Re: prctl(PR_SET_MM)

From: Randy Dunlap
Date: Mon Feb 18 2013 - 00:44:00 EST


On 02/17/13 17:39, Amnon Shiloh wrote:
> Hello,
>
> The code in "kernel/sys.c" provides the "prctl(PR_SET_MM)" function,
> which is the only way a process can set or modify the following 11
> per-process fields:
>
> start_code, end_code, start_data, end_data, start_brk, brk,
> start_stack, arg_start, arg_end, env_start, env_end.
>
> Being able to set those fields is important, even crucial,
> for any conceivable user-level checkpointing software, as
> well as for migrating processes between different computers.
>
> Unfortunately, this code (essentially "prctl_set_mm()") is presently
> enclosed in "#ifdef CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE" which is configured
> as "default n" in "init/Kconfig". Many system-administrators who
> may like to have a checkpoint/restore or process-migration facility,
> but use standard pre-packaged kernels, find the requirement to
> configure and compile their own non-standard kernel difficult or
> too prohibitive.
>
> Would it be possible to have this code enabled by default?
>
> This could be done in one of 4 ways:
> 1) Having CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE enabled by default; or
> 2) Releasing this code from the "#ifdef CONFIG_CHECK_RESTORE"; or
> 3) Placing this code within a different kernel-configuration option
> (say "CONFIG_BASIC_CHECKPOINTING") that is enabled by default; or
> 4) Placing this code under a dual #if, so instead of:
> #ifdef CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE
> have:
> #if defined(CONFIG_CHECKPOINT_RESTORE) || defined(CONFIG_BASIC_CHECKPOINTING)


This is basically a distro issue. Distros can choose to enable
this code by default, but the Linux kernel that Linus maintains does
not need to enable it.


--
~Randy
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