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authorJose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com>2023-02-28 10:51:29 +0100
committerAlexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>2023-02-28 09:55:18 -0800
commitae256f95478e07d49dae5036bb83c09dfbd686d4 (patch)
treed98045d67f1a689bdea9a5cec15ecb9a5df83e63 /Documentation/bpf
parent30a2d8328d8ac1bb0a6bf73f4f4cf03f4f5977cc (diff)
downloadlinux-ae256f95478e07d49dae5036bb83c09dfbd686d4.tar.gz
bpf, docs: Document BPF insn encoding in term of stored bytes
[Changes from V4: - s/regs:16/regs:8 in figure.] [Changes from V3: - Back to src_reg and dst_reg, since they denote register numbers as opposed to the values stored in these registers.] [Changes from V2: - Use src and dst consistently in the document. - Use a more graphical depiction of the 128-bit instruction. - Remove `Where:' fragment. - Clarify that unused bits are reserved and shall be zeroed.] [Changes from V1: - Use rst literal blocks for figures. - Avoid using | in the basic instruction/pseudo instruction figure. - Rebased to today's bpf-next master branch.] This patch modifies instruction-set.rst so it documents the encoding of BPF instructions in terms of how the bytes are stored (be it in an ELF file or as bytes in a memory buffer to be loaded into the kernel or some other BPF consumer) as opposed to how the instruction looks like once loaded. This is hopefully easier to understand by implementors looking to generate and/or consume bytes conforming BPF instructions. The patch also clarifies that the unused bytes in a pseudo-instruction shall be cleared with zeros. Signed-off-by: Jose E. Marchesi <jose.marchesi@oracle.com> Acked-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com> Acked-by: David Vernet <void@manifault.com> Link: https://lore.kernel.org/r/87h6v6i0da.fsf_-_@oracle.com Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/bpf')
-rw-r--r--Documentation/bpf/instruction-set.rst46
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 22 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/bpf/instruction-set.rst b/Documentation/bpf/instruction-set.rst
index 01802ed9b29b..db8789e6969e 100644
--- a/Documentation/bpf/instruction-set.rst
+++ b/Documentation/bpf/instruction-set.rst
@@ -38,15 +38,11 @@ eBPF has two instruction encodings:
* the wide instruction encoding, which appends a second 64-bit immediate (i.e.,
constant) value after the basic instruction for a total of 128 bits.
-The basic instruction encoding looks as follows for a little-endian processor,
-where MSB and LSB mean the most significant bits and least significant bits,
-respectively:
+The fields conforming an encoded basic instruction are stored in the
+following order::
-============= ======= ======= ======= ============
-32 bits (MSB) 16 bits 4 bits 4 bits 8 bits (LSB)
-============= ======= ======= ======= ============
-imm offset src_reg dst_reg opcode
-============= ======= ======= ======= ============
+ opcode:8 src_reg:4 dst_reg:4 offset:16 imm:32 // In little-endian BPF.
+ opcode:8 dst_reg:4 src_reg:4 offset:16 imm:32 // In big-endian BPF.
**imm**
signed integer immediate value
@@ -64,16 +60,17 @@ imm offset src_reg dst_reg opcode
**opcode**
operation to perform
-and as follows for a big-endian processor:
+Note that the contents of multi-byte fields ('imm' and 'offset') are
+stored using big-endian byte ordering in big-endian BPF and
+little-endian byte ordering in little-endian BPF.
-============= ======= ======= ======= ============
-32 bits (MSB) 16 bits 4 bits 4 bits 8 bits (LSB)
-============= ======= ======= ======= ============
-imm offset dst_reg src_reg opcode
-============= ======= ======= ======= ============
+For example::
-Multi-byte fields ('imm' and 'offset') are similarly stored in
-the byte order of the processor.
+ opcode offset imm assembly
+ src_reg dst_reg
+ 07 0 1 00 00 44 33 22 11 r1 += 0x11223344 // little
+ dst_reg src_reg
+ 07 1 0 00 00 11 22 33 44 r1 += 0x11223344 // big
Note that most instructions do not use all of the fields.
Unused fields shall be cleared to zero.
@@ -84,18 +81,23 @@ The 64 bits following the basic instruction contain a pseudo instruction
using the same format but with opcode, dst_reg, src_reg, and offset all set to zero,
and imm containing the high 32 bits of the immediate value.
-================= ==================
-64 bits (MSB) 64 bits (LSB)
-================= ==================
-basic instruction pseudo instruction
-================= ==================
+This is depicted in the following figure::
+
+ basic_instruction
+ .-----------------------------.
+ | |
+ code:8 regs:8 offset:16 imm:32 unused:32 imm:32
+ | |
+ '--------------'
+ pseudo instruction
Thus the 64-bit immediate value is constructed as follows:
imm64 = (next_imm << 32) | imm
where 'next_imm' refers to the imm value of the pseudo instruction
-following the basic instruction.
+following the basic instruction. The unused bytes in the pseudo
+instruction are reserved and shall be cleared to zero.
Instruction classes
-------------------