Re: Attach my own pid

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.....Continued.... That is, if kernel at Computer 2 finds that pid of a process requesting a system call is 1500, the request is forwarded to slave daemon which in turn contacts with the master daemon. Master daemon requests the kernel for the system call and sends the result back to slave daemon.

On Mon, Mar 21, 2016 at 4:01 PM, Nitin Varyani <varyani.nitin1@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I am trying to create a distributed pid space.

0 to 2000 Computer 1
2001 to 4000 Computer 2
4001 to 6000 Computer 3 

and so on...

I am running a master user-level process at Computer 1 which sends a process context like code, data, registers, PC, etc as well as "pid" to slave processes running at other computers. The responsibility of the slave process is to fork a new process on order of master process and attach "pid" given by the master to the new process it has forked. Any system call on slave nodes will have an initial check of " Whether the process belongs to local node or to the master node?". That is, if kernel at Computer 2 pid of the process is 1500



On Mon, Mar 21, 2016 at 12:23 PM, <Valdis.Kletnieks@xxxxxx> wrote:
On Mon, 21 Mar 2016 10:33:44 +0530, Nitin Varyani said:

> Sub-task 1: Until now, parent process cannot control the pid of the forked
> child. A pid gets assigned as a sequential number by the kernel at the time
> the process is forked . I want to modify kernel in such a way that parent
> process can control the pid of the forked child.

What does controlling the pid gain you?  To what purpose?

> Sub-task 2: On Linux, you can find the maximum PID value for your system
> with the following command:
>
> $ cat /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max
>
> Suppose pid_max=2000 for a system. I want that the parent process should be
> able to assign a pid which is greater that 2000 to the forked child.

Again, why would you want to do that?

Anyhow...

echo 3000 > /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max
fork a process that gets a pid over 2000.

Done.

Note that on 32 bit systems, using a pid_max of over 32768 will cause
various things in /proc to blow up.

I suspect that you need to think harder about what problem you're actually
trying to solve here - what will you do with a controlled child PID? Why does
it even matter?


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