On 11/19/21 05:24, Alexei Starovoitov wrote:
On Thu, Nov 18, 2021 at 9:17 PM Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi
<memxor@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Fri, Nov 19, 2021 at 10:26:59AM IST, Alexei Starovoitov wrote:
On Fri, Nov 19, 2021 at 09:45:23AM +0530, Kumar Kartikeya Dwivedi wrote:
Also, this work is part of GSoC. There is already code that is waiting for this
to fill in the missing pieces [0]. If you want me to add a sample/selftest that
demonstrates/tests how this can be used to reconstruct a task's io_uring, I can
certainly do that. We've already spent a few months contemplating on a few
approaches and this turned out to be the best/most powerful. At one point I had
to scrap some my earlier patches completely because they couldn't work with
descriptorless io_uring. Iterator seem like the best solution so far that can
adapt gracefully to feature additions in something seeing as heavy development
as io_uring.
[0]: https://github.com/checkpoint-restore/criu/commit/cfa3f405d522334076fc4d687bd077bee3186ccf#diff-d2cfa5a05213c854d539de003a23a286311ae81431026d3d50b0068c0cb5a852
[1]: https://github.com/checkpoint-restore/criu/pull/1597
Is that the main PR? 1095 changed files? Is it stale or something?
Is there a way to view the actual logic that exercises these bpf iterators?
No, there is no code exercising BPF iterator in that PR yet (since it wouldn't
build/run in CI). There's some code I have locally that uses these to collect
the necessary information, I can post that, either as a sample or selftest in
the next version, or separately on GH for you to take a look.
I still rebased it so that you can see the rest of the actual code.
I would like to see a working end to end solution.
Also I'd like to hear what Jens and Pavel have to say about
applicability of CRIU to io_uring in general.
First, we have no way to know what requests are in flight, without it
CR doesn't make much sense. The most compelling way for me is to add
a feature to fail all in-flights as it does when is closed. But maybe,
you already did solve it somehow?
There is probably a way to restore registered buffers and files, though
it may be tough considering that files may not have corresponding fds in
the userspace, buffers may be unmapped, buffers may come from
shmem/etc. and other corner cases.
There are also not covered here pieces of state, SELECT_BUFFER
buffers, personalities (aka creds), registered eventfd, io-wq
configuration, etc. I'm assuming you'll be checking them and
failing CR if any of them is there.
And the last point, there will be some stuff CR of which is
likely to be a bad idea. E.g. registered dmabuf's,
pre-registered DMA mappings, zerocopy contexts and so on.
IOW, if the first point is solved, there may be a subset of ring
setups that can probably be CR. That should cover a good amount
of cases. I don't have a strong opinion on the whole thing,
I guess it depends on the amount of problems to implement
in-flight cancellations.
--
Pavel Begunkov