This page describes non-standard options that can be useful when using crtools
Evasive devices
Sometimes an application opens a device file and then somehow the path by which it was opened becomes inaccessible (e.g. overmounted or unlinked). In that case crtools cannot easily dump and restore such a process. If you consider that the path doesn't really matter when dumping your apps state you can tell crtools that a device file can be opened by any name, even if the original one is no longer accessible. The option for that is --evasive-devices
External UNIX sockets
Consider an application opens a datagram UNIX socket and connects it to some address. If you will try to dump such app and the server socket for some reason will not be taken in the dumped state (e.g. -- a task holding it is not dumped) the dump will fail. You can override this behavior by allowing crtools to disconnect the client after dump and re-connecting it back on restore by the server socket path using the --ext-unix-sk
option.
TCP connections
When dumping and restoring an application having an opened tcp connection you should use the --tcp-established
option. When this option is in use crtools will leave the connection(s) locked after dump and will require it(them) to be still locked before restore.
Per-task logging on restore
By default crtools puts all logs into one log file specified by -o/--log-file
option. If you want to split restoration logs on per-pid basis you can use the --log-pid
option. The ${pid}
task's logs will appear in a ${log-file}.pid