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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Savecore directory is full, what can be done? Post 51533 by TRUEST on Saturday 22nd of May 2004 06:21:00 PM
Old 05-22-2004
Savecore directory is full, what can be done?

what should i do in this situation. the system crashes and when it rebooted, it tries to dump the core files in the savecore directory. it finds that there is not enough space to dump the files so it just goes ahead and boots up and saves as much core as the directory can withhold


1.
now my question is, what can be done to get the full original core files?? this happened to me a while ago and when i called SUn they said there is nothin they can do because its too late to generate the original full core files the system would have generated had it not been that the directory was full.


2.
another scenerio. say this system crashes, reboots and stops at the OK prompt. what is wrong with this command to type at the OK prompt:
savecore -L /var/crash/hostname/


3.
what command exactly is used to break out of a hung system? i keep hearing this STOP A thing but what buttons on the keyboard exactly is this??


any input is appreciated. please feel free to expatiate as much as you can. thank you
 

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CRASHINFO(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					      CRASHINFO(8)

NAME
crashinfo -- analyze a core dump of the operating system SYNOPSIS
crashinfo [-d crashdir] [-n dumpnr] [-k kernel] [core] DESCRIPTION
The crashinfo utility analyzes a core dump saved by savecore(8). It generates a text file containing the analysis in the same directory as the core dump. For a given core dump file named vmcore.XX the generated text file will be named core.txt.XX. By default, crashinfo analyzes the most recent core dump in the core dump directory. A specific core dump may be specified via either the core or dumpnr arguments. Once crashinfo has located a core dump, it analyzes the core dump to determine the exact version of the kernel that generated the core. It then looks for a matching kernel file under each of the subdirectories in /boot. The location of the kernel file can also be explicitly provided via the kernel argument. Once crashinfo has located a core dump and kernel, it uses several utilities to analyze the core including dmesg(8), fstat(1), iostat(8), ipcs(1), kgdb(1), netstat(1), nfsstat(1), ps(1), pstat(8), and vmstat(8). The options are as follows: -d crashdir Specify an alternate core dump directory. The default crash dump directory is /var/crash. -n dumpnr Use the core dump saved in vmcore.dumpnr instead of the latest core in the core dump directory. -k kernel Specify an explicit kernel file. SEE ALSO
textdump(4), savecore(8) HISTORY
The crashinfo utility appeared in FreeBSD 6.4. BSD
June 28, 2008 BSD
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