[Devel] [RFC v7][PATCH 6/9] Checkpoint/restart: initial documentation
Oren Laadan
orenl at cs.columbia.edu
Sun Oct 19 22:40:34 PDT 2008
Covers application checkpoint/restart, overall design, interfaces
and checkpoint image format.
Signed-off-by: Oren Laadan <orenl at cs.columbia.edu>
Acked-by: Serge Hallyn <serue at us.ibm.com>
Signed-off-by: Dave Hansen <dave at linux.vnet.ibm.com>
---
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+
+ === Checkpoint-Restart support in the Linux kernel ===
+
+Copyright (C) 2008 Oren Laadan
+
+Author: Oren Laadan <orenl at cs.columbia.edu>
+
+License: The GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2
+ (dual licensed under the GPL v2)
+Reviewers:
+
+Application checkpoint/restart [CR] is the ability to save the state
+of a running application so that it can later resume its execution
+from the time at which it was checkpointed. An application can be
+migrated by checkpointing it on one machine and restarting it on
+another. CR can provide many potential benefits:
+
+* Failure recovery: by rolling back an to a previous checkpoint
+
+* Improved response time: by restarting applications from checkpoints
+ instead of from scratch.
+
+* Improved system utilization: by suspending long running CPU
+ intensive jobs and resuming them when load decreases.
+
+* Fault resilience: by migrating applications off of faulty hosts.
+
+* Dynamic load balancing: by migrating applications to less loaded
+ hosts.
+
+* Improved service availability and administration: by migrating
+ applications before host maintenance so that they continue to run
+ with minimal downtime
+
+* Time-travel: by taking periodic checkpoints and restarting from
+ any previous checkpoint.
+
+
+=== Overall design
+
+Checkpoint and restart is done in the kernel as much as possible. The
+kernel exports a relative opaque 'blob' of data to userspace which can
+then be handed to the new kernel at restore time. The 'blob' contains
+data and state of select portions of kernel structures such as VMAs
+and mm_structs, as well as copies of the actual memory that the tasks
+use. Any changes in this blob's format between kernel revisions can be
+handled by an in-userspace conversion program. The approach is similar
+to virtually all of the commercial CR products out there, as well as
+the research project Zap.
+
+Two new system calls are introduced to provide CR: sys_checkpoint and
+sys_restart. The checkpoint code basically serializes internal kernel
+state and writes it out to a file descriptor, and the resulting image
+is stream-able. More specifically, it consists of 5 steps:
+ 1. Pre-dump
+ 2. Freeze the container
+ 3. Dump
+ 4. Thaw (or kill) the container
+ 5. Post-dump
+Steps 1 and 5 are an optimization to reduce application downtime:
+"pre-dump" works before freezing the container, e.g. the pre-copy for
+live migration, and "post-dump" works after the container resumes
+execution, e.g. write-back the data to secondary storage.
+
+The restart code basically reads the saved kernel state and from a
+file descriptor, and re-creates the tasks and the resources they need
+to resume execution. The restart code is executed by each task that
+is restored in a new container to reconstruct its own state.
+
+
+=== Interfaces
+
+int sys_checkpoint(pid_t pid, int fd, unsigned long flag);
+ Checkpoint a container whose init task is identified by pid, to the
+ file designated by fd. Flags will have future meaning (should be 0
+ for now).
+ Returns: a positive integer that identifies the checkpoint image
+ (for future reference in case it is kept in memory) upon success,
+ 0 if it returns from a restart, and -1 if an error occurs.
+
+int sys_restart(int crid, int fd, unsigned long flags);
+ Restart a container from a checkpoint image identified by crid, or
+ from the blob stored in the file designated by fd. Flags will have
+ future meaning (should be 0 for now).
+ Returns: 0 on success and -1 if an error occurs.
+
+Thus, if checkpoint is initiated by a process in the container, one
+can use logic similar to fork():
+ ...
+ crid = checkpoint(...);
+ switch (crid) {
+ case -1:
+ perror("checkpoint failed");
+ break;
+ default:
+ fprintf(stderr, "checkpoint succeeded, CRID=%d\n", ret);
+ /* proceed with execution after checkpoint */
+ ...
+ break;
+ case 0:
+ fprintf(stderr, "returned after restart\n");
+ /* proceed with action required following a restart */
+ ...
+ break;
+ }
+ ...
+And to initiate a restart, the process in an empty container can use
+logic similar to execve():
+ ...
+ if (restart(crid, ...) < 0)
+ perror("restart failed");
+ /* only get here if restart failed */
+ ...
+
+See below a complete example in C.
+
+
+=== Order of state dump
+
+The order of operations, both save and restore, is as following:
+
+* Header section: header, container information, etc.
+* Global section: [TBD] global resources such as IPC, UTS, etc.
+* Process forest: [TBD] tasks and their relationships
+* Per task data (for each task):
+ -> task state: elements of task_struct
+ -> thread state: elements of thread_struct and thread_info
+ -> CPU state: registers etc, including FPU
+ -> memory state: memory address space layout and contents
+ -> filesystem state: [TBD] filesystem namespace state, chroot, cwd, etc
+ -> files state: open file descriptors and their state
+ -> signals state: [TBD] pending signals and signal handling state
+ -> credentials state: [TBD] user and group state, statistics
+
+
+=== Checkpoint image format
+
+The checkpoint image format is composed of records consistings of a
+pre-header that identifies its contents, followed by a payload. (The
+idea here is to enable parallel checkpointing in the future in which
+multiple threads interleave data from multiple processes into a single
+stream).
+
+The pre-header is defined by "struct cr_hdr" as follows:
+
+struct cr_hdr {
+ __s16 type;
+ __s16 len;
+ __u32 parent;
+};
+
+Here, 'type' field identifies the type of the payload, 'len' tells its
+length in bytes. The 'parent' identifies the owner object instance. The
+meaning of the 'parent field varies depending on the type. For example,
+for type CR_HDR_MM, the 'parent identifies the task to which this MM
+belongs. The payload also varies depending on the type, for instance,
+the data describing a task_struct is given by a 'struct cr_hdr_task'
+(type CR_HDR_TASK) and so on.
+
+The format of the memory dump is as follows: for each VMA, there is a
+'struct cr_vma'; if the VMA is file-mapped, it is followed by the file
+name. Following comes the actual contents, in one or more chunk: each
+chunk begins with a header that specifies how many pages it holds,
+then a the virtual addresses of all the dumped pages in that chunk,
+followed by the actual contents of all the dumped pages. A header with
+zero number of pages marks the end of the contents for a particular
+VMA. Then comes the next VMA and so on.
+
+To illustrate this, consider a single simple task with two VMAs: one
+is file mapped with two dumped pages, and the other is anonymous with
+three dumped pages. The checkpoint image will look like this:
+
+cr_hdr + cr_hdr_head
+cr_hdr + cr_hdr_task
+ cr_hdr + cr_hdr_mm
+ cr_hdr + cr_hdr_vma + cr_hdr + string
+ cr_hdr_pgarr (nr_pages = 2)
+ addr1, addr2
+ page1, page2
+ cr_hdr_pgarr (nr_pages = 0)
+ cr_hdr + cr_hdr_vma
+ cr_hdr_pgarr (nr_pages = 3)
+ addr3, addr4, addr5
+ page3, page4, page5
+ cr_hdr_pgarr (nr_pages = 0)
+ cr_hdr + cr_mm_context
+ cr_hdr + cr_hdr_thread
+ cr_hdr + cr_hdr_cpu
+cr_hdr + cr_hdr_tail
+
+
+=== Current Implementation
+
+[2008-Oct-07]
+There are several assumptions in the current implementation; they will
+be gradually relaxed in future versions. The main ones are:
+* A task can only checkpoint itself (missing "restart-block" logic).
+* Namespaces are not saved or restored; They will be treated as a type
+ of shared object.
+* In particular, it is assumed that the task's file system namespace
+ is the "root" for the entire container.
+* It is assumed that the same file system view is available for the
+ restart task(s). Otherwise, a file system snapshot is required.
+
+
+=== Sample code
+
+Two example programs: one uses checkpoint (called ckpt) to checkpoint
+itself, and another uses restart (called rstr) to restart from that
+checkpoint. Note the use of "dup2" to create a copy of an open file
+and show how shared objects are treated. Execute like this:
+
+orenl:~/test$ ./ckpt > out.1
+ <-- ctrl-c
+orenl:~/test$ cat /tmp/cr-rest.out
+hello, world!
+world, hello!
+(ret = 1)
+
+orenl:~/test$ ./ckpt > out.1
+ <-- ctrl-c
+orenl:~/test$ cat /tmp/cr-rest.out
+hello, world!
+world, hello!
+(ret = 2)
+
+ <-- now change the contents of the file
+orenl:~/test$ sed -i 's/world, hello!/xxxx/' /tmp/cr-rest.out
+orenl:~/test$ cat /tmp/cr-rest.out
+hello, world!
+xxxx
+(ret = 2)
+
+ <-- and do the restart
+orenl:~/test$ ./rstr < out.1
+ <-- ctrl-c
+orenl:~/test$ cat /tmp/cr-rest.out
+hello, world!
+world, hello!
+(ret = 0)
+
+(if you check the output of ps, you'll see that "rstr" changed its
+name to "ckpt", as expected).
+
+============================== ckpt.c ================================
+
+#define _GNU_SOURCE /* or _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE */
+
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include <stdlib.h>
+#include <string.h>
+#include <errno.h>
+#include <fcntl.h>
+#include <unistd.h>
+#include <asm/unistd.h>
+#include <sys/syscall.h>
+
+#define OUTFILE "/tmp/cr-test.out"
+
+int main(int argc, char *argv[])
+{
+ pid_t pid = getpid();
+ FILE *file;
+ int ret;
+
+ close(0);
+ close(2);
+
+ unlink(OUTFILE);
+ file = fopen(OUTFILE, "w+");
+ if (!file) {
+ perror("open");
+ exit(1);
+ }
+
+ if (dup2(0,2) < 0) {
+ perror("dups");
+ exit(1);
+ }
+
+ fprintf(file, "hello, world!\n");
+ fflush(file);
+
+ ret = syscall(__NR_checkpoint, pid, STDOUT_FILENO, 0);
+ if (ret < 0) {
+ perror("checkpoint");
+ exit(2);
+ }
+
+ fprintf(file, "world, hello!\n");
+ fprintf(file, "(ret = %d)\n", ret);
+ fflush(file);
+
+ while (1)
+ ;
+
+ return 0;
+}
+======================================================================
+
+============================== rstr.c ================================
+
+#define _GNU_SOURCE /* or _BSD_SOURCE or _SVID_SOURCE */
+
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include <stdlib.h>
+#include <errno.h>
+#include <fcntl.h>
+#include <unistd.h>
+#include <asm/unistd.h>
+#include <sys/syscall.h>
+
+int main(int argc, char *argv[])
+{
+ pid_t pid = getpid();
+ int ret;
+
+ ret = syscall(__NR_restart, pid, STDIN_FILENO, 0);
+ if (ret < 0)
+ perror("restart");
+
+ printf("should not reach here !\n");
+
+ return 0;
+}
+======================================================================
+
+
+=== Changelog
+
+[2008-Oct-17] v7:
+ - Fix save/restore state of FPU
+ - Fix argument given to kunmap_atomic() in memory dump/restore
+
+[2008-Oct-07] v6:
+ - Balance all calls to cr_hbuf_get() with matching cr_hbuf_put()
+ (even though it's not really needed)
+ - Add 'current implementation' to docs to describe assumptions
+ - Misc fixes and cleanups
+
+[2008-Sep-11] v5:
+ - Config is 'def_bool n' by default
+ - Improve memory dump/restore code (following Dave Hansen's comments)
+ - Change dump format (and code) to allow chunks of <vaddrs, pages>
+ instead of one long list of each
+ - Fix use of follow_page() to avoid faulting in non-present pages
+ - Memory restore now maps user pages explicitly to copy data into them,
+ instead of reading directly to user space; got rid of mprotect_fixup()
+ - Remove preempt_disable() when restoring debug registers
+ - Rename headers files s/ckpt/checkpoint/
+ - Fix misc bugs in files dump/restore
+ - Fix cleanup on some error paths
+ - Fix misc coding style
+
+[2008-Sep-04] v4:
+ - Fix calculation of hash table size
+ - Fix header structure alignment
+ - Use stand list_... for cr_pgarr
+
+[2008-Aug-20] v3:
+ - Various fixes and clean-ups
+ - Use standard hlist_... for hash table
+ - Better use of standard kmalloc/kfree
+
+[2008-Aug-09] v2:
+ - Added utsname->{release,version,machine} to checkpoint header
+ - Pad header structures to 64 bits to ensure compatibility
+ - Address comments from LKML and linux-containers mailing list
+
+[2008-Jul-29] v1:
+In this incarnation, CR only works on single task. The address space
+may consist of only private, simple VMAs - anonymous or file-mapped.
+Both checkpoint and restart will ignore the first argument (pid/crid)
+and instead act on themselves.
--
1.5.4.3
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