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Full Discussion: Should i delete core files ?
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Should i delete core files ? Post 303038083 by Peasant on Saturday 24th of August 2019 03:58:33 AM
Old 08-24-2019
Deleting core files will not affect the current running application.
It has crashed (in the past) and generated a core dump.
Or killed intentionally to generate one by user or kernel.

Now, the one who wrote those applications, should tell you that.
Perhaps he or she (or a group, company whatever) would like to analyse those core dumps to determine the reason of crash.

Hope that helps
Regards
Peasant.

Last edited by rbatte1; 09-04-2019 at 02:12 PM..
This User Gave Thanks to Peasant For This Post:
 

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tnfxtract(1)							   User Commands						      tnfxtract(1)

NAME
tnfxtract - extract kernel probes output into a trace file SYNOPSIS
tnfxtract [ -d dumpfile -n namelist] tnf_file DESCRIPTION
The tnfxtract utility collects kernel trace output from an in-core buffer in the Solaris kernel, or from the memory image of a crashed sys- tem, and generates a binary TNF trace file like those produced directly by user programs being traced. Either both or neither of the -d and -n options must be specified. If neither is specified, trace output is extracted from the running ker- nel. If both are specified, the -d argument names the file containing the (crashed) system memory image, and the -n argument names the file containing the symbol table for the system memory image. The TNF trace file tnf_file produced is exactly the same size as the in-core buffer; it is essentially a snapshot of that buffer. It is legal to run tnfxtract while kernel tracing is active, i.e., while the in-core buffer is being written. tnfxtract insures that the output file it generates is low-level consistent, that is, that only whole probes are written out, and that internal data structures in the buffer are not corrupted because the buffer is being concurrently written. The TNF trace file generated is suitable as input to tnfdump(1), which will generate an ASCII file. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -d dumpfile Uses dumpfile as the system memory image, instead of the running kernel. The dumpfile is normally the path name of a file generated by the savecore utility. -n namelist Uses namelist as the file containing the symbol table information for the given dumpfile. OPERANDS
The following operand is supported: tnf_file Output file generated by tnfxtract based on kernel trace output from an in-core buffer in the Solaris kernel. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Extracting probes from a running kernel Extract probes from the running kernel into ktrace.out: example% tnfxtract ktrace.out Example 2: Extracting probes from a kernel crash dump Extract probes from a kernel crash dump into ktrace.out: example% tnfxtract -d /var/crash/`uname -n`/vmcore.0 -n /var/crash/`uname -n`/unix.0 ktrace.out EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned: 0 Successful completion. >0 An error occurred. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWtnfc | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
prex(1), tnfdump(1), savecore(1M), tnf_kernel_probes(4), attributes(5) SunOS 5.10 19 Aug 2003 tnfxtract(1)
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