eBPF has revolutionized the observability landscape in the Linux kernel. Throughout our previous blog post series, I covered the fundamental building blocks of the eBPF ecosystem, scratched the surface of XDP and showed how closely it cooperates with the eBPF infrastructure to introduce a fast-processing datapath in the networking stack.

Nevertheless, eBPF is not exclusive to kernel-space tracing. Wouldn’t it be splendid if we could instrument applications running in production while enjoying all the luxuries of eBPF-driven tracing?

This is where uprobes come into play. Think of them as a sort of kprobes that are attached to userspace tracepoints instead of kernel symbols. Numerous language runtimes, database systems, and other software stacks incorporate hooks that can be consumed by BCC tools. Specifically, the ustat tool collects a bunch of valuable events such as garbage collection events, object creation statistics, method calls and more.

The bad news is that “official” language runtime releases, like Node.js and Python, don’t ship with DTrace support, which means that you’ll have to build from source passing the –-with-dtrace flag to the compiler. This is not a prerequisite for natively compiled languages. As long as the symbol table is available it is possible to apply dynamic tracing to any symbol present in the binary’s text segment. Instrumenting Go or Rust stdlib function calls on live binaries is accomplished this way.

eBPF Techniques for Instrumenting Applications

There are various approaches to tracing user space processes:

Statically declared USDT

Dynamically declared USDT

Dynamic tracing with uprobes

Free OpenTracing eBook Want to get useful how-to instructions, copy-paste code for tracer registration? We’ve prepared an OpenTracing eBook which puts all key OpenTracing information at your fingertips: from introducing OpenTracing, explaining what it is and does, how it works, to covering Zipkin followed by Jaeger, both being popular distributed tracers, and finally, compare Jaeger vs. Zipkin. Download yours.

Statically declared USDT

USDT (Userland Statically Defined Tracing) embodies the idea of embedding probes directly in user code. The origin of this technique dates back to the Solaris/BSD DTrace era and consists of using the DTRACE_PROBE() macro for declaring the tracepoint at strategic code locations. Unlike regular symbols, USDT hooks are guaranteed to remain stable even if the code is refactored. The following diagram depicts the process of declaring a USDT tracepoint in the user code all up to its execution in the kernel.

A developer would start by implanting tracepoints via the DTRACE_PROBE and DTRACE_PROBE1 macros to surround the code blocks of interest. Both macros accept a couple of mandatory arguments such as provider/probe names, followed by any value you would like to consult from the tracepoint. The compiler will squash the USDT tracepoints inside the ELF section of the target binary. The contract between compilers and tracing tools dictates that a .note.stapstd section must exist where USDT metadata resides.

The USDT tracing tool introspects the ELF section and places a breakpoint on the tracepoint’s location that is translated to an int3 interrupt. Whenever control flow is executed at the tracepoint’s marker, the interrupt handler is triggered and the program associated with the uprobe is called in the kernel to process the events and broadcast them to userspace, perform map aggregations, etc.

Dynamically declared USDT

Since USDT is pushed into statically generated ELF section, it defeats the purpose of declaring USDT for the software that runs on interpreted or JIT-based languages. Luckily, it is possible to define tracepoints in the runtime via libstapsdt. It produces a tiny shared object with USDT information that is mapped to the process’ address space so tracing tools can attach to intended tracepoints. Bindings for libstapsdt exist in many languages. Head to this example to find out how to install USDT probes in Node.js.

Dynamic tracing with uprobes

This type of tracing mechanism doesn’t require any extra capabilities from the target process, except that its symbol table is accessible. This is the most versatile and powerful instrumentation method as it allows for injecting breakpoints at arbitrary instructions without even restarting the actual process.

Tracing examples

After a brief theoretical introduction, let’s see some concrete examples on how to instrument real-world apps crafted in diverse languages.

C

Redis is a popular key-value data structures server built in C. Taking a sneak peek into the Redis symbol table reveals a vast number of functions that are candidates for capturing via uprobes.

$ objdump -tT /usr/bin/redis-server … 000000000004c160 g DF .text 00000000000000cc Base addReplyDouble 0000000000090940 g DF .text 00000000000000b0 Base sha1hex 00000000000586e0 g DF .text 000000000000007c Base replicationSetMaster 00000000001b39e0 g DO .data 0000000000000030 Base dbDictType 00000000000ace20 g DF .text 0000000000000030 Base RM_DictGetC 0000000000041bc0 g DF .text 0000000000000073 Base sdsull2str 00000000000bba00 g DF .text 0000000000000871 Base raxSeek 00000000000ac8c0 g DF .text 000000000000000c Base RM_ThreadSafeContextUnlock 00000000000e3900 g DF .text 0000000000000059 Base mp_encode_lua_string 00000000001cef60 g DO .bss 0000000000000438 Base rdbstate 0000000000047110 g DF .text 00000000000000b5 Base zipSaveInteger 000000000009f5a0 g DF .text 0000000000000055 Base addReplyDictOfRedisInstances 0000000000069200 g DF .text 000000000000004a Base zzlDelete 0000000000041e90 g DF .text 00000000000008ba Base sdscatfmt 000000000009ac40 g DF .text 000000000000003a Base sentinelLinkEstablishedCallback 00000000000619d0 g DF .text 0000000000000045 Base psetexCommand 00000000000d92f0 g DF .text 00000000000000fc Base luaL_argerror 00000000000bc360 g DF .text 0000000000000328 Base raxRandomWalk 0000000000096a00 g DF .text 00000000000000c3 Base rioInitWithFdset 000000000003d160 g DF .text 0000000000000882 Base serverCron 0000000000032907 g DF .text 0000000000000000 Base je_prof_thread_name_set 0000000000043960 g DF .text 0000000000000031 Base zfree 00000000000a2a40 g DF .text 00000000000001ab Base sentinelFailoverDetectEnd 00000000001b8500 g DO .data 0000000000000028 Base je_percpu_arena_mode_names 00000000000b5f90 g DF .text 0000000000000018 Base geohashEstimateStepsByRadius 00000000000d95e0 g DF .text 0000000000000039 Base luaL_checkany 0000000000048850 g DF .text 00000000000002d4 Base createClient ...

There is an interesting createStringObject function that Redis utilizes internally for allocating strings modeled around the robj structure. Redis commands are produced on behalf of createStringObject calls. We can spy on any command sent to the Redis server by hooking this function. For this purpose, I’m going to use the trace utility from the BCC toolkit.

$ /usr/share/bcc/tools/trace '/usr/bin/redis-server:createStringObject "%s" arg1' PID TID COMM FUNC - 8984 8984 redis-server createStringObject b'COMMANDrn' 8984 8984 redis-server createStringObject b'setrn$4rnoctirn$4rnfestrn' 8984 8984 redis-server createStringObject b'octirn$4rnfestrn' 8984 8984 redis-server createStringObject b'festrn' 8984 8984 redis-server createStringObject b'getrn$4rnoctirn' 8984 8984 redis-server createStringObject b'octirn'

The above is the output yielded by executing set octi fest and get octi from the Redis CLI client.

Java

Modern JVM versions ship with built-in support for USDT. All the probes are brought on behalf of the libjvm shared object. We can dig out available tracepoints in the ELF section.

$ readelf -n /usr/lib/jvm/jdk-11-oracle/lib/server/libjvm.so ... stapsdt 0x00000037 NT_STAPSDT (SystemTap probe descriptors) Provider: hs_private Name: cms__initmark__end Location: 0x0000000000e2420c, Base: 0x0000000000f725b4, Semaphore: 0x0000000000000000 Arguments: stapsdt 0x00000037 NT_STAPSDT (SystemTap probe descriptors) Provider: hs_private Name: cms__remark__begin Location: 0x0000000000e24334, Base: 0x0000000000f725b4, Semaphore: 0x0000000000000000 Arguments: stapsdt 0x00000035 NT_STAPSDT (SystemTap probe descriptors) Provider: hs_private Name: cms__remark__end Location: 0x0000000000e24418, Base: 0x0000000000f725b4, Semaphore: 0x0000000000000000 Arguments: stapsdt 0x0000002f NT_STAPSDT (SystemTap probe descriptors) Provider: hotspot Name: gc__begin Location: 0x0000000000e2b262, Base: 0x0000000000f725b4, Semaphore: 0x0000000000000000 Arguments: 1@$1 stapsdt 0x00000029 NT_STAPSDT (SystemTap probe descriptors) Provider: hotspot Name: gc__end Location: 0x0000000000e2b31a, Base: 0x0000000000f725b4, Semaphore: 0x0000000000000000 Arguments: ...

To capture all class load events we can use the following command:

$ /usr/share/bcc/tools/trace 'u:/usr/lib/jvm/jdk-11-oracle/lib/server/libjvm.so:class__loaded "%s", arg1'

Similarly, we can watch on JVM thread creation events:

$ /usr/share/bcc/tools/trace 'u:/usr/lib/jvm/jdk-11-oracle/lib/server/libjvm.so:thread__start "%s", arg1'

PID TID COMM FUNC 27390 27398 java thread__start b'Reference Handler' 27390 27399 java thread__start b'Finalizer' 27390 27400 java thread__start b'Signal Dispatcher' 27390 27401 java thread__start b'C2 CompilerThread0' 27390 27402 java thread__start b'C1 CompilerThread0' 27390 27403 java thread__start b'Sweeper thread' 27390 27404 java thread__start b'Service Thread'

When extended probes are enabled via -XX:+ExtendedDTraceProbes property, the uflow tool is able to trace and graph all method executions in real-time.

$ /usr/share/bcc/tools/lib/uflow -l java 27965 Tracing method calls in java process 27965... Ctrl-C to quit. CPU PID TID TIME(us) METHOD 5 27965 27991 0.736 <- jdk/internal/misc/Unsafe.park 5 27965 27991 0.736 -> java/util/concurrent/locks/LockSupport.setBlocker' 5 27965 27991 0.736 -> jdk/internal/misc/Unsafe.putObject 5 27965 27991 0.736 <- jdk/internal/misc/Unsafe.putObject 5 27965 27991 0.736 <- java/util/concurrent/locks/LockSupport.setBlocker' 5 27965 27991 0.736 <- java/util/concurrent/locks/LockSupport.parkNanos 5 27965 27991 0.736 -> java/util/concurrent/locks/AbstractQueuedSynchronizer$ConditionObject.checkInterruptWhileWaiting 5 27965 27991 0.737 -> java/lang/Thread.interrupted 5 27965 27991 0.737 -> java/lang/Thread.isInterrupted 5 27965 27991 0.737 <- java/lang/Thread.isInterrupted 5 27965 27991 0.737 <- java/lang/Thread.interrupted 5 27965 27991 0.737 <- java/util/concurrent/locks/AbstractQueuedSynchronizer$ConditionObject.checkInterruptWhileWaiting 5 27965 27991 0.737 -> java/lang/System.nanoTime 5 27965 27991 0.737 <- java/lang/System.nanoTime

However, this tends to be quite expensive in terms of overhead incurred by extended probes making them unfit for production debugging.

Go

I’m going to finish the demonstration of the tracing techniques with an example in Go. Since Go is a natively compiled language it is tentative to use the trace tool to attach uprobe programs on target symbols. You can try it yourself with this trivial code snippet:

package main import "fmt" func main() { fmt.Println("Hi") } $ go build -o hi build.go $/usr/share/bcc/tools/trace '/tmp/hi:fmt.Println "%s" arg1' PID TID COMM FUNC - 31545 31545 hi fmt.Println b'xd6x8dK'

Instead of our glorious “Hi” string, we got some random garbage in the argument column. This is in part caused by trace not being able to handle Println variadic arguments, but also of the wrong assumption regarding ABI calling conventions. Unlike C/C++ where the preferred way of passing parameters is in regular registers, Go passes parameters on the stack.

Since we cannot rely on the trace to demonstrate how to instrument Go code, I’ll be building a simple tool to trace all HTTP GET requests that are emitted by the http.Get function. You could easily adapt it to capture other HTTP request verbs, but I’m leaving it as an exercise. The full source code can be found in this repo.

I’ll not go into details regarding the uprobe attaching/loading process since we are using the Go bindings for libbcc to do the heavy lifting. Let’s dissect the actual uprobe program.

After the required include statements, we have the definition of the macro responsible for picking up the parameters from the stack by means of offset handling.

#define SP_OFFSET(offset) (void *)PT_REGS_SP(ctx) + offset * 8

Next, we declare the structure for encapsulating events that are streamed through reqs map. The map is defined with the BPF_PERF_OUTPUT macro. The core of our program is the __uprobe_http_get function. Whenever http.Get is invoked, the previous function is triggered in the kernel space. We know http.Get has a single argument that represents the URL where a HTTP request is sent to. Another difference between C and Go is how they layout strings in memory.

While C strings are null-terminated sequences, Go treats strings as two-word values comprising the pointer to the memory buffer and the string length. This explains that we need two calls to bpf_probe_read – one for reading the string and the second for pulling its length.

bpf_probe_read(&url, sizeof(url), SP_OFFSET(1)); bpf_probe_read(&req.len, sizeof(req.len), SP_OFFSET(2));

Later in userspace, the URL is trimmed from the byte slice to its corresponding length. As a side note, I would like to mention that the draft version of the tool was able to dig out latencies for each HTTP GET request by injecting an uretprobe. However, this proved to have a catastrophic effect each time the Go runtime decides to shrink/grow the stack, because uretprobes patch the return address on the stack to the trampoline function that’s executed in the context of the eBPF VM. On exiting the uretprobe function, the instruction pointer is restored to the original return address which might point to an invalid location messing up the stack and causing the process to crash. There are some proposals to address this issue.

Conclusion

We have come to the end of our eBPF journey. In this final article, we shed some light on eBPF features for instrumentation of userspace processes. Through several pragmatic cases, we’ve shown the versatility of the BCC framework for capturing observability signals. Finally, we got our hands dirty and built a small tool for tracing HTTP requests on live Go apps. Before you go, don’t forget to download OpenTracing eBook to get useful how-to instructions and copy-paste code.

Share Twitter

Facebook

LinkedIn

Reddit

Email

