There are many security solutions available today that rely on the Extended Berkeley Packet Filter (eBPF) features of the Linux kernel to monitor kernel functions. Such a paradigm shift in the latest monitoring technologies is being driven by a variety of reasons. Some of them are motivated by performance needs in an increasingly cloud-dominated world, among others. The Linux kernel always had kernel tracing capabilities such as kprobes (2.6.9), ftrace (2.6.27 and later), perf (2.6.31), or up...