On Wed, 2007-12-26 at 20:57 -0500, Vivek Goyal wrote: [...] > > 9. Now, you are in the original kernel again. You can read/write the > > memory image of kexeced kernel via /proc/kimgcore. > > > > Why do we need two interfaces, /proc/vmcore and /proc/kimgcore? Can't > we have just one say /proc/vmcore. Irrespective of what kernel you are > in /proc/vmcore gives you the access to the memory of kernel which was > previously booted. In theory we can kexec another kernel even in a kexeced kernel, that is, in kernel A kexec kernel B, and in kernel B kexec another kernel C. In this situation, both /proc/vmcore and /proc/kimgcore has valid contents. So I think, it may be better to keep two interfaces. In fact, current kexec jump implementation use a dummy "jump back helper image" in kexeced kernel to jump back to the original kernel. The "jump back helper image" has no PT_LOAD segment, it is used to provide a struct kimage (including control page, swap page) and entry point to jump back. Best Regards, Huang Ying _______________________________________________ linux-pm mailing list linux-pm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linux-foundation.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-pm