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Andrew Cooper authored
In 13y of working on Xen, I've never seen seen it used. The implementation was introduced (commit b69f92f3, Jul 28 2004) with known issues such as: /* Resuming after we've stopped used to work, but more through luck than any actual intention. It doesn't at the moment. */ which appear to have gone unfixed for the 20 years since. Nowadays there are more robust ways of inspecting crashed state, such as a kexec crash kernel, or running Xen in a VM. This will allow us to clean up some hooks around the codebase which are proving awkward for other tasks. Signed-off-by: Andrew Cooper <andrew.cooper3@citrix.com> Acked-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
d182f9feAndrew Cooper authoredIn 13y of working on Xen, I've never seen seen it used. The implementation was introduced (commit b69f92f3, Jul 28 2004) with known issues such as: /* Resuming after we've stopped used to work, but more through luck than any actual intention. It doesn't at the moment. */ which appear to have gone unfixed for the 20 years since. Nowadays there are more robust ways of inspecting crashed state, such as a kexec crash kernel, or running Xen in a VM. This will allow us to clean up some hooks around the codebase which are proving awkward for other tasks. Signed-off-by: Andrew Cooper <andrew.cooper3@citrix.com> Acked-by: Jan Beulich <jbeulich@suse.com>
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