freebsd-nq/share/man/man5/core.5

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.\" @(#)core.5 8.3 (Berkeley) 12/11/93
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.\" $FreeBSD$
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.\"
.Dd October 5, 2015
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.Dt CORE 5
.Os
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.Sh NAME
.Nm core
.Nd memory image file format
.Sh SYNOPSIS
.In sys/param.h
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.Sh DESCRIPTION
A small number of signals which cause abnormal termination of a process
also cause a record of the process's in-core state to be written
to disk for later examination by one of the available debuggers.
(See
.Xr sigaction 2 . )
This memory image is written to a file named by default
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.Nm programname.core
in the working directory;
provided the terminated process had write permission in the directory,
and provided the abnormality did not cause
a system crash.
(In this event, the decision to save the core file is arbitrary, see
.Xr savecore 8 . )
.Pp
The maximum size of a core file is limited by
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.Xr setrlimit 2 .
Files which would be larger than the limit are not created.
.Pp
The name of the file is controlled via the
.Xr sysctl 8
variable
.Va kern.corefile .
The contents of this variable describes a filename to store
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the core image to.
This filename can be absolute, or relative (which
will resolve to the current working directory of the program
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generating it).
.Pp
The following format specifiers may be used in the
.Va kern.corefile
sysctl to insert additional information into the resulting core file
name:
.Bl -tag -width "1234567890" -compact -offset "12345"
.It Em \&%H
Machine hostname.
.It Em \&%I
An index starting at zero until the sysctl
.Em debug.ncores
is reached.
This can be useful for limiting the number of corefiles
generated by a particular process.
.It Em \&%N
process name.
.It Em \&%P
processes PID.
.It Em \&%U
process UID.
.El
.Pp
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The name defaults to
.Em \&%N.core ,
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yielding the traditional
.Fx
behaviour.
.Pp
By default, a process that changes user or group credentials whether
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real or effective will not create a corefile.
This behaviour can be
changed to generate a core dump by setting the
.Xr sysctl 8
variable
.Va kern.sugid_coredump
to 1.
.Pp
Corefiles can be compressed by the kernel if the following item
is included in the kernel configuration file:
.Bl -tag -width "1234567890" -compact -offset "12345"
.It options
GZIO
.El
.Pp
When the GZIO option is included, the following sysctls control whether core
files will be compressed:
.Bl -tag -width "kern.compress_user_cores_gzlevel" -compact -offset "12345"
.It Em kern.compress_user_cores_gzlevel
Gzip compression level.
Defaults to 6.
.It Em kern.compress_user_cores
Actually compress user cores.
Compressed core files will have a suffix of
.Ql .gz
appended to them.
.El
Detect badly behaved coredump note helpers Coredump notes depend on being able to invoke dump routines twice; once in a dry-run mode to get the size of the note, and another to actually emit the note to the corefile. When a note helper emits a different length section the second time around than the length it requested the first time, the kernel produces a corrupt coredump. NT_PROCSTAT_FILES output length, when packing kinfo structs, is tied to the length of filenames corresponding to vnodes in the process' fd table via vn_fullpath. As vnodes may move around during dump, this is racy. So: - Detect badly behaved notes in putnote() and pad underfilled notes. - Add a fail point, debug.fail_point.fill_kinfo_vnode__random_path to exercise the NT_PROCSTAT_FILES corruption. It simply picks random lengths to expand or truncate paths to in fo_fill_kinfo_vnode(). - Add a sysctl, kern.coredump_pack_fileinfo, to allow users to disable kinfo packing for PROCSTAT_FILES notes. This should avoid both FILES note corruption and truncation, even if filenames change, at the cost of about 1 kiB in padding bloat per open fd. Document the new sysctl in core.5. - Fix note_procstat_files to self-limit in the 2nd pass. Since sometimes this will result in a short write, pad up to our advertised size. This addresses note corruption, at the risk of sometimes truncating the last several fd info entries. - Fix NT_PROCSTAT_FILES consumers libutil and libprocstat to grok the zero padding. With suggestions from: bjk, jhb, kib, wblock Approved by: markj (mentor) Relnotes: yes Sponsored by: EMC / Isilon Storage Division Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D3548
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.Sh NOTES
Corefiles are written with open file descriptor information as an ELF note.
By default, file paths are packed to only use as much space as needed.
However, file paths can change at any time, including during core dump,
and this can result in truncated file descriptor data.
.Pp
All file descriptor information can be preserved by disabling packing.
This potentially wastes up to PATH_MAX bytes per open fd.
Packing is disabled with
.Dl sysctl kern.coredump_pack_fileinfo=0 .
.Pp
Similarly, corefiles are written with vmmap information as an ELF note, which
contains file paths.
By default, they are packed to only use as much space as
needed.
By the same mechanism as for the open files note, these paths can also
change at any time and result in a truncated note.
.Pp
All vmmap information can be preserved by disabling packing.
Like the file information, this potentially wastes up to PATH_MAX bytes per
mapped object.
Packing is disabled with
.Dl sysctl kern.coredump_pack_vmmapinfo=0 .
.Sh EXAMPLES
In order to store all core images in per-user private areas under
.Pa /var/coredumps ,
the following
.Xr sysctl 8
command can be used:
.Pp
.Dl sysctl kern.corefile=/var/coredumps/\&%U/\&%N.core
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.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr gdb 1 ,
.Xr kgdb 1 ,
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.Xr setrlimit 2 ,
.Xr sigaction 2 ,
.Xr sysctl 8
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.Sh HISTORY
A
.Nm
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file format appeared in
.At v6 .