XDP-loader is a simple loader for XDP programs with support for attaching
multiple programs to the same interface. To achieve this it exposes the same
load and unload semantics exposed by the libxdp library. See the libxdp(3)
man
page for details of how this works, and what kernel features it relies on.
The syntax for running xdp-loader is:
xdp-loader COMMAND [options]
Where COMMAND can be one of:
load - load an XDP program on an interface
unload - unload an XDP program from an interface
status - show current XDP program status
clean - clean up detached program links in XDP bpffs directory
help - show the list of available commands
Each command, and its options are explained below. Or use xdp-loader COMMAND
--help
to see the options for each command.
The load
command loads one or more XDP programs onto an interface.
The syntax for the load
command is:
xdp-loader load [options] <ifname> <programs>
Where <ifname>
is the name of the interface to load the programs onto, and the
<programs>
is one or more file names containing XDP programs. The programs
will be loaded onto the interface in the order of their preference, as
specified by the program metadata (see libxdp(3)).
The supported options are:
Specifies which mode to load the XDP program to be loaded in. The valid values are ‘native’, which is the default in-driver XDP mode, ‘skb’, which causes the so-called skb mode (also known as generic XDP) to be used, ‘hw’ which causes the program to be offloaded to the hardware, or ‘unspecified’ which leaves it up to the kernel to pick a mode (which it will do by picking native mode if the driver supports it, or generic mode otherwise). Note that using ‘unspecified’ can make it difficult to predict what mode a program will end up being loaded in. For this reason, the default is ‘native’.
This specifies a root path under which to pin any maps that define the ‘pinning’
attribute in their definitions. This path must be located on a bpffs
file
system. If not set, maps will not be pinned, even if they specify pinning in
their definitions. When pinning maps, if the pinned location for a map already
exist, the map pinned there will be reused if it is compatible with the type of
the map being loaded.
Specify which ELF section to load the XDP program(s) from in each file. The default is to use the first program in each file. If this option is set, it applies to all programs being loaded.
Specify which BPF program with the name to load the XDP program(s) from in each file. The default is to use the first program in each file. Only one of –section and –prog-name may be specified. If this option is set, it applies to all programs being loaded.
Enable debug logging. Specify twice for even more verbosity.
Display a summary of the available options
The unload
command is used for unloading programs from an interface.
The syntax for the unload
command is:
xdp-loader unload [options] <ifname>
Where <ifname>
is the name of the interface to load the programs onto. Either
the --all
or --id
options must be used to specify which program(s) to unload.
The supported options are:
Unload a single program from the interface by ID. Use xdp-loader status
to
obtain the ID of the program being unloaded. If this program is the last program
loaded on the interface, the dispatcher program will also be removed, which
makes the operation equivalent to specifying --all
.
Unload all XDP programs on the interface, as well as the multi-program dispatcher.
Enable debug logging. Specify twice for even more verbosity.
Display a summary of the available options
The status
command displays a list of interfaces in the system, and the XDP
program(s) loaded on each interface. For each interface, a list of programs are
shown, with the run priority and “chain actions” for each program. See the
section on program metadata for the meaning of this metadata.
Enable debug logging. Specify twice for even more verbosity.
Display a summary of the available options
The syntax for the clean
command is:
xdp-loader clean [options] [ifname]
The clean
command cleans up any detached program links in the XDP bpffs
directory. When a network interface disappears, any programs loaded in software
mode (e.g. skb, native) remain pinned in the bpffs directory, but become
detached from the interface. These need to be unlinked from the filesystem. The
clean
command takes an optional interface parameter to only unlink detached
programs corresponding to the interface. By default, all detached programs for
all interfaces are unlinked.
The supported options are:
Enable debug logging. Specify twice for even more verbosity.
Display a summary of the available options
To load an XDP program on the eth0 interface simply do:
# xdp-loader load eth0 xdp_drop.o
# xdp-loader status
CURRENT XDP PROGRAM STATUS:
Interface Prio Program name Mode ID Tag Chain actions
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
lo <no XDP program>
eth0 xdp_dispatcher native 50 d51e469e988d81da
=> 50 xdp_drop 55 57cd311f2e27366b XDP_PASS
Which shows that a dispatcher program was loaded on the interface, and the xdp_drop program was installed as the first (and only) component program after it. In this instance, the program does not specify any of the metadata above, so the defaults (priority 50 and XDP_PASS as its chain call action) was used.
To use the automatic map pinning, include the pinning
attribute into the map
definition in the program, something like:
struct {
__uint(type, BPF_MAP_TYPE_ARRAY);
__uint(max_entries, 10);
__type(key, __u32);
__type(value, __u64);
__uint(pinning, LIBBPF_PIN_BY_NAME);
} my_map SEC(".maps");
And load it with the --pin-path
attribute:
# xdp-loader load eth0 my_prog.o --pin-path /sys/fs/bpf/my-prog
This will pin the map at /sys/fs/bpf/my-prog/my_map
. If this already exists,
the pinned map will be reused instead of creating a new one, which allows
different BPF programs to share the map.
libxdp(3)
for details on the XDP loading semantics and kernel compatibility
requirements.
Please report any bugs on Github: https://github.com/xdp-project/xdp-tools/issues
xdp-loader and this man page were written by Toke Høiland-Jørgensen.