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BPFTOOL-MAP(8) BPFTOOL-MAP(8)

NAME

bpftool-map - tool for inspection and simple manipulation of eBPF maps

SYNOPSIS

bpftool [OPTIONS] map COMMAND

OPTIONS := { { -j | --json } [{ -p | --pretty }] | { -f | --bpffs } }

COMMANDS := { show | list | create | dump | update | lookup | getnext | delete | pin | help }



MAP COMMANDS

bpftool map { show | list }   [MAP]
bpftool map create     FILE type TYPE key KEY_SIZE value VALUE_SIZE 

entries MAX_ENTRIES name NAME [flags FLAGS] [inner_map MAP] [dev NAME]
bpftool map dump MAP bpftool map update MAP [key DATA] [value VALUE] [UPDATE_FLAGS] bpftool map lookup MAP [key DATA] bpftool map getnext MAP [key DATA] bpftool map delete MAP key DATA bpftool map pin MAP FILE bpftool map event_pipe MAP [cpu N index M] bpftool map peek MAP bpftool map push MAP value VALUE bpftool map pop MAP bpftool map enqueue MAP value VALUE bpftool map dequeue MAP bpftool map freeze MAP bpftool map help MAP := { id MAP_ID | pinned FILE | name MAP_NAME } DATA := { [hex] BYTES } PROG := { id PROG_ID | pinned FILE | tag PROG_TAG | name PROG_NAME } VALUE := { DATA | MAP | PROG } UPDATE_FLAGS := { any | exist | noexist } TYPE := { hash | array | prog_array | perf_event_array | percpu_hash
| percpu_array | stack_trace | cgroup_array | lru_hash | lru_percpu_hash | lpm_trie | array_of_maps | hash_of_maps | devmap | devmap_hash | sockmap | cpumap | xskmap | sockhash | cgroup_storage | reuseport_sockarray | percpu_cgroup_storage | queue | stack | sk_storage | struct_ops | ringbuf | inode_storage }

DESCRIPTION

Show information about loaded maps. If MAP is specified show information only about given maps, otherwise list all maps currently loaded on the system. In case of name, MAP may match several maps which will all be shown.

Output will start with map ID followed by map type and zero or more named attributes (depending on kernel version).

Since Linux 5.8 bpftool is able to discover information about processes that hold open file descriptors (FDs) against BPF maps. On such kernels bpftool will automatically emit this information as well.

Create a new map with given parameters and pin it to bpffs as FILE.

FLAGS should be an integer which is the combination of desired flags, e.g. 1024 for BPF_F_MMAPABLE (see bpf.h UAPI header for existing flags).

To create maps of type array-of-maps or hash-of-maps, the inner_map keyword must be used to pass an inner map. The kernel needs it to collect metadata related to the inner maps that the new map will work with.

Keyword dev expects a network interface name, and is used to request hardware offload for the map.

Dump all entries in a given MAP. In case of name, MAP may match several maps which will all be dumped.
Update map entry for a given KEY.

UPDATE_FLAGS can be one of: any update existing entry or add if doesn't exit; exist update only if entry already exists; noexist update only if entry doesn't exist.

If the hex keyword is provided in front of the bytes sequence, the bytes are parsed as hexadecimal values, even if no "0x" prefix is added. If the keyword is not provided, then the bytes are parsed as decimal values, unless a "0x" prefix (for hexadecimal) or a "0" prefix (for octal) is provided.

Lookup key in the map.
Get next key. If key is not specified, get first key.
Remove entry from the map.
Pin map MAP as FILE.

Note: FILE must be located in bpffs mount. It must not contain a dot character ('.'), which is reserved for future extensions of bpffs.

Read events from a BPF_MAP_TYPE_PERF_EVENT_ARRAY map.

Install perf rings into a perf event array map and dump output of any bpf_perf_event_output() call in the kernel. By default read the number of CPUs on the system and install perf ring for each CPU in the corresponding index in the array.

If cpu and index are specified, install perf ring for given cpu at index in the array (single ring).

Note that installing a perf ring into an array will silently replace any existing ring. Any other application will stop receiving events if it installed its rings earlier.

Peek next value in the queue or stack.
Push VALUE onto the stack.
Pop and print value from the stack.
Enqueue VALUE into the queue.
Dequeue and print value from the queue.
Freeze the map as read-only from user space. Entries from a frozen map can not longer be updated or deleted with the bpf() system call. This operation is not reversible, and the map remains immutable from user space until its destruction. However, read and write permissions for BPF programs to the map remain unchanged.
Print short help message.



OPTIONS

Print short help message (similar to bpftool help).
Print version number (similar to bpftool version), and optional features that were included when bpftool was compiled. Optional features include linking against libbfd to provide the disassembler for JIT-ted programs (bpftool prog dump jited) and usage of BPF skeletons (some features like bpftool prog profile or showing pids associated to BPF objects may rely on it).
Generate JSON output. For commands that cannot produce JSON, this option has no effect.
Generate human-readable JSON output. Implies -j.
Print all logs available, even debug-level information. This includes logs from libbpf as well as from the verifier, when attempting to load programs.
Show file names of pinned maps.
Do not automatically attempt to mount any virtual file system (such as tracefs or BPF virtual file system) when necessary.



EXAMPLES

# bpftool map show

10: hash  name some_map  flags 0x0

key 4B value 8B max_entries 2048 memlock 167936B
pids systemd(1)


The following three commands are equivalent:

# bpftool map update id 10 key hex   20   c4   b7   00 value hex   0f   ff   ff   ab   01   02   03   4c
# bpftool map update id 10 key     0x20 0xc4 0xb7 0x00 value     0x0f 0xff 0xff 0xab 0x01 0x02 0x03 0x4c
# bpftool map update id 10 key       32  196  183    0 value       15  255  255  171    1    2    3   76

# bpftool map lookup id 10 key 0 1 2 3

key: 00 01 02 03 value: 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07


# bpftool map dump id 10

key: 00 01 02 03  value: 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07
key: 0d 00 07 00  value: 02 00 00 00 01 02 03 04
Found 2 elements


# bpftool map getnext id 10 key 0 1 2 3

key:
00 01 02 03
next key:
0d 00 07 00


# mount -t bpf none /sys/fs/bpf/
# bpftool map pin id 10 /sys/fs/bpf/map
# bpftool map del pinned /sys/fs/bpf/map key 13 00 07 00

Note that map update can also be used in order to change the program references hold by a program array map. This can be used, for example, to change the programs used for tail-call jumps at runtime, without having to reload the entry-point program. Below is an example for this use case: we load a program defining a prog array map, and with a main function that contains a tail call to other programs that can be used either to "process" packets or to "debug" processing. Note that the prog array map MUST be pinned into the BPF virtual file system for the map update to work successfully, as kernel flushes prog array maps when they have no more references from user space (and the update would be lost as soon as bpftool exits).

# bpftool prog loadall tail_calls.o /sys/fs/bpf/foo type xdp
# bpftool prog --bpffs

545: xdp  name main_func  tag 674b4b5597193dc3  gpl

loaded_at 2018-12-12T15:02:58+0000 uid 0
xlated 240B jited 257B memlock 4096B map_ids 294
pinned /sys/fs/bpf/foo/xdp 546: xdp name bpf_func_process tag e369a529024751fc gpl
loaded_at 2018-12-12T15:02:58+0000 uid 0
xlated 200B jited 164B memlock 4096B
pinned /sys/fs/bpf/foo/process 547: xdp name bpf_func_debug tag 0b597868bc7f0976 gpl
loaded_at 2018-12-12T15:02:58+0000 uid 0
xlated 200B jited 164B memlock 4096B
pinned /sys/fs/bpf/foo/debug


# bpftool map

294: prog_array  name jmp_table  flags 0x0

key 4B value 4B max_entries 1 memlock 4096B
owner_prog_type xdp owner jited


# bpftool map pin id 294 /sys/fs/bpf/bar
# bpftool map dump pinned /sys/fs/bpf/bar

Found 0 elements


# bpftool map update pinned /sys/fs/bpf/bar key 0 0 0 0 value pinned /sys/fs/bpf/foo/debug
# bpftool map dump pinned /sys/fs/bpf/bar

key: 00 00 00 00  value: 22 02 00 00
Found 1 element


SEE ALSO