Hate having processes die because of kernel upgrades? The thought of losing your irssi scrollback just too much for you?
Compile (I needed zlib1g-dev on my Ubuntu machine which had build-essentials installed) and then run 'freeze' to save processes to disk. You start the process again by executing the file that it saves - there is no 'thaw' utility
It can't save a screen session, but you can save the processes inside them and rescreen.
Craig
On Fri, 2005-11-18 at 11:56 +1300, Perry Lorier wrote:
Craig Box wrote:
Hate having processes die because of kernel upgrades? The thought of losing your irssi scrollback just too much for you?
Name a long lived process that doesn't use a socket that you would want to keep alive?
my uptime counter!
On 11/18/05, Perry Lorier perry@coders.net wrote:
Craig Box wrote:
Hate having processes die because of kernel upgrades? The thought of losing your irssi scrollback just too much for you?
Name a long lived process that doesn't use a socket that you would want to keep alive?
Full kernel compilation on my machine (around 75 minutes!)
Ian -- Ian McDonald http://wand.net.nz/~iam4 WAND Network Research Group University of Waikato New Zealand
On Fri, Nov 18, 2005 at 11:56:42AM +1300, Perry Lorier wrote:
Craig Box wrote:
Hate having processes die because of kernel upgrades? The thought of losing your irssi scrollback just too much for you?
Name a long lived process that doesn't use a socket that you would want to keep alive?
A network simulation or statistics calculation that's been running for a week and has another two weeks to go? Use your imagination :)
John
Perry Lorier wrote:
Craig Box wrote:
Hate having processes die because of kernel upgrades? The thought of losing your irssi scrollback just too much for you?
Name a long lived process that doesn't use a socket that you would want to keep alive?
In the case of irssi, you just reconnect the socket.
Anything else that doesn't let you save state. Same-Gnome? :)
Craig
* Perry Lorier perry@coders.net [2005-11-18 00:00]:
Name a long lived process that doesn't use a socket that you would want to keep alive?
Firefox without the SessionSaver extension? (I tried it, it made my browser unbearably slow.)
Regards,
participants (7)
-
A. Pagaltzis -
Craig Box -
Craig Box -
Ian McDonald -
John R. McPherson -
Matt Brown -
Perry Lorier