The BTF dumper code currently displays arrays of characters as just that - arrays, with each character formatted individually. Sometimes this is what makes sense, but it's nice to be able to treat that array as a string.
This change adds a special case to the btf_dump functionality to allow arrays of single-byte integer values to be printed as character strings. Characters for which isprint() returns false are printed as hex-escaped values. This is enabled when the new ".emit_strings" is set to 1 in the btf_dump_type_data_opts structure.
As an example, here's what it looks like to dump the string "hello" using a few different field values for btf_dump_type_data_opts (.compact = 1):
- .emit_strings = 0, .skip_names = 0: (char[6])['h','e','l','l','o',] - .emit_strings = 0, .skip_names = 1: ['h','e','l','l','o',] - .emit_strings = 1, .skip_names = 0: (char[6])"hello" - .emit_strings = 1, .skip_names = 1: "hello"
Here's the string "h\xff", dumped with .compact = 1 and .skip_names = 1:
- .emit_strings = 0: ['h',-1,] - .emit_strings = 1: "h\xff"
Signed-off-by: Blake Jones blakejones@google.com --- tools/lib/bpf/btf.h | 3 ++- tools/lib/bpf/btf_dump.c | 44 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 2 files changed, 45 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/tools/lib/bpf/btf.h b/tools/lib/bpf/btf.h index 4392451d634b..ccfd905f03df 100644 --- a/tools/lib/bpf/btf.h +++ b/tools/lib/bpf/btf.h @@ -326,9 +326,10 @@ struct btf_dump_type_data_opts { bool compact; /* no newlines/indentation */ bool skip_names; /* skip member/type names */ bool emit_zeroes; /* show 0-valued fields */ + bool emit_strings; /* print char arrays as strings */ size_t :0; }; -#define btf_dump_type_data_opts__last_field emit_zeroes +#define btf_dump_type_data_opts__last_field emit_strings
LIBBPF_API int btf_dump__dump_type_data(struct btf_dump *d, __u32 id, diff --git a/tools/lib/bpf/btf_dump.c b/tools/lib/bpf/btf_dump.c index 460c3e57fadb..336a6646e0fa 100644 --- a/tools/lib/bpf/btf_dump.c +++ b/tools/lib/bpf/btf_dump.c @@ -68,6 +68,7 @@ struct btf_dump_data { bool compact; bool skip_names; bool emit_zeroes; + bool emit_strings; __u8 indent_lvl; /* base indent level */ char indent_str[BTF_DATA_INDENT_STR_LEN]; /* below are used during iteration */ @@ -2028,6 +2029,43 @@ static int btf_dump_var_data(struct btf_dump *d, return btf_dump_dump_type_data(d, NULL, t, type_id, data, 0, 0); }
+static int btf_dump_string_data(struct btf_dump *d, + const struct btf_type *t, + __u32 id, + const void *data) +{ + const struct btf_array *array = btf_array(t); + __u32 i; + + btf_dump_data_pfx(d); + btf_dump_printf(d, """); + + for (i = 0; i < array->nelems; i++, data++) { + char c; + + if (data >= d->typed_dump->data_end) + return -E2BIG; + + c = *(char *)data; + if (c == '\0') { + /* + * When printing character arrays as strings, NUL bytes + * are always treated as string terminators; they are + * never printed. + */ + break; + } + if (isprint(c)) + btf_dump_printf(d, "%c", c); + else + btf_dump_printf(d, "\x%02x", *(__u8 *)data); + } + + btf_dump_printf(d, """); + + return 0; +} + static int btf_dump_array_data(struct btf_dump *d, const struct btf_type *t, __u32 id, @@ -2055,8 +2093,11 @@ static int btf_dump_array_data(struct btf_dump *d, * char arrays, so if size is 1 and element is * printable as a char, we'll do that. */ - if (elem_size == 1) + if (elem_size == 1) { + if (d->typed_dump->emit_strings) + return btf_dump_string_data(d, t, id, data); d->typed_dump->is_array_char = true; + } }
/* note that we increment depth before calling btf_dump_print() below; @@ -2544,6 +2585,7 @@ int btf_dump__dump_type_data(struct btf_dump *d, __u32 id, d->typed_dump->compact = OPTS_GET(opts, compact, false); d->typed_dump->skip_names = OPTS_GET(opts, skip_names, false); d->typed_dump->emit_zeroes = OPTS_GET(opts, emit_zeroes, false); + d->typed_dump->emit_strings = OPTS_GET(opts, emit_strings, false);
ret = btf_dump_dump_type_data(d, NULL, t, id, data, 0, 0);