[PATCH 05/10] Core checkpoint/restart support code
Oren Laadan
orenl at cs.columbia.edu
Mon Apr 4 10:32:33 PDT 2011
On 04/04/2011 12:27 PM, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
> Quoting Nathan Lynch (ntl at pobox.com):
>> On Mon, 2011-04-04 at 10:10 -0500, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
>>> Quoting Nathan Lynch (ntl at pobox.com):
>>>> On Sun, 2011-04-03 at 14:03 -0500, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
>>>>> Quoting ntl at pobox.com (ntl at pobox.com):
>>>>>> Only a pid namespace init task - the child process produced by a call
>>>>>> to clone(2) with CLONE_NEWPID - is allowed to call these. The state
>>>>>
>>>>> So you make this useful for your cases by only using this with
>>>>> application containers - created using lxc-execute, or, more precisely,
>>>>> using lxc-init as the container's init. So a container running a stock
>>>>> distro can't be checkpointed.
>>>>
>>>> Correct, a conventional distro init won't work, and application
>>>> containers are my focus for now, at least.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> Is this just to keep the patch simple for now, or is there some reason
>>>>> to keep this limitation in place?
>>>>
>>>> I guess you're asking whether non-pid-init processes could be allowed to
>>>> use the syscalls?
>>>
>>> No. I'm asking whether you are intending to later on change the checkpoint
>>> API to allow an external task to checkpoint a pid-init process, rather than
>>> the pid-init process having to initiate it itself.
>>
>> No, that is not the intention. I can see how that would be problematic
>> for those wanting to run minimally-modified distro containers, but I
>> think running a patched pid-init is a reasonable tradeoff to ask users
>> to make in order to get c/r. And there's nothing to keep the standard
>> distro inits from growing c/r capability.
>
> It's not necessarily a dealbreaker, since presumably I can hack the
> needed support into upstart, triggered by a boot option so it isn't
> activated on a host. But especially given the lack of interest in
> this thread so far, I don't see a point in pushing this, an API-incompatible
> less-capable version of the linux-cr tree. If it can gain traction
> better than linux-cr, that'd be one thing. But given the amount of
> review and testing the other tree has gotten - and I realize you're
> able to piggy-back on much of that - and, again, the lack of responses
> so far, I just don't see this as worth pushing for.
First, thanks to Nathan for cleaning up and re-producing a "minimal"
patchest for review.
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