[Devel] Re: [PATCH 0/6] /proc/pid/checkpointable

Mike Waychison mikew at google.com
Wed Mar 18 13:03:59 PDT 2009


Oren Laadan wrote:
> 
> Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
>> Quoting Oren Laadan (orenl at cs.columbia.edu):
>>> Serge E. Hallyn wrote:
>>>> Quoting Oren Laadan (orenl at cs.columbia.edu):
>>>>> Sukadev Bhattiprolu wrote:
>>>>>> From: Sukadev Bhattiprolu <sukadev at linux.vnet.ibm.com>
>>>>>> Date: Fri, 13 Mar 2009 17:25:42 -0700
>>>>>> Subject: [PATCH 5/6] Define and use proc_pid_checkpointable()
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Create a proc file, /proc/pid/checkpointable, which shows '1' if
>>>>>> task is checkpointable and '0' if it is not.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> To determine whether a task is checkpointable, the handler for this
>>>>>> new proc file, shares the same code with sys_checkpoint().
>>>> Hey Oren,
>>>>
>>>> 3 counter-points:
>>>>
>>>>> I still don't understand why we would like to do it this way.
>>>>>
>>>>> First, it makes little sense to do it per-task, because we are supposed
>>>>> to checkpoint an entire container.
>>>> Yes we need per-container info too.  Actually, per-checkpoint-job-init,
>>>> so if we send pids in for that, it should return false if we send in the
>>>> pid of a task which isn't a proper checkpoint-job-init.
>>>>
>>>> But we also want the info per-task, for debugging info.
>>>>
>>> My suggestions works for this two: we add a flag CR_CTX_DRYRUN; a task
>>> can ask to checkpoint itself, or another task, with CR_CTX_DRYRUN and
>>> the checkpoint code runs without actual effect. (If we don't want to
>>> expose the actual flag to userspace, then we simply use it in an
>>> implementation of a /proc/PID/checkpointable operation).
>> Hmm, so if we pass in CR_CTX_DRYRUN, then the fd can point to a file
>> wherein to store a text represenation of the reason?
>>
>> Dave will probably hate it, but it could be worse...
> 
> Either that.
> 
> Or continue using a debugfs interface, except that the  implementation
> will go through an internal interface as I suggest.
> 
> Or spit the reason on the kernel console so the user can check dmesg
> for it (like when 'modprobe' fails).

It'd be nice if the error message could be gotten directly from the 
call.  Would something like a new packet in the output stream 
(cr_hdr->type == CR_HDR_FAILURE) with something descriptive in the body 
of the packet make sense?  That could then be scanned for when 
sys_checkpoint fails..

Polluting the dmesg buffer with messages from common failures (consider 
a multi-user cluster where checkpoints may or may not succeed) isn't 
very useful.
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