From: Michael Sinz <msinz@wgate.com>
To: Martin Dalecki <dalecki@evision-ventures.com>
Cc: "Jakob Østergaard" <jakob@unthought.net>,
"Linux Kernel List" <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] Core dump file control
Date: Fri, 15 Feb 2002 07:55:32 -0500 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <3C6D0544.FE775840@wgate.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <3C6BE18F.7B849129@wgate.com> <20020215124036.C23673@unthought.net> <3C6CF4AA.8040808@evision-ventures.com> <20020215131320.E23673@unthought.net> <3C6CFD7A.30503@evision-ventures.com>
Martin Dalecki wrote:
>
> Jakob Østergaard wrote:
>
> >On Fri, Feb 15, 2002 at 12:44:42PM +0100, Martin Dalecki wrote:
> >
> >>Jakob Østergaard wrote:
> >>
> >...
> >
> >>>What I want is "core.[process name]" eventually with a ".[pid]" appended. A
> >>>flexible scheme like your patch implements is very nice. Actually having
> >>>the core files in CWD is fine for me - I mainly care about the file name.
> >>>
> >>Please execute the size command on the core fiel:
> >>
> >>size core
> >>
> >>to see why this isn't needed.
> >>
> >
> >Huh ?
> >
> >I suppose you mean, that I can get the name of the executable that caused the
> >core dump, when running size - right ?
> >
> >Well, you can do that easier with the file command.
> >
> >But that doesn't prevent my 7 other processes from overwriting the core file
> >of the 8'th process which was the first one to crash. Multi-process systems
> >can, on occation, produce such "domino dumps". Separate names is a *must have*.
> >
> This point I fully agree with. And in fact 2.4.17 already does it the
> core.{pid} way.
This is still not a very good way to control the names.
What I have is a cluster of nearly 100 machines - all but one of them have
no disk. When something goes down on one of the machines, I would like to
know (a) what it was that went down and (b) which machine it was on.
I would also like to have the core files someplace that is writable (all
but the /coredumps directory is read-only - oh, and the local tmpfs mounts
for /var and /etc)
> >And having process names is nicer than having PIDs - I don't mind if my core
> >files are over-written on subsequent runs, actually it's nice (keeps the disks
> >from filling up).
>
> They can get long and annoying... They are not suitable for short name
> filesystems... They provide a good
> hint for deliberate overwrites.... and so on. Basically I think this
> would be too much of the good.
I was very carefull to keep that behavior consistant with 2.4.17. That
is, if you do nothing different with the kernel.core_name_format then it
will work just as before. And only root can change that sysctl.
As to "overwrites" and the like, I have much less overwrites with most
any pattern form than with just plain "core" And I can support features
that many people have wanted (%N.core being a very popular construct).
--
Michael Sinz ---- Worldgate Communications ---- msinz@wgate.com
A master's secrets are only as good as
the master's ability to explain them to others.
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2002-02-15 12:55 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 16+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2002-02-14 16:10 [PATCH] Core dump file control Michael Sinz
2002-02-15 11:40 ` Jakob Østergaard
2002-02-15 11:44 ` Martin Dalecki
2002-02-15 12:11 ` Michael Sinz
2002-02-15 12:13 ` Jakob Østergaard
2002-02-15 12:22 ` Martin Dalecki
2002-02-15 12:32 ` Jakob Østergaard
2002-02-15 12:55 ` Michael Sinz [this message]
2002-02-15 12:06 ` Michael Sinz
[not found] <3C6BE18F.7B849129@wgate.com.suse.lists.linux.kernel>
2002-02-14 16:37 ` Andi Kleen
[not found] ` <363c044a047f1f07d2@[192.168.1.4]>
2002-02-14 17:09 ` Michael Sinz
[not found] <361c88b8047e6c07d2@[192.168.1.4]>
2002-02-14 17:53 ` Michael Sinz
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2002-02-15 17:57 Michael Sinz
2002-02-15 19:07 ` Michael Sinz
2002-02-16 17:37 ` Horst von Brand
2002-02-17 14:36 ` Michael Sinz
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