Awesome eBPF 
A curated list of awesome projects related to eBPF.
BPF, as in Berkeley Packet Filter, is an in-kernel virtual
machine running programs passed from user space. Initially implemented
on BSD, then Linux, the (now legacy) “classic BPF” or cBPF machine would
be used with tools like tcpdump for filtering packets in the kernel to
avoid useless copies to user space. More recently, the BPF
infrastructure in Linux has been completely reworked and gave life to
the “extended BPF”, or eBPF, which gained new features (safety and
termination checks, JIT-compiling for programs, persistent maps, a
standard library, hardware offload support, etc.) and is now used for
many tasks. Processing packets at a very low level (XDP), tracing and
monitoring events on the system, or enforcing access control over
cgroups are but a few examples to which eBPF brings performance,
programmability and flexibility.
Recently, Cilium launched a great
website about eBPF called ebpf.io. It
serves a similar purpose to this list, with an introduction to eBPF and
links to related projects.
Note: eBPF is an exciting piece of technology, and its ecosystem is
constantly evolving. We’d love help from you to keep this
awesome list up to date, and improve its signal-to-noise ratio in anyway
we can. Please feel free to leave any
feedback.
Contents
Reference Documentation
eBPF Essentials
- ebpf.io - A gateway to discover all
the basics of eBPF, including a listing of the main related projects and
of community resources.
- Cilium’s BPF and XDP
Reference Guide - In-depth documentation about most features and
aspects of eBPF.
Kernel Documentation
Manual Pages
bpf(2)
- Manual page about the bpf() system call, used to manage
BPF programs and maps from userspace.
tc-bpf(8)
- Manual page about using BPF with tc, including example commands and
samples of code.
bpf-helpers(7)
man page - Description of the in-kernel helper functions forming the
BPF standard library.
Other
Articles and Presentations
Generic eBPF
Presentations and Articles
If you are new to eBPF, you may want to try the links described as
“introductions” in this section.
BPF Internals
Daniel Borkmann has made several presentations and papers
covering the internals of eBPF, in particular about its use with tc.
IO Visor
blog
Linux
Networking Explained - Linux networking internals, with a part about
eBPF.
Kernel Tracing
- Full-system
dynamic tracing on Linux using eBPF and bpftrace - A detailed
introduction to tracing with eBPF, from listing the available trace
points to running bpftrace programs.
- Meet-cute
between eBPF and Kernel Tracing - Kprobes, uprobes, ftrace.
- Linux
Kernel Tracing - Systemtap, Kernelshark, trace-cmd, LTTng,
perf-tool, ftrace, hist-trigger, perf, function tracer, tracepoint,
kprobe/uprobe, and more.
- Brendan Gregg’s blog, and in particular Linux
BPF Superpowers article.
XDP
The
eXpress Data Path - A very accessible introduction to XDP, providing
sample code to show how to process packets.
All XDP details in a technical paper: The eXpress Data Path: Fast
Programmable Packet Processing in the Operating System Kernel, by
Toke Høiland-Jørgensen, Jesper Dangaard Brouer, Daniel Borkmann, John
Fastabend, Tom Herbert, David Ahern and David Miller, all being
essential eBPF and XDP contributors.
Work-in-progress
documentation for XDP
BPF and XDP
Reference Guide - Guide from the Cilium project.
XDP Project
overview
eXpress
Data Path (XDP) - The first presentation about XDP.
BoF
- What Can BPF Do For You?
eXpress
Data Path - Contains some benchmark results obtained with the mlx4
driver.
Jesper Dangaard Brouer has several sets of slides describing the
internals of XDP:
XDP
workshop – Introduction, experience, and future development
(Video)
High
Speed Packet Filtering on Linux - About packet filtering on Linux,
DDoS protection, packet processing in the kernel, kernel bypass, XDP and
eBPF.
How
to drop 10 million packets per second - Cloudflare’s blog post
talking about their move to using XDP for packet filtering.
AF_XDP
bpfilter
BTF
cBPF
Hardware Offload
Tutorials
- bcc
Reference Guide - Many incremental steps to start using bcc and
eBPF, mostly centered on tracing and monitoring.
- bcc
Python Developer Tutorial - Comes with bcc, but targets the Python
bits across seventeen “lessons”.
- Building BPF
applications with libbpf-bootstrap - Helps generate minimal or
advanced templates to bootstrap your own applications (kernel side and
user space management for maps and programs) with features like CO-RE,
global variables, and ring buffer.
- How I ended
up writing opensnoop in pure C using eBPF - A thorough walk-through
of how to write eBPF programs, first using only bpf() syscall, and then
libbpf library, with reproducible code examples.
- Linux
Tracing Workshops Materials - Involves the use of several BPF tools
for tracing.
- Tracing
a packet journey using Linux tracepoints, perf and eBPF -
Troubleshooting ping requests and replies with perf and bcc
programs.
- Open NFP
platform - Operated by Netronome: some tutorials for network-related
eBPF use cases, including an eBPF Offload Starting Guide.
- XDP for
the Rest of Us - First edition of a workshop to get started with
XDP.
- XDP
for the Rest of Us - Second edition, with new contents.
- Load
XDP programs using the ip (iproute2) command
- XDP Hands-On
Tutorial - A progressive (three levels of difficulty) tutorial to
learn how to process packets with XDP.
- All
your tracing are belong to BPF - A step-by-step walkthrough to
integrate tracing capabilities in your C++ applications with the LLVM
libraries.
- Firewalling
with BPF/XDP: Examples and Deep Dive - A simple guide to build basic
firewalls with TC and XDP.
- A
Deep Dive into eBPF: Writing an Efficient DNS Monitoring. - A
detailed explanation of methods used to capture DNS requests at the
socket filter layer.
- eBPF Developer Tutorial -
Learn eBPF by examples - Start with eBPF basics and progress to
advanced topics using 20+ hands-on tutorials and examples. Covers
performance, networking, and security with libbpf and CO-RE. Available
in Chinese and English.
- Catch
Performance Regressions in eBPF - A step-by-step guide to
benchmarking both the client and kernel eBPF code written in Rust.
- Loops
and Iterators in eBPF - Newsletter about all the ways to loop and
iterate in eBPF.
- What
Insights Can eBPF Provide into Real-Time SSL/TLS Encrypted Traffic and
How? - A step-by-step guide how eBPF can observe encrypted network
traffic.
- Can
eBPF Detect Redis Message Patterns Before They Become Problems? - A
step-by-step guide how eBPF can observe Redis communication between
client and server.
- Transparent
Proxy Implementation using eBPF and Go - A step-by-step guide on how
to implement a transparent proxy using eBPF.
- eBPF-Powered
Load Balancing - Learn how eBPF can infer custom load-balancing for
services listening on the same port, through the SO_REUSEPORT TCP
option.
- Unit
Testing eBPF Programs - Learn how you can unit test your eBPF
programs using libbpf.
- Accelerating
Local Socket Communication using eBPF - Learn how eBPF can speed-up
local socket communication up to 30%.
- Writing
a basic continuous profiler - A step-by-step guide to write an
appliation continuous profiler leveraging the eBPF instrumentation, with
a complete project as a reference.
- Inspektor
Gadget - Hello world gadget - An introductory guide to writing
image-based eBPF gadgets and sharing them via OCI registries.
- Inspektor
Gadget - Hello world gadget with Wasm - An introductory guide to
writing image-based eBPF gadgets and performing post-processing with
WASM.
Examples
- linux/samples/bpf/
- In the kernel tree: some sample eBPF programs.
- linux/tools/testing/selftests/bpf
- In the kernel tree: Linux BPF selftests, with many eBPF programs.
- prototype-kernel/kernel/samples/bpf
- Jesper Dangaard Brouer’s prototype-kernel repository contains some
additional examples that can be compiled outside of kernel
infrastructure.
- iproute2/examples/bpf/
- Some networking programs to attach to the TC interface.
- Netronome sample
network applications - Provides basic but complete examples of eBPF
applications also compatible with hardware offload.
- bcc/examples
- Examples coming along with the bcc tools, mostly about tracing.
- bcc/tools -
These tools themselves can be seen as example use cases for BPF
programs, mostly for tracing and monitoring. bcc tools have been
packaged for some Linux distributions.
- MPLSinIP
sample - A heavily commented sample demonstrating how to encapsulate
& decapsulate MPLS within IP. The code is commented for those new to
BPF development.
- ebpf-samples - A
collection of compiled (as ELF object files) samples gathered from
several projects, primarily intended to serve as test cases for user
space verifiers.
- ebpf-kill-example
- A fully documented and tested example of an eBPF probe that logs all
force-kills and prints them out in user-space.
- redbpf
examples - Example programs for using RedBPF to write eBPF programs
in Rust.
- XDP/TC-eBPF example
- Program that uses XDP/TC-eBPF to provide statefull firewalling and
socket redirection.
bcc
- bcc - Framework and
set of tools - One way to handle BPF programs, in particular for tracing
and monitoring. Also includes some utilities that may help inspect maps
or programs on the system.
- Lua
front-end for BCC - Another alternative to C, and even to most of
the Python code used in bcc.
iproute2
- iproute2
- Package containing tools for network management on Linux. In
particular, it contains
tc, used to manage eBPF filters and
actions, and ip, used to manage XDP programs. Most of the
code related to BPF is in lib/bpf.c.
- iproute2-next
- The development tree, synchronised with net-next.
LLVM
libbpf
- libbpf
- A C library used for handling BPF objects (programs and maps), and
manipulating ELF object files containing them. It is shipped with the
kernel and mirrored on
GitHub.
- libbpf-bootstrap -
Scaffolding for BPF application development with libbpf and BPF
CO-RE.
Go libraries
- cilium/ebpf - Pure-Go
library to read, modify and load eBPF programs and attach them to
various hooks in the Linux kernel.
- libbpfgo -
eBPF library for Go, powered by libbpf.
- gobpf - Go bindings
for BCC for creating eBPF programs.
Aya
- aya - A pure Rust
library for writing, loading, and managing eBPF objects, with a focus on
developer experience and operability. It supports writing eBPF programs
in Rust and distributing library code over crates.io to share it between
eBPF programs. Aya does not depend on libbpf.
- aya-template -
Templates for writing BPF applications in Aya that can be used with
cargo generate.
- Ebpfguard -
Rust library for writing Linux security policies using eBPF.
zbpf
- zbpf - A pure Zig
framework for writing cross platform eBPF programs, powered by libbpf
and Zig toolchain.
eunomia-bpf
- eunomia-bpf
- A compilation framework and runtime library to build, distribute,
dynamically load, and run CO-RE eBPF applications in multiple languages
and WebAssembly. It supports writing eBPF kernel code only (to build
simple CO-RE libbpf eBPF applications), writing the kernel part in both
BCC and libbpf styles, and writing userspace in multiple languages in a
WASM module and distributing it with simple JSON data or WASM OCI
images. The runtime is based on libbpf only and provides CO-RE to
BCC-style eBPF programs without depending on the LLVM library.
oxidebpf
- oxidebpf - A
pure Rust library for managing eBPF programs, designed for security use
cases. The featureset is more limited than other libraries but
emphasizes stability across a wide range of kernels and
backwards-compatible compile-once-run-most-places.
User Space eBPF
- uBPF - Written in C.
Contains an interpreter, a JIT compiler for x86_64 architecture, an
assembler and a disassembler.
- A generic
implementation - With support for FreeBSD kernel, FreeBSD user
space, Linux kernel, Linux user space and macOS user space. Used for the
VALE software
switch’s BPF
extension module.
- rbpf - Written in
Rust. Interpreter for Linux, macOS and Windows, and JIT-compiler for
x86_64 under Linux.
- PREVAIL - A user
space verifier for eBPF using an abstract
interpretation layer, with support for loops.
- oster - Written
in Go. A tool for tracing execution of Go programs by attaching eBPF to
uprobes.
- wachy - A tracing
profiler that aims to make eBPF uprobe-based debugging easier to use.
This is done by displaying traces in a UI next to the source code and
allowing interactive drilldown analysis.
- eBPF for
Windows - This project is a work-in-progress that allows using
existing eBPF toolchains and APIs familiar in the Linux ecosystem to be
used on top of Windows.
Testing in Virtual
Environments
Networking
P4 has some interactions with eBPF:
Cilium project (GitHub repository) is a
technology relying on BPF and XDP to provide “fast in-kernel networking
and security policy enforcement for containers based on eBPF programs
generated on the fly”. Many presentations available (with overlap):
Open vSwitch (OvS), and its related project Open Virtual Network
(OVN, an open source network virtualization solution) are considering
using eBPF at various level:
Katran
- A layer 4 load-balancer based on XDP, open-sourced by
Facebook.
XDP in
practice: integrating XDP in our DDoS mitigation pipeline -
Protection against DDoS with XDP at Cloudflare.
Droplet:
DDoS countermeasures powered by BPF + XDP - Protection against DDoS
with XDP at Facebook.
DPDK
has a poll-mode driver (PMD) based on AF_XDP
CETH
for XDP - Common Ethernet Driver Framework for faster network I/O, a
technology initiated by Mellanox.
Suricata, an open source intrusion detection system, relies
on eBPF components for its “capture bypass” features:
Project
Calico - Calico is an open source networking and network security
solution for containers, virtual machines, and native host-based
workloads. Calico’s eBPF data plane delivers a low latency, high
throughput data plane with a rich network security policy model.
merbridge -
Use eBPF to speed up your Service Mesh. Merbridge replaces iptables
rules with eBPF to intercept traffic. It also combines msg_redirect to
reduce latency with a shortened datapath between sidecars and
services.
PcapPlusPlus - An
open-source C++ library for capturing, parsing and crafting network
packets. It features a C++ interface for creating AF_XDP sockets, making
it easy to send
and receive packets through them.
ApFree
WiFiDog - A high performance and lightweight captive portal solution
for wireless networks. It leverages eBPF for traffic control and deep
packet inspection capabilities, with plans to gradually replace nftables
firewall functionality with eBPF-based solutions.
Observability
- InKeV:
In-Kernel Distributed Network Virtualization for DCN
- DEEP-mon
- Helps with measuring power consumption for servers and uses eBPF
programs for in-kernel aggregation of data.
- pixie -
Observability for Kubernetes using eBPF. Features include protocol
tracing, application profiling, and support for distributed bpftrace
deployments.
- SkyWalking
Rover - Apache
SkyWalking is an open-source Application Performance Monitoring
(APM) platform specially designed for distributed systems with
microservices, cloud-native and container-based (Kubernetes)
architectures. SkyWalking Rover is an eBPF-based profiler and metrics
collector for C, C++, Golang, and Rust applications.
- parca-agent -
eBPF based always-on continuous profiler for analysis of CPU and memory
usage, down to the line number and throughout time.
- rbperf -
Sampling profiler and tracer for Ruby.
- Hubble - Network,
service and security observability for Kubernetes using eBPF.
- Caretta -
Instant Kubernetes service dependency map generated by eBPF, right to a
Grafana instance.
- DeepFlow -
Instant observability for cloud-native and AI applications based on
eBPF.
- Coroot - Coroot is an
open-source APM & Observability tool, a DataDog and NewRelic
alternative.
Security
- Falco - A cloud-native runtime
security project used as a Kubernetes threat detection engine.
- Sysmon for
Linux - A security monitoring tool. It depends on SysinternalsEBPF.
- Red Canary
Linux Agent - Red Canary has started to incorporate eBPF to their
Linux security sensor.
- Tracee - A
runtime security and forensics tool for Linux which uses eBPF technology
to trace the system and applications at runtime, and analyze collected
events to detect suspicious behavioral patterns.
- redcanary-ebpf-sensor
- A set of BPF programs that gather security relevant event data from
the Linux kernel. The BPF programs are combined into a single ELF file
from which individual probes can be selectively loaded, depending on the
running operating system and kernel version.
- bpflock - Lock Linux
machines - An eBPF driven security tool for locking and auditing
Linux machines.
- Tetragon -
Kubernetes-aware, eBPF-based security observability and runtime
enforcement.
- harpoon - Trace
syscalls from user-space functions, by using eBPF.
- ply - A small but flexible
open source dynamic tracer for Linux, with features similar to the bcc
tools, but with a simpler language inspired by awk and DTrace.
- bpftrace - A tool for tracing
with its own high-level tracing language. It is flexible enough to be
envisioned as a Linux replacement for DTrace and SystemTap.
- bpftrace
Cheat Sheet - Summary and cheat sheet for programming in bpftrace.
Contains information about syntax, probe types, variables and
functions.
- kubectl trace
- A kubectl plug-in for executing bpftrace programs in a Kubernetes
cluster.
- inspektor-gadget - A
collection tools and framework for data collection and system inspection
on Kubernetes clusters and Linux hosts using eBPF.
- bpfd - Framework
for running BPF programs with rules on Linux as a daemon. Container
aware.
- BPFd - A distinct
BPF daemon, trying to leverage the flexibility of the bcc tools to trace
and debug remote targets, and in particular devices running with
Android.
- adeb - A Linux shell
environment for using tracing tools on Android with BPFd.
- greggd - System daemon
to compile and load eBPF programs into the kernel, and forward program
output to socket for metric aggregation.
- FUSE
- Considers using eBPF.
- upf-bpf - An
in-kernel solution based on XDP for 5G UPF.
- redbpf - Tooling and
framework to write eBPF code in Rust efficiently.
- ebpf-explorer - A
web interface to explore system’s maps and programs.
- ebpfmon - A TUI
(terminal user interface) application for real time monitoring of eBPF
programs.
- bpfman - An eBPF
Manager for Linux and Kubernetes. Includes a built-in program loader
that supports program cooperation for XDP and TC programs, as well as
deployment of eBPF programs from OCI images.
- ptcpdump - A
process-aware, eBPF-based tcpdump-like tool.
eBPF in Security
- Embrace The Red:
Offensive BPF! - A series of posts around the introduction into BPF
with a focus to an offensive setting, and also how its misuse can be
detected. Posts include discussions on the rootkit capabilities of eBPF,
or on which tracing type is needed for different use cases.
- eBPF:
Block Linux Fileless Payload “Malware” Execution with BPF LSM - Blog
post about how BPF can help detection and blocking fileless
malware.
- Blackhat
2021: With Friends Like eBPF, Who Needs Enemies? - Talk about an
eBPF rootkit and how the capabilities of eBPF could be abused. The
rootkit was also the object of a talk at Defcon, eBPF,
I thought we were friends !.
- ebpfkit - A
rootkit that leverages multiple eBPF features to implement offensive
security techniques.
- ebpfkit-monitor
- An utility to statically analyze eBPF bytecode or monitor suspicious
eBPF activity at runtime. It was specifically designed to detect
ebpfkit.
- Bad BPF - A
collection of malicious eBPF programs that make use of eBPF’s ability to
read and write user data in between the usermode program and the
kernel.
- TripleCross - A
Linux eBPF rootkit with a backdoor, C2, library injection, execution
hijacking, persistence and stealth capabilities.
The Code
linux/include/linux/bpf.h
- with linux/include/uapi/bpf.h:
definitions related to eBPF, to be used respectively in the kernel and
to interface with userspace programs.
linux/include/linux/filter.h
- with linux/include/uapi/filter.h:
information used to run the BPF programs themselves.
linux/kernel/bpf/
- This directory contains most of BPF-related code. In particular, those
files are worth of interest:
syscall.c
- Different operations permitted by the system call, such as program
loading or map management.
core.c
- BPF interpreter.
verifier.c
- BPF verifier.
linux/net/core/filter.c
- Functions and eBPF helpers related to networking (TC, XDP etc.); also
contains the code to migrate cBPF bytecode to eBPF (all cBPF programs
are translated to eBPF in recent kernels).
linux/kernel/trace/bpf_trace.c
- Functions and eBPF helpers related to tracing and monitoring (kprobes,
tracepoints, etc.).
The JIT compilers are under the directory of their respective
architectures, such as file linux/arch/x86/net/bpf_jit_comp.c
for x86. Exception is made for JIT compilers used for hardware offload,
sitting in their drivers, such as linux/drivers/net/ethernet/netronome/nfp/bpf/jit.c
for Netronome NFP.
linux/net/sched/
- and in particular in files act_bpf.c (action) and
cls_bpf.c (filter): code related to BPF actions and filters
with TC.
linux/kernel/seccomp.c
linux/net/core/dev.c
- contains the function dev_change_xdp_fd() that is called
through a Netlink command to hook a XDP program to a device, after is
has been loaded into the kernel from user space. This function in turns
uses a callback from the relevant driver.
Development and Community
Other Lists of Resources on
eBPF
Acknowledgement
Thank you to Quentin Monnet and Daniel Borkmann for their original
work on Dive
into BPF: A List of Reading Material which became the basis for this
list.
Contributing
Contributions welcome! Read the contribution guidelines first.
License

To the extent possible under law, zoidbergwill has waived all
copyright and related or neighboring rights to this work.
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