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.. SPDX-License-Identifier: (GPL-2.0-only OR BSD-2-Clause) ============ bpftool-iter ============ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- tool to create BPF iterators ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- :Manual section: 8 .. include:: substitutions.rst SYNOPSIS ======== **bpftool** [*OPTIONS*] **iter** *COMMAND* *OPTIONS* := { |COMMON_OPTIONS| } *COMMANDS* := { **pin** | **help** } ITER COMMANDS =================== | **bpftool** **iter pin** *OBJ* *PATH* [**map** *MAP*] | **bpftool** **iter help** | | *OBJ* := /a/file/of/bpf_iter_target.o | *MAP* := { **id** *MAP_ID* | **pinned** *FILE* } DESCRIPTION =========== **bpftool iter pin** *OBJ* *PATH* [**map** *MAP*] A bpf iterator combines a kernel iterating of particular kernel data (e.g., tasks, bpf_maps, etc.) and a bpf program called for each kernel data object (e.g., one task, one bpf_map, etc.). User space can *read* kernel iterator output through *read()* syscall. The *pin* command creates a bpf iterator from *OBJ*, and pin it to *PATH*. The *PATH* should be located in *bpffs* mount. It must not contain a dot character ('.'), which is reserved for future extensions of *bpffs*. Map element bpf iterator requires an additional parameter *MAP* so bpf program can iterate over map elements for that map. User can have a bpf program in kernel to run with each map element, do checking, filtering, aggregation, etc. without copying data to user space. User can then *cat PATH* to see the bpf iterator output. **bpftool iter help** Print short help message. OPTIONS ======= .. include:: common_options.rst EXAMPLES ======== **# bpftool iter pin bpf_iter_netlink.o /sys/fs/bpf/my_netlink** :: Create a file-based bpf iterator from bpf_iter_netlink.o and pin it to /sys/fs/bpf/my_netlink **# bpftool iter pin bpf_iter_hashmap.o /sys/fs/bpf/my_hashmap map id 20** :: Create a file-based bpf iterator from bpf_iter_hashmap.o and map with id 20, and pin it to /sys/fs/bpf/my_hashmap |