Tree after restore

From CRIU
Revision as of 16:01, 20 September 2016 by Xemul (talk | contribs) (→‎See also)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The restore command has several options how to restore the tree.

Types of restore

Default
CRIU just forks the root task and all other tasks, restores the tasks, then waits for it to exit and after it exits itself. The process tree right after restore is shown on the picture below.

Default restore


Detached
An option --restore-detached makes CRIU exit right after restoring the tree thus causing it to get reparented to the init process.

Detached restore



Sibling
An option --restore-sibling makes CRIU create root task as its own sibling and thus as caller's child. After restore is complete CRIU also exits thus leaving the restored tree being a pure child of the caller.

Sibling restore

Doing execv() in CRIU

In the default restore case it's possible to replace CRIU hanging between the caller process and the root one with something more useful. The --exec-cmd option makes CRIU call execv() with arguments that are to be given at the very end of the CLI after -- argument. E.g. like this

criu restore --images-dir img/ --exec-cmd -v4 -o restore.log -- my_waiter --my-waiter-arg

In this case the restored tree will look like in default case, but with the custom binary instead of CRIU processes.

Restore with execv()

Getting pid of the tree

In case the process tree lives in namespaces or is restored in new namespaces, the real pid of the root task can become any. Knowing it depends on the API used.

CLI
When using the --pidfile $path option CRIU writes the PID of the root task in the $path file.
RPC
In case of RPC the real pid of restored root task is reported back in the criu_resp.restore.pid field of the message.

See also