Usage scenarios

From CRIU
Revision as of 23:36, 8 September 2016 by Kir (talk | contribs) (remove links from headers)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

This is a set of ideas how criu can be used.

Container live migration

This is the use case from what the whole checkpoint/restore project appeared. Container is checkpointed, then the image is copied on another box, then restored. From the remote observer point of view the container is just frozen for a while.

For more info, see Category:live migration.

Slow-boot services speed up

If some service starts up too long (it can perform complex state initialization for example) we can checkpoint it after it finishes starting up and on the 2nd and subsequent starts restore it from the image.

We have a rough preliminary measurement, showing that VNC server + eclipse start time reduces from ~29 seconds to ~1.5.

Main article: slow-boot services speed up.

Seamless kernel upgrade

When replacing a kernel on a box we can do it without stopping critical activity. Checkpoint it, then replace the kernel (e.g. using kexec) then restore services back. In a perfect world the applications memory shouldn't be put to disk image, but should rather be kept in RAM.

Main article: Seamless kernel upgrade.

Networking load balancing

Not the whole project, but the TCP repair can be used to offload an app-level request handling on another box.

HPC issues

High Performance Computing people may require it for two things:

  1. Load balancing a computational task over a cluster. It can be done in two directions -- push parts of a task on another box to utilize idle parts of a cluster or pull parts of a task to a local box to make better use of local caches.
  2. Periodic state save to avoid recomputation in case of a cluster crash. Take server snapshot every few minutes and put on other machine. When doing failover resurrect the other side quickly.

Desktop environment suspend/resume

Suspending a screen session and restoring it on another box might be interesting. Suspending some X app (browser?) and restoring it later is also worth thinking about but requires knowledge of X-protocol.

Main article: X applications.

Processes duplication

Somewhat like a remote fork() ;)

"Save" ability in apps (games), that don't have such

Some arcades require you to complete next level to "fixup" the progress. With criu it can be done at any point.

Snapshots of apps

With CRIU one can save a series of app's states (all but first incremental) and revert later to any of them. The "apply-images" item from TODO list should help to revert the state faster, especially if the memory changes tracker state is with us.

One of examples when this snapshot might be useful is debugging. One might need to bring an application into a "desired" state fast, and having dump at that state would speed things up.

Main article: Incremental dumps.

Move "forgotten" applications into "screen"

Sometimes it's useful to launch a process in "screen". If you forgot to switch into screen, but launched a task, criu can help to "migrate" the app into it.

Applications behavior analysis on another machine

It's possible to take periodic snapshots of running applications and transfer them on another machine for debugging or behavior and performance analysis.

Debugging of hung application

If there's some service, that got hung, but need to be restarted quickly, it's possible to take a dump of one, restart and debug why it hanged later, using its restored copy.

Fault-tolerant systems

With CRIU it's possible to periodically duplicate process on another box. Requires applying images facility.

Update dryrun

Before updating a kernel/system libs one may duplicate a system service(s) into VM with updates and check they continue to run OK. If this test passes, then the real system update can be done.