Provided by: netsniff-ng_0.6.8-3build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       bpfc - a Berkeley Packet Filter assembler and compiler

SYNOPSIS

       bpfc { [options] | [source-file] }

DESCRIPTION

       bpfc  is  a small Berkeley Packet Filter assembler and compiler which is able to translate BPF assembler-
       like mnemonics into a numerical or C-like format, that can be read by tools such as netsniff-ng, iptables
       (xt_bpf)  and  many  others.  BPF  is  the  one  and  only  upstream  filtering construct that is used in
       combination with packet(7) sockets, but also seccomp-BPF for system call sandboxing.

       The Linux kernel and also BSD kernels implement "virtual machine" like constructs and JIT compilers  that
       mimic  a  small  register-based machine in BPF architecture and execute filter code that is, for example,
       composed by bpfc on a data buffer that is given by network packets. The  purpose  of  this  is  to  shift
       computation  in  time,  so  that  the  kernel  can drop or truncate incoming packets as early as possible
       without having to push them to user space for further analysis first. Meanwhile, BPF constructs also find
       application  in  other  areas such as in the communication between user and kernel space like system call
       sand-boxing.

       At the time of writing this man page, the only other available  BPF  compiler  is  part  of  the  pcap(3)
       library  and  accessible  through  a  high-level filter language that might be familiar to many people as
       tcpdump-like filters.

       However, it is quite often useful to bypass that  compiler  and  write  optimized  code  that  cannot  be
       produced  by  the pcap(3) compiler, or is wrongly optimized, or is defective on purpose in order to debug
       test kernel code. Also, a reason to use bpfc could be to try out some new BPF  extensions  that  are  not
       supported  by other compilers. Furthermore, bpfc can be useful to verify JIT compiler behavior or to find
       possible bugs that need to be fixed.

       bpfc is implemented with the help of flex(1) and bison(1), tokenizes the source file in the  first  stage
       and  parses  its  content  into  an  AST.   In  two  code generation stages it emits target opcodes. bpfc
       furthermore supports Linux kernel BPF extensions. More about that can be found in the syntax section.

       The Linux kernel BPF JIT compiler is automatically turned on if detected by netsniff-ng. However, it  can
       also  be  manually turned on through the command ''echo "1" > /proc/sys/net/core/bpf_jit_enable'' (normal
       working mode) or ''echo "2" > /proc/sys/net/core/bpf_jit_enable'' (debug mode where  emitted  opcodes  of
       the  image  are  printed  to  the kernel log). An architecture agnostic BPF JIT image disassembler can be
       found in the kernel source tree  under  ''tools/net/bpf_jit_disasm.c''  or  within  the  netsniff-ng  Git
       repository.

OPTIONS

       -i <source-file/->, --input <source-file/->
              Read BPF assembly instruction from an input file or from stdin.

       -p, --cpp
              Pass the bpf program through the C preprocessor before reading it in bpfc. This allows #define and
              #include directives (e.g. to include definitions from system  headers)  to  be  used  in  the  bpf
              program.

       -D <name>=<definition>, --define <name>=<definition>
              Add  macro  definition  for  the  C preprocessor to use it within bpf file. This option is used in
              combination with the -p/--cpp option.

       -f <format>, --format <format>
              Specify a different output format than the default that is netsniff-ng  compatible.  The  <format>
              specifier can be: C, netsniff-ng, xt_bpf, tcpdump.

       -b, --bypass
              Bypass  basic  filter validation when emitting opcodes. This can be useful for explicitly creating
              malformed BPF expressions for injecting into the kernel, for example, for bug testing.

       -V, --verbose
              Be more verbose and display some bpfc debugging information.

       -d, --dump
              Dump all supported instructions to stdout.

       -v, --version
              Show version information and exit.

       -h, --help
              Show user help and exit.

SYNTAX

       The BPF architecture resp. register machine consists of the following elements:

           Element          Description

           A                32 bit wide accumulator
           X                32 bit wide X register
           M[]              16 x 32 bit wide misc registers aka “scratch memory store”, addressable from 0 to 15

       A program, that is translated by bpfc into ''opcodes''  is  an  array  that  consists  of  the  following
       elements:

           o:16, jt:8, jf:8, k:32

       The  element o is a 16 bit wide opcode that has a particular instruction encoded, jt and jf are two 8 bit
       wide jump targets, one for condition
        ''true'', one for condition ''false''. Last but  not  least  the  32  bit  wide  element  k  contains  a
       miscellaneous argument that can be interpreted in different ways depending on the given instruction resp.
       opcode.

       The instruction set consists of load, store, branch, alu, miscellaneous and return instructions that  are
       also represented in bpfc syntax. This table also includes bpfc's own extensions. All operations are based
       on unsigned data structures:

          Instruction      Addressing mode      Description

          ld               1, 2, 3, 4, 10       Load word into A
          ldi              4                    Load word into A
          ldh              1, 2                 Load half-word into A
          ldb              1, 2                 Load byte into A
          ldx              3, 4, 5, 10          Load word into X
          ldxi             4                    Load word into X
          ldxb             5                    Load byte into X

          st               3                    Copy A into M[]
          stx              3                    Copy X into M[]

          jmp              6                    Jump to label
          ja               6                    Jump to label
          jeq              7, 8                 Jump on k == A
          jneq             8                    Jump on k != A
          jne              8                    Jump on k != A
          jlt              8                    Jump on k < A
          jle              8                    Jump on k <= A
          jgt              7, 8                 Jump on k > A
          jge              7, 8                 Jump on k >= A
          jset             7, 8                 Jump on k & A

          add              0, 4                 A + <x>
          sub              0, 4                 A - <x>
          mul              0, 4                 A * <x>
          div              0, 4                 A / <x>
          mod              0, 4                 A % <x>
          neg              0, 4                 !A
          and              0, 4                 A & <x>
          or               0, 4                 A | <x>
          xor              0, 4                 A ^ <x>
          lsh              0, 4                 A << <x>
          rsh              0, 4                 A >> <x>

          tax                                   Copy A into X
          txa                                   Copy X into A

          ret              4, 9                 Return

          Addressing mode  Syntax               Description

           0               x/%x                 Register X
           1               [k]                  BHW at byte offset k in the packet
           2               [x + k]              BHW at the offset X + k in the packet
           3               M[k]                 Word at offset k in M[]
           4               #k                   Literal value stored in k
           5               4*([k]&0xf)          Lower nibble * 4 at byte offset k in the packet
           6               L                    Jump label L
           7               #k,Lt,Lf             Jump to Lt if true, otherwise jump to Lf
           8               #k,Lt                Jump to Lt if predicate is true
           9               a/%a                 Accumulator A
          10               extension            BPF extension (see next table)

          Extension (and alias)                 Description

          #len, len, #pktlen, pktlen            Length of packet (skb->len)
          #pto, pto, #proto, proto              Ethernet type field (skb->protocol)
          #type, type                           Packet type (**) (skb->pkt_type)
          #poff, poff                           Detected payload start offset
          #ifx, ifx, #ifidx, ifidx              Interface index (skb->dev->ifindex)
          #nla, nla                             Netlink attribute of type X with offset A
          #nlan, nlan                           Nested Netlink attribute of type X with offset A
          #mark, mark                           Packet mark (skb->mark)
          #que, que, #queue, queue, #Q, Q       NIC queue index (skb->queue_mapping)
          #hat, hat, #hatype, hatype            NIC hardware type (**) (skb->dev->type)
          #rxh, rxh, #rxhash, rxhash            Receive hash (skb->rxhash)
          #cpu, cpu                             Current CPU (raw_smp_processor_id())
          #vlant, vlant, #vlan_tci, vlan_tci    VLAN TCI value (vlan_tx_tag_get(skb))
          #vlanp, vlanp                         VLAN present (vlan_tx_tag_present(skb))

          Further extension details (**)        Value

          #type, type                           0 - to us / host
                                                1 - to all / broadcast
                                                2 - to group / multicast
                                                3 - to others (promiscuous mode)
                                                4 - outgoing of any type

          #hat, hat, #hatype, hatype            1 - Ethernet 10Mbps
                                                8 - APPLEtalk
                                               19 - ATM
                                               24 - IEEE 1394 IPv4 - RFC 2734
                                               32 - InfiniBand
                                              768 - IPIP tunnel
                                              769 - IP6IP6 tunnel
                                              772 - Loopback device
                                              778 - GRE over IP
                                              783 - Linux-IrDA
                                              801 - IEEE 802.11
                                              802 - IEEE 802.11 + Prism2 header
                                              803 - IEEE 802.11 + radiotap header
                                              823 - GRE over IP6
                                              824 - Netlink
                                              [...] See include/uapi/linux/if_arp.h

       Note that the majority of BPF extensions are available on Linux only.

       There are two types of comments in bpfc source-files:

         1. Multi-line C-style comments:        /* put comment here */
         2. Single-line ASM-style comments:     ;  put comment here

       Used Abbreviations:

         BHW: byte, half-word, or word

SOURCE EXAMPLES

       In this section, we give a couple of examples of bpfc source files, in other words,  some  small  example
       filter programs:

       Only return packet headers (truncate packets):

         ld poff
         ret a

       Only allow ARP packets:

         ldh [12]
         jne #0x806, drop
         ret #-1
         drop: ret #0

       Only allow IPv4 TCP packets:

         ldh [12]
         jne #0x800, drop
         ldb [23]
         jneq #6, drop
         ret #-1
         drop: ret #0

       Only allow IPv4 TCP SSH traffic:

         ldh [12]
         jne #0x800, drop
         ldb [23]
         jneq #6, drop
         ldh [20]
         jset #0x1fff, drop
         ldxb 4 * ([14] & 0xf)
         ldh [x + 14]
         jeq #0x16, pass
         ldh [x + 16]
         jne #0x16, drop
         pass: ret #-1
         drop: ret #0

       A loadable x86_64 seccomp-BPF filter to allow a given set of syscalls:

         ld [4]                  /* offsetof(struct seccomp_data, arch) */
         jne #0xc000003e, bad    /* AUDIT_ARCH_X86_64 */
         ld [0]                  /* offsetof(struct seccomp_data, nr) */
         jeq #15, good           /* __NR_rt_sigreturn */
         jeq #231, good          /* __NR_exit_group */
         jeq #60, good           /* __NR_exit */
         jeq #0, good            /* __NR_read */
         jeq #1, good            /* __NR_write */
         jeq #5, good            /* __NR_fstat */
         jeq #9, good            /* __NR_mmap */
         jeq #14, good           /* __NR_rt_sigprocmask */
         jeq #13, good           /* __NR_rt_sigaction */
         jeq #35, good           /* __NR_nanosleep */
         bad: ret #0             /* SECCOMP_RET_KILL */
         good: ret #0x7fff0000   /* SECCOMP_RET_ALLOW */

       Allow any (hardware accelerated) VLAN:

         ld vlanp
         jeq #0, drop
         ret #-1
         drop: ret #0

       Only allow traffic for (hardware accelerated) VLAN 10:

         ld vlant
         jneq #10, drop
         ret #-1
         drop: ret #0

       More pedantic check for the above VLAN example:

         ld vlanp
         jeq #0, drop
         ld vlant
         jneq #10, drop
         ret #-1
         drop: ret #0

       Filter rtnetlink messages:

         ldh #proto       /* A = skb->protocol */

         jneq #0, skip    /* check for NETLINK_ROUTE */
         ldb [4]          /* A = nlmsg_type */

         jneq #0x10, skip /* check type == RTNL_NEWLINK */
         ldx #16          /* X = offset(ifinfomsg) */

         ldb [x + 4]      /* offset(ifi_index) */
         jneq #0x3, skip  /* check ifindex == 3 */

         ld #32           /* A = len(nlmsghdr) + len(ifinfomsg), payload offset */
         ldx #16          /* X = IFLA_OPERSTATE */
         ld #nla          /* A = offset(IFLA_OPERSTATE) */
         jeq #0, skip
         tax
         ldb [x + 4]      /* A = value(IFLA_OPERSTATE) */
         jneq #0x6, skip  /* check oper state is UP */

         ret #-1
         skip: ret #0

USAGE EXAMPLE

       bpfc fubar
              Compile the source file ''fubar'' into BPF opcodes. Opcodes will be directed to stdout.

       bpfc -f xt_bpf -b -p -i fubar, resp. iptables -A INPUT -m bpf --bytecode `bpfc -f xt_bpf -i fubar` -j LOG
              Compile  the  source  file  ''fubar''  into  BPF  opcodes, bypass basic filter validation and emit
              opcodes in netfilter's xt_bpf readable format. Note that the source file ''fubar'' is first passed
              to the C preprocessor for textual replacements before handing over to the bpfc compiler.

       cat fubar | bpfc -
              Read bpfc instruction from stdin and emit opcodes to stdout.

       bpfc foo > bar && netsniff-ng -f bar ...
              Compile  filter  instructions from file foo and redirect bpfc's output into the file bar, that can
              then be read by netsniff-ng(8) through option -f.

       bpfc -f tcpdump -i fubar
              Output opcodes from source file fubar in the same behavior as ''tcpdump -ddd''.

LEGAL

       bpfc is licensed under the GNU GPL version 2.0.

HISTORY

       bpfc was originally written for the netsniff-ng toolkit by Daniel Borkmann. It is currently maintained by
       Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch> and Daniel Borkmann <dborkma@tik.ee.ethz.ch>.

SEE ALSO

       netsniff-ng(8), trafgen(8), mausezahn(8), ifpps(8), flowtop(8), astraceroute(8), curvetun(8)

AUTHOR

       Manpage was written by Daniel Borkmann.

COLOPHON

       This page is part of the Linux netsniff-ng toolkit project. A description of the project, and information
       about reporting bugs, can be found at http://netsniff-ng.org/.