получение и обработка сохраненных дампов ядра и метаданных (Retrieve and process saved core dumps and metadata)
Имя (Name)
coredumpctl - Retrieve and process saved core dumps and metadata
Синопсис (Synopsis)
coredumpctl
[OPTIONS...] {COMMAND} [PID|COMM|EXE|MATCH...]
Описание (Description)
coredumpctl
is a tool that can be used to retrieve and process
core dumps and metadata which were saved by systemd-coredump(8).
Команды (Commands)
The following commands are understood:
list
List core dumps captured in the journal matching specified
characteristics. If no command is specified, this is the
implied default.
The output is designed to be human readable and contains a
table with the following columns:
TIME
The timestamp of the crash, as reported by the kernel.
PID
The identifier of the process that crashed.
UID, GID
The user and group identifiers of the process that
crashed.
SIGNAL
The signal that caused the process to crash, when
applicable.
COREFILE
Information whether the coredump was stored, and whether
it is still accessible: "none" means the core was not
stored, "-" means that it was not available (for example
because the process was not terminated by a signal),
"present" means that the core file is accessible by the
current user, "journal" means that the core was stored in
the "journal", "truncated" is the same as one of the
previous two, but the core was too large and was not
stored in its entirety, "error" means that the core file
cannot be accessed, most likely because of insufficient
permissions, and "missing" means that the core was stored
in a file, but this file has since been removed.
EXE
The full path to the executable. For backtraces of
scripts this is the name of the interpreter.
It's worth noting that different restrictions apply to data
saved in the journal and core dump files saved in
/var/lib/systemd/coredump, see overview in
systemd-coredump(8). Thus it may very well happen that a
particular core dump is still listed in the journal while its
corresponding core dump file has already been removed.
info
Show detailed information about the last core dump or core
dumps matching specified characteristics captured in the
journal.
dump
Extract the last core dump matching specified
characteristics. The core dump will be written on standard
output, unless an output file is specified with --output=
.
debug
Invoke a debugger on the last core dump matching specified
characteristics. By default, gdb(1) will be used. This may be
changed using the --debugger=
option or the $SYSTEMD_DEBUGGER
environment variable. Use the --debugger-arguments=
option to
pass extra command line arguments to the debugger.
Параметры (Options)
The following options are understood:
-h
, --help
Print a short help text and exit.
--version
Print a short version string and exit.
--no-pager
Do not pipe output into a pager.
--no-legend
Do not print the legend, i.e. column headers and the footer
with hints.
--json=
MODE
Shows output formatted as JSON. Expects one of "short" (for
the shortest possible output without any redundant whitespace
or line breaks), "pretty" (for a pretty version of the same,
with indentation and line breaks) or "off" (to turn off JSON
output, the default).
-1
Show information of the most recent core dump only, instead
of listing all known core dumps. Equivalent to --reverse -n
1
.
-n
INT
Show at most the specified number of entries. The specified
parameter must be an integer greater or equal to 1.
-S
, --since
Only print entries which are since the specified date.
-U
, --until
Only print entries which are until the specified date.
-r
, --reverse
Reverse output so that the newest entries are displayed
first.
-F
FIELD, --field=
FIELD
Print all possible data values the specified field takes in
matching core dump entries of the journal.
-o
FILE, --output=
FILE
Write the core to FILE
.
--debugger=
DEBUGGER
Use the given debugger for the debug
command. If not given
and $SYSTEMD_DEBUGGER is unset, then gdb(1) will be used.
-A
ARGS, --debugger-arguments=
ARGS
Pass the given ARGS as extra command line arguments to the
debugger. Quote as appropriate when ARGS contain whitespace.
(See Examples.)
--file=
GLOB
Takes a file glob as an argument. If specified, coredumpctl
will operate on the specified journal files matching GLOB
instead of the default runtime and system journal paths. May
be specified multiple times, in which case files will be
suitably interleaved.
-D
DIR, --directory=
DIR
Use the journal files in the specified DIR
.
-q
, --quiet
Suppresses informational messages about lack of access to
journal files and possible in-flight coredumps.
MATCHING
A match can be:
PID
Process ID of the process that dumped core. An integer.
COMM
Name of the executable (matches COREDUMP_COMM=
). Must not
contain slashes.
EXE
Path to the executable (matches COREDUMP_EXE=
). Must contain
at least one slash.
MATCH
General journalctl match filter, must contain an equals sign
("="). See journalctl(1).
Статус выхода (Exit)
On success, 0 is returned; otherwise, a non-zero failure code is
returned. Not finding any matching core dumps is treated as
failure.
Окружение (Environment)
$SYSTEMD_DEBUGGER
Use the given debugger for the debug
command. See the
--debugger=
option.
Примеры (Examples)
Example 1. List all the core dumps of a program
$ coredumpctl list /usr/lib64/firefox/firefox
TIME PID UID GID SIG COREFILE EXE SIZE
Tue ... 8018 1000 1000 SIGSEGV missing /usr/lib64/firefox/firefox n/a
Wed ... 251609 1000 1000 SIGTRAP missing /usr/lib64/firefox/firefox n/a
Fri ... 552351 1000 1000 SIGSEGV present /usr/lib64/firefox/firefox 28.7M
The journal has three entries pertaining to
/usr/lib64/firefox/firefox, and only the last entry still has an
available core file (in external storage on disk).
Note that coredumpctl needs access to the journal files to
retrieve the relevant entries from the journal. Thus, an
unprivileged user will normally only see information about
crashing programs of this user.
Example 2. Invoke gdb on the last core dump
$ coredumpctl debug
Example 3. Use gdb to display full register info from the last
core dump
$ coredumpctl debug --debugger-arguments="-batch -ex 'info all-registers'"
Example 4. Show information about a core dump matched by PID
$ coredumpctl info 6654
PID: 6654 (bash)
UID: 1000 (user)
GID: 1000 (user)
Signal: 11 (SEGV)
Timestamp: Mon 2021-01-01 00:00:01 CET (20s ago)
Command Line: bash -c $'kill -SEGV $$'
Executable: /usr/bin/bash
Control Group: /user.slice/user-1000.slice/...
Unit: user@1000.service
User Unit: vte-spawn-....scope
Slice: user-1000.slice
Owner UID: 1000 (user)
Boot ID: ...
Machine ID: ...
Hostname: ...
Storage: /var/lib/systemd/coredump/core.bash.1000.....zst (present)
Disk Size: 51.7K
Message: Process 130414 (bash) of user 1000 dumped core.
Stack trace of thread 130414:
#0 0x00007f398142358b kill (libc.so.6 + 0x3d58b)
#1 0x0000558c2c7fda09 kill_builtin (bash + 0xb1a09)
#2 0x0000558c2c79dc59 execute_builtin.lto_priv.0 (bash + 0x51c59)
#3 0x0000558c2c79709c execute_simple_command (bash + 0x4b09c)
#4 0x0000558c2c798408 execute_command_internal (bash + 0x4c408)
#5 0x0000558c2c7f6bdc parse_and_execute (bash + 0xaabdc)
#6 0x0000558c2c85415c run_one_command.isra.0 (bash + 0x10815c)
#7 0x0000558c2c77d040 main (bash + 0x31040)
#8 0x00007f398140db75 __libc_start_main (libc.so.6 + 0x27b75)
#9 0x0000558c2c77dd1e _start (bash + 0x31d1e)
Example 5. Extract the last core dump of /usr/bin/bar to a file
named bar.coredump
$ coredumpctl -o bar.coredump dump /usr/bin/bar
Смотри также (See also)
systemd-coredump(8), coredump.conf(5),
systemd-journald.service(8), gdb(1)