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Have you some links of software that can already achieve this?
I know Nyrna with that kind of feature but it doesn't work with multiple apps and not after a reboot either.
Do you know if someone is working on it?
Thanks!
The suspend/resume stuff I don't know of anything similar; that's the kind of thing that benefits from a rigidly-defined use-case rather than the usable-for-anything mechanisms that make sense for Linux to prefer. Plus suspend/resume in general has been wrinkly.
(Kidding of course, I suppose it's something that actually suspends/resumes a process to disk?)
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On the Xbox Series X, as I understand it (didn't read a lot about it), when "pausing" a game, it doesn't consume resources (RAM, CPU or GPU), if it was the case it would be not great at all for the performances in-game. We speaking about a console of course, it's the only purpose.
How it can be difficult to do that?
Sure Microsoft won't release the source code of the feature, and it will remain Windows exclusive.
But I hope some Linux enthusiasts will work on it for our beloved OS.
The place that kind of functionality would go, should someone make it, would be systemd, as the process that starts and stops other processes.
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Have you an opinion on nyrna? I'm curious because from my point of view I don't see the real difficult to have a quick resume feature on Linux (or macOS...) but in the other hand it seems developers might have ones.
On their Github page they mention CRIU, but it doesn't work with X applications...
I'd not heard of it till you mentioned it. From a quick look, it seems quite simplistic.
For the right implementation of the thing you're after, you'd want something that could keep track of the process and any child processes, and their memory usage, so that all the processes can be suspended together, their RAM contents put into an image which is saved to disc (optionally over restarts) and unloaded, then reloading the RAM image in such a way that the processes don't notice that the actual memory addresses have changed, then restart the processes and recreate their windows without any of them getting confused. It seems like the sort of thing that's doable from systemd/cgroups/some kind of containerisation, as long as there's sufficient interest. Most use cases for that kind of thing would just use a VM, though.
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So I suppose with that they can achieve it without negative impact on performances. I know nothing about Hyper-V, but it seems it's available on Linux, isn't it?
If yes, anyone have tested it?
On a console, the user don't notice it, it works OOTB. But with a PC, I'm wondering if setup VMs etc worth it... Maybe it can be pretty simple, I don't know.