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redcanary-ebpf-sensor

This project consists of a variety of eBPF applications aimed at gathering events of interest for Red Canary's Linux EDR product.

These applications do not use BCC to build. The main objective of this design is to have a compile once, run everywhere application.

Build

To build this project run:

For building both x86_64 and aarch64 architectures docker compose up

To build either x86_64 or aarch64 architectures docker compose run --rm ebpf-amd make all or docker compose run --rm ebpf-arm make all


A vscode cpp properties files has been included. Make sure to update the include path with the path on your local system where the kernel header files are located

For convenience-sake, when running in a system with apt (e.g., Ubuntu) you can run sudo make dev to build all of the eBPF programs into the local build/ directory. This command uses the kernel version of the currently running system.

Gotchas and Patterns

Dummy Telemetry Event

At the beginning of the programs we often have code that looks like:

process_message_t pm = {0};

We then proceed to send &pm to our functions and set the proper values there. This is done for two reasons:

  1. We want to save stack space, so by creating a single dummy event at the top we can remind ourselves that this is the only event we ever want to have at a time and it is meant to be reused.

  2. The eBPF verifier does not like uninitialized padding. When initializing a padded struct in C, not all of the space occupied by the struct necessarily gets initialized as padding may exist between fields, or empty space unused by some union members. The eBPF verifier does not like this so to guarantee nothing is unitialized we need to zero out all of the space for the event struct. For more information see this issue.

Per CPU structures

Be careful when using PERCPU structures (such as BPF_MAP_TYPE_PERFCPU_ARRAY). While an eBPF program is not preemptable, syscalls are. This means that a kprobe for a syscall may happen in one CPU but its kretprobe will happen in a different CPU. This means that passing data using per cpu structures accross programs will not always work in multicore systems. Note, however, that tail calling is NOT preemptable, so it is okay to pass information using per cpu structures through tail calls.

Multi-message events

Whenever possible a single event (i.e., syscall) should emit only a single message during its kretprobe. You cannot have synchronizaiton issues if there is only one message. When this is not possible we need to be careful because syscalls may start and finish in different CPUs (they are preemptable). All messages in the same program will be in the same per-CPU buffer but messages for the same syscall but in different non-tailcalled programs (e.g., kprobe vs kretprobe) will not necessarily be put in the same per-CPU buffer which means user-space may read them at different times. To avoid synchronization issues all messages for a single event (i.e., syscall) should be sent in the same kretprobe or tail calls from it and should share a (unique enough) event id. Because they are all from the same probe we can guarantee the order and thus not having to re-order events in user-space. The event id is used as the identifier for user space to know what messages to combine into the same event.

Kretprobe not firing

Kretprobes are not guaranteed to fire so we cannot rely on it as a cleanup strategy. Because of this our maps that send messages from kprobe to kretprobes are LRU maps such that any message that we didn't clean up in a kretprobe will eventually be evicted.

Validate Instruction Count

Due to older kernel limitations (< 5.2) the instruction limit for our ebpf programs is 4096. This was changed in Kernel 5.2+ to be 1 million but we cannot rely on that at this time. To verify that we aren't going over the limit, after modifying an ebpf program run it through llvm-objdump and check its instruction count:

llvm-objdump -d <PATH_TO_COMPILED_FILE> -j <SPECIFIC_SECTION_TO_ANALYZE> | less

You may ommit the -j <SPECIFIC_SECTION_TO_ANALYZE> if you want to check all the sections at the same time.

eBPF programs can branch (but not jump back!) so make sure to check that none of the branches go over the 4096 instructions limit.

Development with clangd

If clangd is used as the LSP, compile commands can be easily generated with:

bear -- make dev

After that clangd should be able to pickup the created compile_commands.json. A config exists in .clangd to further tweak in case the compile commands are not enough for clangd to have a successful build.

Licensing

Please note, these programs are mostly licensed under GPL, which is required to leverage BPF features critical for gathering security telemetry.

char _license[] SEC("license") = "GPL";

If you bundle these programs with your own code (for example, by using include_bytes!() in Rust), that extends GPL to your code base. If you wish to use your own code with its own license alongside these programs, you'll need to build, manage, and distribute them separately.