Welcome to CRIU, a project to implement checkpoint/restore functionality for Linux in userspace.
Checkpoint/Restore In Userspace, or CRIU (pronounced kree-oo, IPA: /krɪʊ/, Russian: криу), is a software tool for Linux operating system. Using this tool, you can freeze a running application (or part of it) and checkpoint it to a hard drive as a collection of files. You can then use the files to restore and run the application from the point it was frozen at. The distinctive feature of the CRIU project is that it is mainly implemented in user space.
Using
- Installation
- What to do to have CRIU on your system
- Usage
- How to run the tool
- Usage scenarios
- Ideas how criu can be used (some are crazy indeed)
- What software is supported
- Describes TODO list in higher level terms
- Category:HOWTO
- Collection of real world examples of how to use CRIU. Some are complex, some are not. HOW TO dump a simple loop might be the best one to start with.
- What can change after C/R
- CRIU cannot (yet) save and restore every single bit of tasks' state. This page describes what bits visible through standard kernel API are such.
External links
- 2024-11-14, On-demand and Parallel Checkpoint/Restore for GPU Applications
- 2024-09-06, Live Migration of Multi-Container Kubernetes Pods in Multi-Cluster Serverless Edge Systems
- 2024-09-04, Towards Efficient End-to-End Encryption for Container Checkpointing Systems
- 2024-08-04, Custom Page Fault Handling With eBPF
- 2024-08-03, Software-based Live Migration for Containerized RDMA
- 2024-07-30, Packet Buffering to Minimize Service Downtime and Packet Loss During Redundancy Switchover
- 2024-07-30, Don't, Stop, Drop, Pause: Forensics of CONtainer CheckPOINTs (ConPoint)
- 2024-07-25, MDB-KCP: persistence framework of in-memory database with CRIU-based container checkpoint in Kubernetes
- 2024-07-23, Dapper: A Lightweight and Extensible Framework for Live Program State Rewriting
- More external articles...