A proof-of-concept serialization, transmission and restoring python runtime.
pyteleport
is capable of making snapshots of python runtime from
(almost) aribtrary state, including locals, globals and stack.
It then transforms snapshots into specially designed bytecode that
resumes execution from the snapshot state.
The bytecode can be run remotely: this way pyteleport
teleports
python runtime.
pip install pyteleport
Note that the two outputs were produced by different processes on different machines! This is what
tp_bash
does: it transmits the runtime from one python process to another (remotely).
Also works from within a stack:
def a():
def b():
def c():
result = "hello"
tp_bash(...)
return result + " world"
return len(c()) + float("3.5")
return 5 * (3 + b())
assert a() == 87.5
TBD, see docstrings for the moment
- You invoke
teleport
in your python script. pyteleport
collects the runtime state: globals, locals, stack.pyteleport
dumps the runtime into a specially designed "morph" bytecode which resumes from a state resembling current runtime state.- The bytecode is transmitted to the target environment and passed to a python interpreter there.
- The remote python runs the bytecode which restores the runtime state. The python program casually resumes from where it was interrupted.
- The local python runtime is terminated and simply pipes stdio from the target environment.
This is a proof of concept.
The package works with cPython v3.8, 3.9, or 3.10.
Current limitations:
- no thread support
- no
async
support (needs further investigation regarding non-python stack) - more generally, no native code support
- back-teleport and nested teleport (never tried)