Storing entire process state on disk and restoring it later? (On Linux/Unix)
I would like to know: Is there a system call, library, kernel module or command line tool I can use to store the complete state of a running program on the disk?
T开发者_Go百科hat is: I would like to completely dump the memory, page layout, stack, registers, threads and file descriptors a process is currently using to a file on the hard drive and be able to restore it later seamlessly, just like an emulator "savestate" or a Virtual Machine "snapshot".
I would also like, if possible, to have multiple "backup copies" of the program state, so I can revert to a previous execution point if the program dies for some reason.
Is this possible?
You should take a look at the BLCR project from Berkeley Lab. This is widely used by several MPI implementations to provide Checkpoint / Restart capabilities for parallel applications.
A core dump is basically this, so yes, it must be possible to get.
What you really want is a way to restore that dump as a running program. That might be more difficult.
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