move bpfloader.rc into p/m/C am: ddea8ce1af

Original change: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/system/bpf/+/2800818

Change-Id: Icc29fa45c0004b3ce4ac1d9f2130493dea9fc7fe
Signed-off-by: Automerger Merge Worker <android-build-automerger-merge-worker@system.gserviceaccount.com>
diff --git a/bpfloader/Android.bp b/bpfloader/Android.bp
index 981c207..da45531 100644
--- a/bpfloader/Android.bp
+++ b/bpfloader/Android.bp
@@ -48,10 +48,7 @@
         "BpfLoader.cpp",
     ],
 
-    init_rc: ["bpfloader.rc"],
-
     required: [
-        "netbpfload",
         "timeInState.o",
     ],
 
diff --git a/bpfloader/bpfloader.rc b/bpfloader/bpfloader.rc
deleted file mode 100644
index 14181dc..0000000
--- a/bpfloader/bpfloader.rc
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,86 +0,0 @@
-# zygote-start is what officially starts netd (see //system/core/rootdir/init.rc)
-# However, on some hardware it's started from post-fs-data as well, which is just
-# a tad earlier.  There's no benefit to that though, since on 4.9+ P+ devices netd
-# will just block until bpfloader finishes and sets the bpf.progs_loaded property.
-#
-# It is important that we start bpfloader after:
-#   - /sys/fs/bpf is already mounted,
-#   - apex (incl. rollback) is initialized (so that in the future we can load bpf
-#     programs shipped as part of apex mainline modules)
-#   - logd is ready for us to log stuff
-#
-# At the same time we want to be as early as possible to reduce races and thus
-# failures (before memory is fragmented, and cpu is busy running tons of other
-# stuff) and we absolutely want to be before netd and the system boot slot is
-# considered to have booted successfully.
-#
-on load_bpf_programs
-    exec_start bpfloader
-
-service bpfloader /system/bin/netbpfload
-    # netbpfload will do network bpf loading, then execute /system/bin/bpfloader
-    capabilities CHOWN SYS_ADMIN NET_ADMIN
-    # The following group memberships are a workaround for lack of DAC_OVERRIDE
-    # and allow us to open (among other things) files that we created and are
-    # no longer root owned (due to CHOWN) but still have group read access to
-    # one of the following groups.  This is not perfect, but a more correct
-    # solution requires significantly more effort to implement.
-    group root graphics network_stack net_admin net_bw_acct net_bw_stats net_raw system
-    user root
-    #
-    # Set RLIMIT_MEMLOCK to 1GiB for bpfloader
-    #
-    # Actually only 8MiB would be needed if bpfloader ran as its own uid.
-    #
-    # However, while the rlimit is per-thread, the accounting is system wide.
-    # So, for example, if the graphics stack has already allocated 10MiB of
-    # memlock data before bpfloader even gets a chance to run, it would fail
-    # if its memlock rlimit is only 8MiB - since there would be none left for it.
-    #
-    # bpfloader succeeding is critical to system health, since a failure will
-    # cause netd crashloop and thus system server crashloop... and the only
-    # recovery is a full kernel reboot.
-    #
-    # We've had issues where devices would sometimes (rarely) boot into
-    # a crashloop because bpfloader would occasionally lose a boot time
-    # race against the graphics stack's boot time locked memory allocation.
-    #
-    # Thus bpfloader's memlock has to be 8MB higher then the locked memory
-    # consumption of the root uid anywhere else in the system...
-    # But we don't know what that is for all possible devices...
-    #
-    # Ideally, we'd simply grant bpfloader the IPC_LOCK capability and it
-    # would simply ignore it's memlock rlimit... but it turns that this
-    # capability is not even checked by the kernel's bpf system call.
-    #
-    # As such we simply use 1GiB as a reasonable approximation of infinity.
-    #
-    rlimit memlock 1073741824 1073741824
-    oneshot
-    #
-    # How to debug bootloops caused by 'bpfloader-failed'.
-    #
-    # 1. On some lower RAM devices (like wembley) you may need to first enable developer mode
-    #    (from the Settings app UI), and change the developer option "Logger buffer sizes"
-    #    from the default (wembley: 64kB) to the maximum (1M) per log buffer.
-    #    Otherwise buffer will overflow before you manage to dump it and you'll get useless logs.
-    #
-    # 2. comment out 'reboot_on_failure reboot,bpfloader-failed' below
-    # 3. rebuild/reflash/reboot
-    # 4. as the device is booting up capture bpfloader logs via:
-    #    adb logcat -s 'bpfloader:*' 'LibBpfLoader:*' 'NetBpfLoad:*' 'NetBpfLoader:*'
-    #
-    # something like:
-    #   $ adb reboot; sleep 1; adb wait-for-device; adb root; sleep 1; adb wait-for-device; adb logcat -s 'bpfloader:*' 'LibBpfLoader:*' 'NetBpfLoad:*' 'NetBpfLoader:*'
-    # will take care of capturing logs as early as possible
-    #
-    # 5. look through the logs from the kernel's bpf verifier that bpfloader dumps out,
-    #    it usually makes sense to search back from the end and find the particular
-    #    bpf verifier failure that caused bpfloader to terminate early with an error code.
-    #    This will probably be something along the lines of 'too many jumps' or
-    #    'cannot prove return value is 0 or 1' or 'unsupported / unknown operation / helper',
-    #    'invalid bpf_context access', etc.
-    #
-    reboot_on_failure reboot,bpfloader-failed
-    # we're not really updatable, but want to be able to load bpf programs shipped in apexes
-    updatable