10-31-2010
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
help, what is the difference between core dump and panic dump? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: aileen
1 Replies
2. Programming
MY friends:
my program under sco unix have a problem?
it create a core dump file on the path when execute program ,
but i can't find the error of the C program ,i don't know how to
see the error about my program use core, please help me
or give me some suggest and what tools can use... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: zhaohaizhou
1 Replies
3. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hello,
I host a couple of Call of Duty gameing servers. There are some hackers who love the crash them. When they crash them it simply causes a segmentaion fault and kills the PID. I was wondering it you could help me write a script to simply restart the program after it has been crashed. The... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: Phobos
9 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi All
I am new for this forum. I have a core file by using gdb and bt cmd I got the function name but I want to the exact cause of the core dump because of I can not reproduse the binary so if any one know the cmd plz plz plz let me know. (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: gyanusoni
0 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
We have an application that terminates with segmentation violation errors in the logs. No source code is available since this is a third party software that is way past its maintenance life cycle. Under these circumstances is there a way to force a core dump of the process for further analysis??
... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Un1xNewb1e
3 Replies
6. AIX
Hi ,
I want to read core dump file on AIX5.3. While i am trying to use following commands, i am getting only few lines of information.
ux201p3:e46123> dbx capsWrkstnMgr core
Type 'help' for help.
reading symbolic information ...
Segmentation fault in malloc_common.extend_brk at... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rps
1 Replies
7. Linux
Hi everybody,
I want to find out all the processes that ran before a server crashed. Is that possible?
I've looked in /var/log/messages and found out that the system was out of memory.
A user probably wrote a script (in Perl or Python) that used up all available memory and crashed the... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: z1dane
11 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have come into a business environtment problem and had been 10+ years since the last time I did any unix admin work.
A long time ago some mainframe person created an app that talked to a mainframe on UNIX and wrote a c program with "core" in the file name to indicate that the file was the... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: pcooke2002
2 Replies
9. Red Hat
Hello All,
I am new joiner of this forum.I am new to Linux shell scripting.
At present I have identified 1 application which stalls very frequently (PID is say xyz) and I am not having much information in its application log to identify the root cause of stalling. I need to take the core dump... (19 Replies)
Discussion started by: Anjan Ganguly
19 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENDARWIN
gcore
gcore(1) User Commands gcore(1)
NAME
gcore - get core images of running processes
SYNOPSIS
gcore [-pgF] [-o filename] [-c content] process-id...
DESCRIPTION
The gcore utility creates a core image of each specified process. By default, the name of the core image file for the process whose process
ID is process-id will be core.process-id.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-c content Produces core image files with the specified content. The content description uses the same tokens as in coreadm(1M). The
-c option does not apply to cores produced due to the -p or -g flags.
-F Force. Grabs the target process even if another process has control.
-g Produces core image files in the global core file repository with the global content as configured by coreadm(1M). The com-
mand will fail if the user does not have permissions to the global core file repository.
-o filename Substitutes filename in place of core as the first part of the name of the core image files. filename can contain the same
tokens to be expanded as the paths in coreadm(1M).
-p Produces a core image file in the process-specific location with the process-specific content for each process as config-
ured by coreadm(1M). The command will fail if the user does not have permissions to the per-process core file repository.
OPERANDS
The following operand is supported:
process-id process ID
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 On success.
non-zero On failure, such as non-existent process ID.
FILES
core.process-id core images
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWtoo |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Interface Stability |See below. |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
Command Syntax is Evolving. Output Format(s) are Unstable.
SEE ALSO
kill(1), coreadm(1M), setrlimit(2), core(4), proc(4), attributes(5)
NOTES
gcore is unaffected by the setrlimit(2) system call using the RLIMIT_CORE value.
SunOS 5.10 11 Feb 2004 gcore(1)