Re: clone3: allow creation of time namespace with offset
From: Arnd Bergmann
Date: Wed Mar 18 2020 - 06:19:15 EST
On Tue, Mar 17, 2020 at 9:32 AM Adrian Reber <areber@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> This is an attempt to add time namespace support to clone3(). I am not
> really sure which way clone3() should handle time namespaces. The time
> namespace through /proc cannot be used with clone3() because the offsets
> for the time namespace need to be written before a process has been
> created in that time namespace. This means it is necessary to somehow
> tell clone3() the offsets for the clocks.
>
> The time namespace offers the possibility to set offsets for
> CLOCK_MONOTONIC and CLOCK_BOOTTIME. My first approach was to extend
> 'struct clone_args` with '__aligned_u64 monotonic_offset' and
> '__aligned_u64 boottime_offset'. The problem with this approach was that
> it was not possible to set nanoseconds for the clocks in the time
> namespace.
>
> One of the motivations for clone3() with CLONE_NEWTIME was to enable
> CRIU to restore a process in a time namespace with the corresponding
> offsets. And although the nanosecond value can probably never be
> restored to the same value it had during checkpointing, because the
> clock keeps on running between CRIU pausing all processes and CRIU
> actually reading the value of the clocks, the nanosecond value is still
> necessary for CRIU to not restore a process where the clock jumps back
> due to CRIU restoring it with a nanonsecond value that is too small.
>
> Requiring nanoseconds as well as seconds for two clocks during clone3()
> means that it would require 4 additional members to 'struct clone_args':
>
> __aligned_u64 tls;
> __aligned_u64 set_tid;
> __aligned_u64 set_tid_size;
> + __aligned_u64 boottime_offset_seconds;
> + __aligned_u64 boottime_offset_nanoseconds;
> + __aligned_u64 monotonic_offset_seconds;
> + __aligned_u64 monotonic_offset_nanoseconds;
> };
Wouldn't it be sufficient to have the two nanosecond values, rather
than both seconds and nanoseconds? With 64-bit nanoseconds
you can represent several hundred years, and these would
always start at zero during boot.
Regardless of this, I think you need a signed offset, not unsigned.
Arnd