aya

Aya is an eBPF library for the Rust programming language, built with a focus on developer experience and operability.

Latest version: 0.13.1 registry icon
Maintenance score
100
Safety score
100
Popularity score
99
Check your open source dependency risks. Get immediate insight about security, stability and licensing risks.
Security
  Vulnerabilities
Version Suggest Low Medium High Critical
0.13.1 0 0 0 0 0
0.13.0 0 0 0 0 0
0.12.0 0 0 0 0 0
0.11.0 0 0 0 0 0
0.10.7 0 0 0 0 0
0.10.6 0 0 0 0 0
0.10.5 0 0 0 0 0
0.10.4 0 0 0 0 0
0.10.3 0 0 0 0 0
0.10.2 0 0 0 0 0
0.10.1 0 0 0 0 0
0.10.0 0 0 0 0 0

Stability
Latest release:

0.13.1 - This version is safe to use because it has no known security vulnerabilities at this time. Find out if your coding project uses this component and get notified of any reported security vulnerabilities with Meterian-X Open Source Security Platform

Licensing

Maintain your licence declarations and avoid unwanted licences to protect your IP the way you intended.

Apache-2.0   -   Apache License 2.0

Not a wildcard

Not proprietary

OSI Compliant


MIT   -   MIT License

Not a wildcard

Not proprietary

OSI Compliant



Aya

Crates.io License Build status Book Gurubase

API Documentation

Unreleased Documentation Documentaiton

Community

Discord Awesome

Join the conversation on Discord to discuss anything related to Aya or discover and contribute to a list of Awesome Aya projects.

Overview

eBPF is a technology that allows running user-supplied programs inside the Linux kernel. For more info see What is eBPF.

Aya is an eBPF library built with a focus on operability and developer experience. It does not rely on libbpf nor bcc - it's built from the ground up purely in Rust, using only the libc crate to execute syscalls. With BTF support and when linked with musl, it offers a true compile once, run everywhere solution, where a single self-contained binary can be deployed on many linux distributions and kernel versions.

Some of the major features provided include:

  • Support for the BPF Type Format (BTF), which is transparently enabled when supported by the target kernel. This allows eBPF programs compiled against one kernel version to run on different kernel versions without the need to recompile.
  • Support for function call relocation and global data maps, which allows eBPF programs to make function calls and use global variables and initializers.
  • Async support with both tokio and async-std.
  • Easy to deploy and fast to build: aya doesn't require a kernel build or compiled headers, and not even a C toolchain; a release build completes in a matter of seconds.

Example

Aya supports a large chunk of the eBPF API. The following example shows how to use a BPF_PROG_TYPE_CGROUP_SKB program with aya:

use std::fs::File;
use aya::Ebpf;
use aya::programs::{CgroupSkb, CgroupSkbAttachType, CgroupAttachMode};

// load the BPF code
let mut ebpf = Ebpf::load_file("ebpf.o")?;

// get the `ingress_filter` program compiled into `ebpf.o`.
let ingress: &mut CgroupSkb = ebpf.program_mut("ingress_filter")?.try_into()?;

// load the program into the kernel
ingress.load()?;

// attach the program to the root cgroup. `ingress_filter` will be called for all
// incoming packets.
let cgroup = File::open("/sys/fs/cgroup/unified")?;
ingress.attach(cgroup, CgroupSkbAttachType::Ingress, CgroupAttachMode::AllowOverride)?;

Contributing

Please see the contributing guide.

License

Aya is distributed under the terms of either the MIT license or the Apache License (version 2.0), at your option.

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this crate by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.