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I have an application which is having a few stability issues and I'm trying to diagnose root cause, each time the app crashes it produces a Core dump, which I can attach to and view, using GDB. I've attached to the Core Dump and run a backtace, the following information is provided.

warning: core file may not match specified executable file.
[New Thread 4263]
[New Thread 4276]
[New Thread 4273]
[New Thread 4272]
[New Thread 4271]
[New Thread 4270]
[New Thread 4269]
[New Thread 4265]
[New Thread 4264]
[New Thread 4262]
[New Thread 4261]
[New Thread 4260]
[New Thread 4256]
[New Thread 4255]
[New Thread 4253]
[New Thread 4252]
Cannot access memory at address 0xfbc6e808
(gdb) bt
#0  0xf7e897af in ?? ()
#1  0x00000000 in ?? ()

What more can I do to understand what's going on here.. If i do an 'info threads' this seems to show me 16 threads, which I'm making the assumption are in use at time of crash.

How can I get more detail out of the core dump or is that it..

Thanks, SW

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  • How you are running the gdb? The warning at the top is something to take in account? Is JNI involved? Does it generates a thread dump too? If you're using JNI code it may be worth compile it with -g ...
    – geckos
    Aug 25, 2017 at 10:22

1 Answer 1

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warning: core file may not match specified executable file.

Are you using the exact same executable binary to analyze the core dumps as the one which produced it?

The warning says that you may not be, and without the exact binary, the core is mostly useless.

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  • Yes I'm referencing the binary when executing gdb.. My command is as follows: GDB [location_of_command] [crash core] Aug 29, 2017 at 9:50
  • This got me thinking, I tried using a different executable and this then returned the exe it was looking for, so it wasn't the one I thought was running - now running the command with the right executable is giving me more info. Aug 29, 2017 at 9:57

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