In general, to use these features, a Linux kernel version 4.1 or newer is required. In addition, the kernel should have been compiled with the following flags set:
CONFIG_BPF=y
CONFIG_BPF_SYSCALL=y
# [optional, for tc filters]
CONFIG_NET_CLS_BPF=m
# [optional, for tc actions]
CONFIG_NET_ACT_BPF=m
CONFIG_BPF_JIT=y
# [for Linux kernel versions 4.1 through 4.6]
CONFIG_HAVE_BPF_JIT=y
# [for Linux kernel versions 4.7 and later]
CONFIG_HAVE_EBPF_JIT=y
# [optional, for kprobes]
CONFIG_BPF_EVENTS=y
# Need kernel headers through /sys/kernel/kheaders.tar.xz
CONFIG_IKHEADERS=y
There are a few optional kernel flags needed for running bcc networking examples on vanilla kernel:
CONFIG_NET_SCH_SFQ=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_POLICE=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_GACT=m
CONFIG_DUMMY=m
CONFIG_VXLAN=m
Kernel compile flags can usually be checked by looking at /proc/config.gz
or
/boot/config-<kernel-version>
.
bcc
and its tools are available in the standard Debian main repository, from the source package bpfcc under the names bpfcc-tools
, python3-bpfcc
, libbpfcc
and libbpfcc-dev
.
To install:
echo deb http://cloudfront.debian.net/debian sid main >> /etc/apt/sources.list
sudo apt-get install -y bpfcc-tools libbpfcc libbpfcc-dev linux-headers-$(uname -r)
Versions of bcc are available in the standard Ubuntu
Universe repository, as well in iovisor's PPA. The Ubuntu packages have slightly different names: where iovisor
packages use bcc
in the name (e.g. bcc-tools
), Ubuntu packages use bpfcc
(e.g.
bpfcc-tools
).
Currently, BCC packages for both the Ubuntu Universe, and the iovisor builds are outdated. This is a known and tracked in:
- Universe - Ubuntu Launchpad
- iovisor - BCC GitHub Issues Currently, building from source is currently the only way to get up to date packaged version of bcc.
Ubuntu Packages Source packages and the binary packages produced from them can be found at packages.ubuntu.com.
sudo apt-get install bpfcc-tools linux-headers-$(uname -r)
The tools are installed in /sbin
(/usr/sbin
in Ubuntu 18.04) with a -bpfcc
extension. Try running sudo opensnoop-bpfcc
.
Note: the Ubuntu packages have different names but the package contents, in most cases, conflict and as such cannot be installed alongside upstream packages. Should one choose to use Ubuntu's packages instead of the upstream iovisor packages (or vice-versa), the conflicting packages will need to be removed.
The iovisor packages do declare they provide the Ubuntu packages and as such may be
used to satisfy dependencies. For example, should one attempt to install package foo
which declares a dependency on libbpfcc
while the upstream libbcc
package is installed,
foo
should install without trouble as libbcc
declares that it provides libbpfcc
.
That said, one should always test such a configuration in case of version incompatibilities.
iovisor packages (Upstream Stable and Signed Packages)
sudo apt-key adv --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys 4052245BD4284CDD
echo "deb https://repo.iovisor.org/apt/$(lsb_release -cs) $(lsb_release -cs) main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/iovisor.list
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install bcc-tools libbcc-examples linux-headers-$(uname -r)
(replace xenial
with artful
or bionic
as appropriate). Tools will be installed under /usr/share/bcc/tools.
Upstream Nightly Packages
echo "deb [trusted=yes] https://repo.iovisor.org/apt/xenial xenial-nightly main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/iovisor.list
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install bcc-tools libbcc-examples linux-headers-$(uname -r)
(replace xenial
with artful
or bionic
as appropriate)
As of Fedora 30, bcc binaries are available in the standard repository. You can install them via
sudo dnf install bcc
Note: if you keep getting Failed to load program: Operation not permitted
when
trying to run the hello_world.py
example as root then you might need to lift
the so-called kernel lockdown (cf.
FAQ,
background article).
Ensure that you are running a 4.2+ kernel with uname -r
. If not, install a 4.2+ kernel from
http://alt.fedoraproject.org/pub/alt/rawhide-kernel-nodebug, for example:
sudo dnf config-manager --add-repo=http://alt.fedoraproject.org/pub/alt/rawhide-kernel-nodebug/fedora-rawhide-kernel-nodebug.repo
sudo dnf update
# reboot
Nightly Packages
Nightly bcc binary packages for Fedora 25, 26, 27, and 28 are hosted at
https://repo.iovisor.org/yum/nightly/f{25,26,27}
.
To install:
echo -e '[iovisor]\nbaseurl=https://repo.iovisor.org/yum/nightly/f27/$basearch\nenabled=1\ngpgcheck=0' | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/iovisor.repo
sudo dnf install bcc-tools kernel-headers kernel-devel
Stable and Signed Packages
Stable bcc binary packages for Fedora 25, 26, 27, and 28 are hosted at
https://repo.iovisor.org/yum/main/f{25,26,27}
.
echo -e '[iovisor]\nbaseurl=https://repo.iovisor.org/yum/main/f27/$basearch\nenabled=1' | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/iovisor.repo
sudo dnf install bcc-tools kernel-devel-$(uname -r) kernel-headers-$(uname -r)
bcc is available in the standard Arch repos, so it can be installed with the pacman
command:
# pacman -S bcc bcc-tools python-bcc
First of all, upgrade the kernel of your choice to a recent version. For example:
emerge sys-kernel/gentoo-sources
Then, configure the kernel enabling the features you need. Please consider the following as a starting point:
CONFIG_BPF=y
CONFIG_BPF_SYSCALL=y
CONFIG_NET_CLS_BPF=m
CONFIG_NET_ACT_BPF=m
CONFIG_BPF_JIT=y
CONFIG_BPF_EVENTS=y
Finally, you can install bcc with:
emerge dev-util/bcc
The appropriate dependencies (e.g., clang
, llvm
with BPF backend) will be pulled automatically.
For openSUSE Leap 42.2 (and later) and Tumbleweed, bcc is already included in the official repo. Just install the packages with zypper.
sudo zypper ref
sudo zypper in bcc-tools bcc-examples
For RHEL 7.6, bcc is already included in the official yum repository as bcc-tools. As part of the install, the following dependencies are installed: bcc.x86_64 0:0.6.1-2.el7 ,llvm-private.x86_64 0:6.0.1-2.el7 ,python-bcc.x86_64 0:0.6.1-2.el7,python-netaddr.noarch 0:0.7.5-9.el7
yum install bcc-tools
Use case 1. Install BCC for latest kernel available in repo: Tested on Amazon Linux AMI release 2018.03 (kernel 4.14.88-72.73.amzn1.x86_64)
sudo yum update kernel
sudo yum install bcc
sudo reboot
Use case 2. Install BCC for your AMI's default kernel (no reboot required): Tested on Amazon Linux AMI release 2018.03 (kernel 4.14.77-70.59.amzn1.x86_64)
sudo yum install kernel-headers-$(uname -r | cut -d'.' -f1-5)
sudo yum install kernel-devel-$(uname -r | cut -d'.' -f1-5)
sudo yum install bcc
Use case 1. Install BCC for your AMI's default kernel (no reboot required): Tested on Amazon Linux AMI release 2021.11 (kernel 5.10.75-79.358.amzn2.x86_64)
sudo amazon-linux-extras install BCC
As of Alpine 3.11, bcc binaries are available in the community repository:
sudo apk add bcc-tools bcc-doc
The tools are installed in /usr/share/bcc/tools
.
Python Compatibility
The binary packages include bindings for Python 3 only. The Python-based tools assume that a python
binary is available at /usr/bin/python
, but that may not be true on recent versions of Alpine. If you encounter errors like <tool-name>: not found
, you can try creating a symlink to the Python 3.x binary like so:
sudo ln -s $(which python3) /usr/bin/python
Containers
Alpine Linux is often used as a base system for containers. bcc
can be used in such an environment by launching the container in privileged mode with kernel modules available through bind mounts:
sudo docker run --rm -it --privileged \
-v /lib/modules:/lib/modules:ro \
-v /sys:/sys:ro \
-v /usr/src:/usr/src:ro \
alpine:3.12
The compiling depends on the headers and lib of linux kernel module which was not found in wsl distribution packages repo. We have to compile the kernel module manually.
apt-get install flex bison libssl-dev libelf-dev dwarves
First, you will need to checkout the WSL2 Linux kernel git repository:
KERNEL_VERSION=$(uname -r | cut -d '-' -f 1)
git clone --depth 1 [email protected]:microsoft/WSL2-Linux-Kernel.git -b linux-msft-wsl-$KERNEL_VERSION
cd WSL2-Linux-Kernel
Then compile and install:
cp Microsoft/config-wsl .config
make oldconfig && make prepare
make scripts
make modules
sudo make modules_install
After install the module you will need to change the name of the directory to remove the '+' at the end
mv /lib/modules/$KERNEL_VERSION-microsoft-standard-WSL2+/ /lib/modules/$KERNEL_VERSION-microsoft-standard-WSL2
Then you can install bcc tools package according your distribution.
If you met some problems, try to
sudo mount -t debugfs debugfs /sys/kernel/debug
Since release v0.10.0, bcc starts to leverage libbpf repo (https://github.com/libbpf/libbpf) to provide wrapper functions to the kernel for bpf syscalls, uapi headers bpf.h/btf.h etc. Unfortunately, the default github release source code does not contain libbpf submodule source code and this will cause build issues.
To alleviate this problem, starting at release v0.11.0, source code with corresponding libbpf submodule codes will be released as well. See https://github.com/iovisor/bcc/releases.
/etc/apt/sources.list
should include the non-free
repository and look something like this:
deb http://deb.debian.org/debian sid main contrib non-free
deb-src http://deb.debian.org/debian sid main contrib non-free
# Before you begin
apt-get update
# According to https://packages.debian.org/source/sid/bpfcc,
# BCC build dependencies:
sudo apt-get install arping bison clang-format cmake dh-python \
dpkg-dev pkg-kde-tools ethtool flex inetutils-ping iperf \
libbpf-dev libclang-dev libclang-cpp-dev libedit-dev libelf-dev \
libfl-dev libzip-dev linux-libc-dev llvm-dev libluajit-5.1-dev \
luajit python3-netaddr python3-pyroute2 python3-setuptools python3
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
mkdir bcc/build; cd bcc/build
cmake ..
make
sudo make install
To build the toolchain from source, one needs:
- LLVM 3.7.1 or newer, compiled with BPF support (default=on)
- Clang, built from the same tree as LLVM
- cmake (>=3.1), gcc (>=4.7), flex, bison
- LuaJIT, if you want Lua support
# Trusty (14.04 LTS) and older
VER=trusty
echo "deb http://llvm.org/apt/$VER/ llvm-toolchain-$VER-3.7 main
deb-src http://llvm.org/apt/$VER/ llvm-toolchain-$VER-3.7 main" | \
sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/llvm.list
wget -O - http://llvm.org/apt/llvm-snapshot.gpg.key | sudo apt-key add -
sudo apt-get update
# For Bionic (18.04 LTS)
sudo apt-get -y install bison build-essential cmake flex git libedit-dev \
libllvm6.0 llvm-6.0-dev libclang-6.0-dev python zlib1g-dev libelf-dev libfl-dev python3-setuptools
# For Focal (20.04.1 LTS)
sudo apt install -y bison build-essential cmake flex git libedit-dev \
libllvm12 llvm-12-dev libclang-12-dev python zlib1g-dev libelf-dev libfl-dev python3-setuptools
# For Hirsute (21.04) or Impish (21.10)
sudo apt install -y bison build-essential cmake flex git libedit-dev \
libllvm11 llvm-11-dev libclang-11-dev python3 zlib1g-dev libelf-dev libfl-dev python3-setuptools
# For Jammy (22.04)
sudo apt install -y bison build-essential cmake flex git libedit-dev \
libllvm14 llvm-14-dev libclang-14-dev python3 zlib1g-dev libelf-dev libfl-dev python3-setuptools
# For other versions
sudo apt-get -y install bison build-essential cmake flex git libedit-dev \
libllvm3.7 llvm-3.7-dev libclang-3.7-dev python zlib1g-dev libelf-dev python3-setuptools
# For Lua support
sudo apt-get -y install luajit luajit-5.1-dev
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
mkdir bcc/build; cd bcc/build
cmake ..
make
sudo make install
cmake -DPYTHON_CMD=python3 .. # build python3 binding
pushd src/python/
make
sudo make install
popd
suppose you're running with root or add sudo first
dnf install -y bison cmake ethtool flex git iperf3 libstdc++-devel python3-netaddr python3-pip gcc gcc-c++ make zlib-devel elfutils-libelf-devel
# dnf install -y luajit luajit-devel ## if use luajit, will report some lua function(which in lua5.3) undefined problem
dnf install -y clang clang-devel llvm llvm-devel llvm-static ncurses-devel
dnf -y install netperf
pip3 install pyroute2
ln -s /usr/bin/python3 /usr/bin/python
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
mkdir bcc-build
cd bcc-build/
## here llvm should always link shared library
cmake ../bcc -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr -DENABLE_LLVM_SHARED=1
make -j10
make install
after install, you may add bcc directory to your $PATH, which you can add to ~/.bashrc
bcctools=/usr/share/bcc/tools
bccexamples=/usr/share/bcc/examples
export PATH=$bcctools:$bccexamples:$PATH
source ~/.bashrc
then run
hello_world.py
Or
cd /usr/share/bcc/examples
./hello_world.py
./tracing/bitehist.py
cd /usr/share/bcc/tools
./bitesize
sudo dnf install -y bison cmake ethtool flex git iperf libstdc++-static \
python-netaddr python-pip gcc gcc-c++ make zlib-devel \
elfutils-libelf-devel python-cachetools
sudo dnf install -y luajit luajit-devel # for Lua support
sudo dnf install -y \
http://repo.iovisor.org/yum/extra/mageia/cauldron/x86_64/netperf-2.7.0-1.mga6.x86_64.rpm
sudo pip install pyroute2
# FC22
wget http://llvm.org/releases/3.7.1/clang+llvm-3.7.1-x86_64-fedora22.tar.xz
sudo tar xf clang+llvm-3.7.1-x86_64-fedora22.tar.xz -C /usr/local --strip 1
# FC23
wget http://llvm.org/releases/3.9.0/clang+llvm-3.9.0-x86_64-fedora23.tar.xz
sudo tar xf clang+llvm-3.9.0-x86_64-fedora23.tar.xz -C /usr/local --strip 1
# FC24 and FC25
sudo dnf install -y clang clang-devel llvm llvm-devel llvm-static ncurses-devel
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
mkdir bcc/build; cd bcc/build
cmake ..
make
sudo make install
sudo zypper in bison cmake flex gcc gcc-c++ git libelf-devel libstdc++-devel \
llvm-devel clang-devel pkg-config python-devel python-setuptools python3-devel \
python3-setuptools
sudo zypper in luajit-devel # for lua support in openSUSE Leap 42.2 or later
sudo zypper in lua51-luajit-devel # for lua support in openSUSE Tumbleweed
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
mkdir bcc/build; cd bcc/build
cmake -DLUAJIT_INCLUDE_DIR=`pkg-config --variable=includedir luajit` \ # for lua support
..
make
sudo make install
cmake -DPYTHON_CMD=python3 .. # build python3 binding
pushd src/python/
make
sudo make install
popd
For Centos 7.6 only
sudo yum install -y epel-release
sudo yum update -y
sudo yum groupinstall -y "Development tools"
sudo yum install -y elfutils-libelf-devel cmake3 git bison flex ncurses-devel
sudo yum install -y luajit luajit-devel # for Lua support
You could compile LLVM from source code
curl -LO http://releases.llvm.org/10.0.0/llvm-10.0.0.src.tar.xz
curl -LO http://releases.llvm.org/10.0.0/cfe-10.0.0.src.tar.xz
tar -xf cfe-10.0.0.src.tar.xz
tar -xf llvm-10.0.0.src.tar.xz
mkdir clang-build
mkdir llvm-build
cd llvm-build
cmake3 -G "Unix Makefiles" -DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD="BPF;X86" \
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ../llvm-10.0.0.src
make
sudo make install
cd ../clang-build
cmake3 -G "Unix Makefiles" -DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD="BPF;X86" \
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ../cfe-10.0.0.src
make
sudo make install
cd ..
or install from centos-release-scl
yum install -y centos-release-scl
yum-config-manager --enable rhel-server-rhscl-7-rpms
yum install -y devtoolset-7 llvm-toolset-10 llvm-toolset-10-llvm-devel llvm-toolset-10-llvm-static llvm-toolset-10-clang-devel
source scl_source enable devtoolset-7 llvm-toolset-10
For permanently enable scl environment, please check https://access.redhat.com/solutions/527703.
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
mkdir bcc/build; cd bcc/build
cmake3 ..
make
sudo make install
Tested on Amazon Linux AMI release 2018.03 (kernel 4.14.47-56.37.amzn1.x86_64)
# enable epel to get iperf, luajit, luajit-devel, cmake3 (cmake3 is required to support c++11)
sudo yum-config-manager --enable epel
sudo yum install -y bison cmake3 ethtool flex git iperf libstdc++-static python-netaddr python-cachetools gcc gcc-c++ make zlib-devel elfutils-libelf-devel
sudo yum install -y luajit luajit-devel
sudo yum install -y http://repo.iovisor.org/yum/extra/mageia/cauldron/x86_64/netperf-2.7.0-1.mga6.x86_64.rpm
sudo pip install pyroute2
sudo yum install -y ncurses-devel
wget http://releases.llvm.org/3.7.1/clang+llvm-3.7.1-x86_64-fedora22.tar.xz
tar xf clang*
(cd clang* && sudo cp -R * /usr/local/)
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
pushd .
mkdir bcc/build; cd bcc/build
cmake3 ..
time make
sudo make install
popd
sudo yum -y install kernel-devel-$(uname -r)
sudo mount -t debugfs debugfs /sys/kernel/debug
sudo /usr/share/bcc/tools/execsnoop
# enable epel to get iperf, luajit, luajit-devel, cmake3 (cmake3 is required to support c++11)
sudo yum-config-manager --enable epel
sudo yum install -y bison cmake3 ethtool flex git iperf libstdc++-static python-netaddr python-cachetools gcc gcc-c++ make zlib-devel elfutils-libelf-devel
sudo yum install -y luajit luajit-devel
sudo yum install -y http://repo.iovisor.org/yum/extra/mageia/cauldron/x86_64/netperf-2.7.0-1.mga6.x86_64.rpm
sudo pip install pyroute2
sudo yum install -y ncurses-devel
yum install -y clang llvm llvm-devel llvm-static clang-devel clang-libs
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
pushd .
mkdir bcc/build; cd bcc/build
cmake3 ..
time make
sudo make install
popd
sudo yum -y install kernel-devel-$(uname -r)
sudo mount -t debugfs debugfs /sys/kernel/debug
sudo /usr/share/bcc/tools/execsnoop
sudo apk add tar git build-base iperf linux-headers llvm10-dev llvm10-static \
clang-dev clang-static cmake python3 flex-dev bison luajit-dev elfutils-dev \
zlib-dev
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
mkdir bcc/build; cd bcc/build
# python2 can be substituted here, depending on your environment
cmake -DPYTHON_CMD=python3 ..
make && sudo make install
# Optional, but needed if you don't have /usr/bin/python on your system
ln -s $(which python3) /usr/bin/python
sudo /usr/share/bcc/tools/execsnoop
pacman -S cmake clang llvm flex bison python
git clone https://github.com/iovisor/bcc.git
pushd .
mkdir bcc/build
cd bcc/build
cmake .. -DPYTHON_CMD=python3 # for python3 support
make -j$(nproc)
sudo make install
cd src/python
make -j$(nproc)
sudo make install
popd
git clone https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.git
mkdir -p llvm-project/llvm/build/install
cd llvm-project/llvm/build
cmake -G "Ninja" -DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD="BPF;X86" \
-DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="clang" \
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$PWD/install ..
ninja && ninja install
export PATH=$PWD/install/bin:$PATH