Technologies

Revision as of 13:39, 10 February 2015 by Cyrillos (talk | contribs)

This page contains a list of technologies and tools have been developed while we were implementing CRIU, which might be useful on their own. These tools are still maintained within the CRIU itself, but eventually they can be split out into a standalone project and CRIU will be fixed to use those as libraries/sub-tools.

Parasite code injection

This thing was split into a separate project called compel. Compel is an utility to execute code in foreign process address space. It is based on the same technology we use in CRIU to obtain some process-private data on dump. We don't currently maintain compel and it's quite out-dated, but still functional.

Managing protocol buffers objects

We have a Python module to convert google protocol buffers to python objects and back.

Unlike other projects to convert pb to python dict or json, our pb2dict does treat optional fields with empty repeated inside properly. It includes special support for custom field options to mark those needed to be treated in a special way. For example, you could include our opts.proto in your proto-file and use criu.* options to mark your fields, i.e.:

required uint64 blk_sigset = 5[(criu).hex = true];

See more examples in our protobuf/*.proto files.

It is also worth noting, that we have a unique number for all kinds of custom protobuf options(see Images#Notes_about_protobuf), so you don't have to worry that it might collide with others.

Sharing of kernel objects

It's well known that some kernel objects can be shared between tasks. For example, if a task calls open() to obtain a file descriptor and then fork()-s the file object referenced by the file descriptor becomes shared between the parent and its child. The similar thing happens when a task dup()-s a file -- he gets two file descriptors that reference the same file. Unlike this two subsequent open()-s result in two different file objects.

In kernel there's no API that can just reveal the tasks-to-objects map. Instead, there's an API called kcmp() that compares two e.g. file descriptors and reports back whether the file referenced by them is the same or not. In CRIU we have a KCMPIDS engine that uses this API, build kcmp trees and turns the equals-notequals answers into a list of IDs of objects.