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Obtaining a core file

Johan Wikman edited this page Oct 7, 2015 · 12 revisions

In case of a crash, a core file may make it easier for us to investigate the issue and provide a fix. However, typically Linux systems are configured so that core files are not generated by default.

In case the crash is easily repeatable, please do as follows to obtain a core file that can be attached to a bug-report (https://mariadb.atlassian.net/projects/MXS).

  • Turn yourself into the user maxscale

      user@host$ sudo su - maxscale -s /bin/bash
      [sudo] password for user: 
      No directory, logging in with HOME=/
      maxscale@host:/$
    

    The user maxscale does not have a login shell, which is why it must be specified explicitly.

  • Enable core files.

      maxscale@host$ ulimit -c unlimited
      maxscale@hosr$ ulimit -c
      unlimited
    

    If the last command does not produce unlimited but 0, you may need to enable core files in /etc/security/limits.conf

  • Move to a directory where maxscale has write rights. Otherwise, the core file cannot be written.

      maxscale@host$ cd /var/lib/maxscale
    
  • Start maxscale in the console.

      maxscale@host$ /usr/bin/maxscale -d
      Info : MaxScale will be run in the terminal process.
      Syslog logging is disabled.
      Configuration file : /etc/maxscale.cnf
      ...
    
  • Do whatever is needed to make maxscale crash.

      MaxScale 1.2.1 received fatal signal 11
    
    
      Writing core dump
      Segmentation fault (core dumped)
    
  • Attach the core file to a bug report.

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