About This Guide

IRIX Checkpoint and Restart (IRIX CPR) is a facility for saving the state of running processes, and for later resuming execution where it left off. Based on the POSIX 1003.1m standard, this facility was initially implemented in IRIX release 6.4.

This IRIX Checkpoint and Restart Operation Guide describes how to use and administer IRIX CPR, and how to program checkpointing applications.

Intended Audience

This document is intended for anyone who needs to checkpoint and restart processes, including users, administrators, and application programmers.

What This Guide Contains

Here is an overview of the material in this book:

Resources for Further Information

The cpr(1) man page describes the usage and options of the cpr command. The ckpt_create(3) man page documents the CPR programming interface; ckpt_setup(3), ckpt_restart, ckpt_stat(3), and ckpt_remove(3) are links to the same page.

The atcheckpoint(3c) man page describes how to set up checkpoint and restart event handlers; atrestart(3c) is a link to that page.

Related Publications

The following documents contain additional information that may be helpful:

  • IRIX Admin: Software Installation and Licensing—Explains how to install and license software that runs under the IRIX operating system, the SGI implementation of the UNIX operating system. Contains instructions for performing miniroot and live installations using the inst command. Identifies the licensing products that control access to restricted applications running under IRIX and refers readers to licensing product documentation.

  • Message Passing Toolkit: PVM Programmer's Manual—Documents the Message Passing Toolkit for IRIX (MPT) 1.5 implementation of PVM-3 supported on SGI MIPS based systems running IRIX release 6.5 or later. No technical changes have been made for MPT 1.5.

  • IRIX Admin: Resource Administration— Provides an introduction to system resource administration and describes how to use and administer various IRIX resource management features, such as IRIX process limits, IRIX job limits, the Miser Batch Processing System, the Cpuset System, Comprehensive System Accounting (CSA), IRIX memory usage, and Array Services.

Obtaining Publications

To obtain SGI documentation, go to the SGI Technical Publications Library at http://techpubs.sgi.com.

Conventions

The following conventions are used throughout this document:

Convention

Meaning

command

This fixed-space font denotes literal items such as commands, files, routines, path names, signals, messages, and programming language structures.

variable

Italic typeface denotes variable entries and words or concepts being defined.

user input

This bold, fixed-space font denotes literal items that the user enters in interactive sessions. Output is shown in nonbold, fixed-space font.

[]

Brackets enclose optional portions of a command or directive line.

...

Ellipses indicate that a preceding element can be repeated.

manpage(x)

Man page section identifiers appear in parentheses after man page names.


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