My program is written in C++. compiled with gcc, using -g3 -O0 -ggdb flags. When it crashes, I want to open its core dump. Does it create core dump file, or I need to do something to enable core dump creation, in the program itself, or on computer where it is executed? Where this file is created, and what is its name?
3 Answers
You need to set ulimit -c
. If you have 0 for this parameter a coredump file is not created. So do this: ulimit -c unlimited
and check if everything is correct ulimit -a
. The coredump file is created when an application has done for example something inappropriate. The name of the file on my system is core.<process-pid-here>
.
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Thanks, I executed "ulimit -c unlimited" from the terminal window (Ubuntu), then executed my program from the same window, and it created core dump. How can I make this mode default? When I execute my program from keyboard shortcut, dump is not created.– Alex FMay 27, 2010 at 8:10
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11)
setrlimit
is a way to set the core file size from your program. 2) Or setulimit -c unlimited
in your profile.– user184968May 27, 2010 at 8:28 -
5
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On ubuntu 14.04
gedit ~/.bashrc
and addulimit -c unlimited
to end of file and save.– mrgloomMar 2, 2016 at 9:48
You can do it this way inside a program:
#include <sys/resource.h>
// core dumps may be disallowed by parent of this process; change that
struct rlimit core_limits;
core_limits.rlim_cur = core_limits.rlim_max = RLIM_INFINITY;
setrlimit(RLIMIT_CORE, &core_limits);
By default many profiles are defaulted to 0 core file size because the average user doesn't know what to do with them.
Try ulimit -c unlimited
before running your program.