int bpf_sysctl_get_current_value(struct  bpf_sysctl  *ctx,  char  *buf,
       size_t buf_len)

              Description
                     Get  current  value  of  sysctl  as  it  is  presented in
                     /proc/sys (incl. newline, etc), and copy it as  a  string
                     into provided by program buffer buf of size buf_len.

                     The  whole  value is copied, no matter what file position
                     user space issued e.g. sys_read at.

                     The  buffer  is  always  NUL  terminated,   unless   it's
                     zero-sized.

              Return Number  of  character  copied (not including the trailing
                     NUL).

                     -E2BIG if the buffer wasn't big enough (buf will  contain
                     truncated name in this case).

                     -EINVAL  if  current  value was unavailable, e.g. because
                     sysctl is uninitialized and read returns -EIO for it.

       int bpf_sysctl_get_new_value(struct bpf_sysctl *ctx, char *buf,  size_t
       buf_len)

              Description
                     Get  new value being written by user space to sysctl (be-
                     fore the actual write happens) and copy it  as  a  string
                     into provided by program buffer buf of size buf_len.

                     User space may write new value at file position > 0.

                     The   buffer   is  always  NUL  terminated,  unless  it's
                     zero-sized.

              Return Number of character copied (not  including  the  trailing
                     NUL).

                     -E2BIG  if the buffer wasn't big enough (buf will contain
                     truncated name in this case).

                     -EINVAL if sysctl is being read.

       int bpf_sysctl_set_new_value(struct bpf_sysctl *ctx, const  char  *buf,
       size_t buf_len)

              Description
                     Override  new value being written by user space to sysctl
                     with value provided by program  in  buffer  buf  of  size
                     buf_len.

                     buf  should  contain a string in same form as provided by
                     user space on sysctl write.

                     User space may write new value at file position >  0.  To
                     override  the  whole sysctl value file position should be
                     set to zero.

              Return 0 on success.

                     -E2BIG if the buf_len is too big.

                     -EINVAL if sysctl is being read.

       int bpf_strtol(const char *buf, size_t buf_len, u64 flags, long *res)

              Description
                     Convert the initial part of the string from buffer buf of
                     size  buf_len  to  a  long integer according to the given
                     base and save the result in res.

                     The string may begin with an arbitrary  amount  of  white
                     space  (as determined by isspace(3)) followed by a single
                     optional '-' sign.

                     Five least significant bits of flags encode  base,  other
                     bits are currently unused.

                     Base must be either 8, 10, 16 or 0 to detect it automati-
                     cally similar to user space strtol(3).

              Return Number of characters consumed on success. Must  be  posi-
                     tive but no more than buf_len.

                     -EINVAL if no valid digits were found or unsupported base
                     was provided.

                     -ERANGE if resulting value was out of range.

       int bpf_strtoul(const char *buf, size_t buf_len,  u64  flags,  unsigned
       long *res)

              Description
                     Convert the initial part of the string from buffer buf of
                     size buf_len to an unsigned long integer according to the
                     given base and save the result in res.

                     The  string  may  begin with an arbitrary amount of white
                     space (as determined by isspace(3)).

                     Five least significant bits of flags encode  base,  other
                     bits are currently unused.

                     Base must be either 8, 10, 16 or 0 to detect it automati-
                     cally similar to user space strtoul(3).

              Return Number of characters consumed on success. Must  be  posi-
                     tive but no more than buf_len.

                     -EINVAL if no valid digits were found or unsupported base
                     was provided.

                     -ERANGE if resulting value was out of range.

       void *bpf_sk_storage_get(struct bpf_map *map, struct bpf_sock *sk, void
       *value, u64 flags)

              Description
                     Get a bpf-local-storage from a sk.

                     Logically,  it could be thought of getting the value from
                     a map with sk as the key.  From  this  perspective,   the
                     usage is not much different from bpf_map_lookup_elem(map,
                     &sk) except this helper enforces the key must be  a  full
                     socket  and  the  map  must  be a BPF_MAP_TYPE_SK_STORAGE
                     also.

                     Underneath, the value is stored locally at sk instead  of
                     the  map.   The  map  is  used  as  the bpf-local-storage
                     "type". The bpf-local-storage "type" (i.e.  the  map)  is
                     searched against all bpf-local-storages residing at sk.

                     An  optional  flags  (BPF_SK_STORAGE_GET_F_CREATE) can be
                     used such that a new bpf-local-storage will be created if
                     one  does  not  exist.   value  can be used together with
                     BPF_SK_STORAGE_GET_F_CREATE to specify the initial  value
                     of  a  bpf-local-storage.   If  value  is  NULL,  the new
                     bpf-local-storage will be zero initialized.

              Return A bpf-local-storage pointer is returned on success.

                     NULL if not found or there was an error in adding  a  new
                     bpf-local-storage.

       int bpf_sk_storage_delete(struct bpf_map *map, struct bpf_sock *sk)

              Description
                     Delete a bpf-local-storage from a sk.

              Return 0 on success.

                     -ENOENT if the bpf-local-storage cannot be found.

       int bpf_send_signal(u32 sig)

              Description
                     Send signal sig to the current task.

              Return 0 on success or successfully queued.

                     -EBUSY if work queue under nmi is full.

                     -EINVAL if sig is invalid.

                     -EPERM if no permission to send the sig.

                     -EAGAIN if bpf program can try again.

       s64  bpf_tcp_gen_syncookie(struct bpf_sock *sk, void *iph, u32 iph_len,
       struct tcphdr *th, u32 th_len)

              Description
                     Try to issue a SYN cookie for the packet with correspond-
                     ing  IP/TCP  headers, iph and th, on the listening socket
                     in sk.

                     iph points to the start of the IPv4 or IPv6 header, while
                     iph_len  contains  sizeof(struct  iphdr) or sizeof(struct
                     ip6hdr).

                     th points to the start of the TCP  header,  while  th_len
                     contains the length of the TCP header.

              Return On  success,  lower 32 bits hold the generated SYN cookie
                     in followed by 16 bits which hold the MSS value for  that
                     cookie, and the top 16 bits are unused.

                     On failure, the returned value is one of the following:

                     -EINVAL SYN cookie cannot be issued due to error

                     -ENOENT SYN cookie should not be issued (no SYN flood)

                     -EOPNOTSUPP  kernel  configuration  does  not  enable SYN
                     cookies

                     -EPROTONOSUPPORT IP packet version is not 4 or 6

EXAMPLES
       Example usage for most of the eBPF helpers listed in this  manual  page
       are  available  within the Linux kernel sources, at the following loca-
       tions:

       o samples/bpf/

       o tools/testing/selftests/bpf/

LICENSE
       eBPF programs can have an associated license,  passed  along  with  the
       bytecode  instructions  to the kernel when the programs are loaded. The
       format for that string is identical to the one in use for  kernel  mod-
       ules  (Dual licenses, such as "Dual BSD/GPL", may be used). Some helper
       functions are only accessible to programs that are compatible with  the
       GNU Privacy License (GPL).

       In  order to use such helpers, the eBPF program must be loaded with the
       correct license string passed (via attr) to the bpf() system call,  and
       this  generally  translates  into the C source code of the program con-
       taining a line similar to the following:

          char ____license[] __attribute__((section("license"), used)) = "GPL";

IMPLEMENTATION
       This manual page is an effort to  document  the  existing  eBPF  helper
       functions.   But  as of this writing, the BPF sub-system is under heavy
       development. New eBPF program or map types are added,  along  with  new
       helper  functions. Some helpers are occasionally made available for ad-
       ditional program types. So in spite of the efforts  of  the  community,
       this  page  might  not  be up-to-date. If you want to check by yourself
       what helper functions exist in your kernel, or what types  of  programs
       they  can  support,  here are some files among the kernel tree that you
       may be interested in:

       o include/uapi/linux/bpf.h is the main BPF header. It contains the full
         list  of  all helper functions, as well as many other BPF definitions
         including most of  the  flags,  structs  or  constants  used  by  the
         helpers.

       o net/core/filter.c  contains  the  definition  of most network-related
         helper functions, and the list of program types from which  they  can
         be used.

       o kernel/trace/bpf_trace.c  is  the  equivalent  for  most tracing pro-
         gram-related helpers.

       o kernel/bpf/verifier.c contains the functions used to check that valid
         types of eBPF maps are used with a given helper function.

       o kernel/bpf/  directory  contains  other  files  in  which  additional
         helpers are defined (for cgroups, sockmaps, etc.).

       Compatibility between helper functions and program types can  generally
       be  found in the files where helper functions are defined. Look for the
       struct bpf_func_proto objects and for functions returning  them:  these
       functions contain a list of helpers that a given program type can call.
       Note that the default: label of the switch  ...  case  used  to  filter
       helpers  can  call other functions, themselves allowing access to addi-
       tional helpers. The requirement for GPL license is also in those struct
       bpf_func_proto.

       Compatibility  between  helper  functions and map types can be found in
       the check_map_func_compatibility() function  in  file  kernel/bpf/veri-
       fier.c.

       Helper functions that invalidate the checks on data and data_end point-
       ers    for    network    processing    are    listed    in     function
       bpf_helper_changes_pkt_data() in file net/core/filter.c.

SEE ALSO
       bpf(2),  cgroups(7),  ip(8), perf_event_open(2), sendmsg(2), socket(7),
       tc-bpf(8)

COLOPHON
       This page is part of release 5.05 of the Linux  man-pages  project.   A
       description  of  the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
       latest    version    of    this    page,    can     be     found     at
       https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

Linux                             2019-11-19                    BPF-HELPERS(7)

NAME | DESCRIPTION | HELPERS | EXAMPLES | LICENSE | IMPLEMENTATION | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON