[Devel] Re: [RFC][PATCH][cryo] Save/restore state of unnamed pipes
sukadev at us.ibm.com
sukadev at us.ibm.com
Tue Jun 17 17:32:14 PDT 2008
Matt Helsley [matthltc at us.ibm.com] wrote:
|
| On Tue, 2008-06-17 at 17:30 -0500, Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
| > Quoting sukadev at us.ibm.com (sukadev at us.ibm.com):
| > >
| > > >From fd13986de32af31621b1badbcf7bfb5626648e0e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
| > > From: Sukadev Bhattiprolu <sukadev at linux.vnet.ibm.com>
| > > Date: Mon, 16 Jun 2008 18:41:05 -0700
| > > Subject: [PATCH] Save/restore state of unnamed pipes
| > >
| > > Design:
| > >
| > > Current Linux kernels provide ability to read/write contents of FIFOs
| > > using /proc. i.e 'cat /proc/pid/fd/read-side-fd' prints the unread data
| > > in the FIFO. Similarly, 'cat foo > /proc/pid/fd/read-sid-fd' appends
| > > the contents of 'foo' to the unread contents of the FIFO.
| > >
| > > So to save/restore the state of the pipe, a simple implementation is
| > > to read the from the unnamed pipe's fd and save to the checkpoint-file.
| > > When restoring, create a pipe (using PT_PIPE()) in the child process,
| > > read the contents of the pipe from the checkpoint file and write it to
| > > the newly created pipe.
| > >
| > > Its fairly straightforward, except for couple of notes:
| > >
| > > - when we read contents of '/proc/pid/fd/read-side-fd' we drain
| > > the pipe such that when the checkpointed application resumes,
| > > it will not find any data. To fix this, we read from the
| > > 'read-side-fd' and write it back to the 'read-side-fd' in
| > > addition to writing to the checkpoint file.
| > >
| > > - there does not seem to be a mechanism to determine the count
| > > of unread bytes in the file. Current implmentation assumes a
| > > maximum of 64K bytes (PIPE_BUFS * PAGE_SIZE on i386) and fails
| > > if the pipe is not fully drained.
| > >
| > > Basic unit-testing done at this point (using tests/pipe.c).
| > >
| > > TODO:
| > > - Additional testing (with multiple-processes and multiple-pipes)
| > > - Named-pipes
| > >
| > > Signed-off-by: Sukadev Bhattiprolu <sukadev at us.ibm.com>
| > > ---
| > > cr.c | 215 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----
| > > 1 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)
| > >
| > > diff --git a/cr.c b/cr.c
| > > index 5163a3d..0cb9774 100644
| > > --- a/cr.c
| > > +++ b/cr.c
| > > @@ -84,6 +84,11 @@ typedef struct fdinfo_t {
| > > char name[128]; /* file name. NULL if anonymous (pipe, socketpair) */
| > > } fdinfo_t;
| > >
| > > +typedef struct fifoinfo_t {
| > > + int fi_fd; /* fifo's read-side fd */
| > > + int fi_length; /* number of bytes in the fifo */
| > > +} fifofdinfo_t;
| > > +
| > > typedef struct memseg_t {
| > > unsigned long start; /* memory segment start address */
| > > unsigned long end; /* memory segment end address */
| > > @@ -468,6 +473,128 @@ out:
| > > return rc;
| > > }
| > >
| > > +static int estimate_fifo_unread_bytes(pinfo_t *pi, int fd)
| > > +{
| > > + /*
| > > + * Is there a way to find the number of bytes remaining to be
| > > + * read in a fifo ? If not, can we print it in fdinfo ?
| > > + *
| > > + * Return 64K (PIPE_BUFS * PAGE_SIZE) for now.
| > > + */
| > > + return 65536;
| > > +}
| > > +
| > > +static void ensure_fifo_has_drained(char *fname, int fifo_fd)
| > > +{
| > > + int rc, c;
| > > +
| > > + rc = read(fifo_fd, &c, 1);
| > > + if (rc != -1 && errno != EAGAIN) {
| >
| > Won't errno only be set if rc == -1? Did you mean || here?
| >
| > > + ERROR("FIFO '%s' not drained fully. rc %d, c %d "
| > > + "errno %d\n", fname, rc, c, errno);
| > > + }
| > > +
| > > +}
| > > +
| > > +static int save_process_fifo_info(pinfo_t *pi, int fd)
| > > +{
| > > + int i;
| > > + int rc;
| > > + int nbytes;
| > > + int fifo_fd;
| > > + int pbuf_size;
| > > + pid_t pid = pi->pid;
| > > + char fname[256];
| > > + fdinfo_t *fi = pi->fi;
| > > + char *pbuf;
| > > + fifofdinfo_t fifofdinfo;
| > > +
| > > + write_item(fd, "FIFO", NULL, 0);
| > > +
| > > + for (i = 0; i < pi->nf; i++) {
| > > + if (! S_ISFIFO(fi[i].mode))
| > > + continue;
| > > +
| > > + DEBUG("FIFO fd %d (%s), flag 0x%x\n", fi[i].fdnum, fi[i].name,
| > > + fi[i].flag);
| > > +
| > > + if (!(fi[i].flag & O_WRONLY))
| > > + continue;
| > > +
| > > + pbuf_size = estimate_fifo_unread_bytes(pi, fd);
| > > +
| > > + pbuf = (char *)malloc(pbuf_size);
| > > + if (!pbuf) {
| > > + ERROR("Unable to allocate FIFO buffer of size %d\n",
| > > + pbuf_size);
| > > + }
| > > + memset(pbuf, 0, pbuf_size);
| > > +
| > > + sprintf(fname, "/proc/%u/fd/%u", pid, fi[i].fdnum);
| > > +
| > > + /*
| > > + * Open O_NONBLOCK so read does not block if fifo has fewer
| > > + * bytes than our estimate.
| > > + */
| > > + fifo_fd = open(fname, O_RDWR|O_NONBLOCK);
| > > + if (fifo_fd < 0)
| > > + ERROR("Error %d opening FIFO '%s'\n", errno, fname);
| > > +
| > > + nbytes = read(fifo_fd, pbuf, pbuf_size);
| > > + if (nbytes < 0) {
| > > + if (errno != EAGAIN) {
| > > + ERROR("Error %d reading FIFO '%s'\n", errno,
| > > + fname);
| > > + }
| > > + nbytes = 0; /* empty fifo */
| > > + }
| > > +
| > > + /*
| > > + * Ensure FIFO has been drained.
| > > + *
| > > + * TODO: If FIFO has not fully drained, our estimate of
| > > + * unread-bytes is wrong. We could:
| > > + *
| > > + * - have kernel print exact number of unread-bytes
| > > + * in /proc/pid/fdinfo/<fd>
| > > + *
| > > + * - read in contents multiple times and write multiple
| > > + * fifobufs or assemble them into a single, large
| > > + * buffer.
| > > + */
| > > + ensure_fifo_has_drained(fname, fifo_fd);
| > > +
| > > + /*
| > > + * Save FIFO data to checkpoint file
| > > + */
| > > + fifofdinfo.fi_fd = fi[i].fdnum;
| > > + fifofdinfo.fi_length = nbytes;
| > > + write_item(fd, "fifofdinfo", &fifofdinfo, sizeof(fifofdinfo));
| > > +
| > > + if (nbytes) {
| > > + write_item(fd, "fifobufs", pbuf, nbytes);
| > > +
| > > + /*
| > > + * Restore FIFO's contents so checkpointed application
| > > + * won't miss a thing.
| > > + */
| > > + errno = 0;
| > > + rc = write(fifo_fd, pbuf, nbytes);
| > > + if (rc != nbytes) {
| > > + ERROR("Wrote-back only %d of %d bytes to FIFO, "
| > > + "error %d\n", rc, nbytes, errno);
| > > + }
| > > + }
| > > +
| > > + close(fifo_fd);
| > > + free(pbuf);
| > > + }
| > > +
| > > + write_item(fd, "END FIFO", NULL, 0);
| > > +
| > > + return 0;
| > > +}
| > > +
| > > static int save_process_data(pid_t pid, int fd, lh_list_t *ptree)
| > > {
| > > char fname[256], exe[256], cwd[256], *argv, *env, *buf;
| > > @@ -587,6 +714,8 @@ static int save_process_data(pid_t pid, int fd, lh_list_t *ptree)
| > > }
| > > write_item(fd, "END FD", NULL, 0);
| > >
| > > + save_process_fifo_info(pi, fd);
| > > +
| > > /* sockets */
| > > write_item(fd, "SOCK", NULL, 0);
| > > for (i = 0; i < pi->ns; i++)
| > > @@ -839,6 +968,29 @@ int restore_fd(int fd, pid_t pid)
| > > }
| > > if (pfd != fdinfo->fdnum) t_d(PT_CLOSE(pid, pfd));
| > > }
| > > + } else if (S_ISFIFO(fdinfo->mode)) {
| > > + int pipefds[2] = { 0, 0 };
| > > +
| > > + /*
| > > + * We create the pipe when we see the pipe's read-fd.
| > > + * Just ignore the pipe's write-fd.
| > > + */
| > > + if (fdinfo->flag == O_WRONLY)
| > > + continue;
| > > +
| > > + DEBUG("Creating pipe for fd %d\n", fdinfo->fdnum);
| > > +
| > > + t_d(PT_PIPE(pid, pipefds));
| > > + t_d(pipefds[0]);
| > > + t_d(pipefds[1]);
| > > +
| > > + if (pipefds[0] != fdinfo->fdnum) {
| > > + DEBUG("Hmm, new pipe has fds %d, %d "
| > > + "Old pipe had fd %d\n", pipefds[0],
| > > + pipefds[1], fdinfo->fdnum); getchar();
| >
| > Can you explain what you're doing here? I would have expected you to
| > dup2() to get back the correct fd, so maybe I'm missing something...
|
| Yes, I agree.
|
| Though I wonder if it's possible that the two fds returned could be
| swapped during restart. Does anyone know if POSIX makes any guarantees
| about the numeric relationship between pipefds[0] and pipefds[1] (like
| "pipefds[0] < pipefds[1]")? If there are no guarantees then it may be
| possible for a simple dup2() to break the new pipe. Suppose, for
| example, that the original pipe used fds 4 and 5 in elements 0 and 1 of
| the fd array respectively and then we restart:
Yes, I was just thinking about this assumption and was wondering if
I could find the peer fd by walking the list of fds in /proc/pid/fd
and doing an lstat() and comparing the inode numbers.
Then save the peer fd in fdinf. On restore, we could create the
pipe and dup2() both read and write-side fds.
|
|
| t_d(PT_PIPE(pid, pipefds)); /* returns 5 and 4 in elements 0 and 1 */
| if (pipefds[0] != fdinfo->fdnum)
| PT_DUP2(pid, pipefds[0], fdinfo->fdnum); /* accidentally closes
| pipefds[1] */
|
|
| I don't see anything in the pipe man page, at least, that suggests we
| can safely assume pipefds[0] < pipefds[1].
|
| The solution could be to use "trampoline" fds. Suppose last_fd is the
| largest fd that exists in the final checkpointed/restarting application.
| We could do (Skipping the PT_FUNC "notation" for clarity):
|
|
| pipe(pipefds); /* returns 5 and 4 in elements 0 and 1 */
| /* use fds after last_fd as trampolines for fds we want to create */
| dup2(pipefds[0], last_fd + 1);
| dup2(pipefds[1], last_fd + 2);
| close(pipefds[0]);
| close(pipefds[1]);
| dup2(last_fd + 1, <orig pipefd[0]>);
| dup2(last_fd + 2, <orig pipefd[1]>);
| close(last_fd + 1);
| close(last_fd + 2);
|
|
| Which is alot more code but should work no matter which fds we get back
| from pipe(). Of course this assumes the checkpointed application hasn't
| used all of its fds. :(
|
This sounds like a good idea too, but we could use any fd that has not
yet been used in the restart-process right ? It would break if all fds
are used AND one of the pipe fds is the very last one :-)
In that case, we could maybe create all pipe fds first and then go
back to creating the rest ?
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