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authorZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl>2017-02-26 16:46:23 -0500
committerZbigniew Jędrzejewski-Szmek <zbyszek@in.waw.pl>2017-02-28 21:33:52 -0500
commit92e92d71faea0f107312f296b7756cc04281ba99 (patch)
treede4c7d4e9d8baf7f07830b00c30a07e759324b47 /test/TEST-06-SELINUX
parentcc4419ed929b5c7c99eaed020b015b1b2e8c7a66 (diff)
coredump: process special crashes in an (almost) normal way
We would only log a terse message when pid1 or systemd-journald crashed. It seems better to reuse the normal code paths as much as possible, with the following differences: - if pid1 crashes, we cannot launch the helper, so we don't analyze the coredump, just write it to file directly from the helper invoked by the kernel; - if journald crashes, we can produce the backtrace, but we don't log full structured messages. With comparison to previous code, advantages are: - we go through most of the steps, so for example vacuuming is performed, - we gather and log more data. In particular for journald and pid1 crashes we generate a backtrace, and for pid1 crashes we record the metadata (fdinfo, maps, etc.), - coredumpctl shows pid1 crashes. A disavantage (inefficiency) is that we gather metadata for journald crashes which is then ignored because _TRANSPORT=kernel does not support structued messages. Messages for the systemd-journald "crash" have _TRANSPORT=kernel, and _TRANSPORT=journal for the pid1 "crash". Feb 26 16:27:55 systemd[1]: systemd-journald.service: Main process exited, code=dumped, status=11/SEGV Feb 26 16:27:55 systemd[1]: systemd-journald.service: Unit entered failed state. Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: Process 18729 (systemd-journal) of user 0 dumped core. Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: Coredump diverted to /var/lib/systemd/coredump/core.systemd-journal.0.36c14bf3c6ce4c38914f441038990979.18729.1488145074000000.lz4 Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: Stack trace of thread 18729: Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: #0 0x00007f46d6a06b8d fsync (libpthread.so.0) Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: #1 0x00007f46d71bfc47 journal_file_set_online (libsystemd-shared-233.so) Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: #2 0x00007f46d71c1c31 journal_file_append_object (libsystemd-shared-233.so) Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: #3 0x00007f46d71c3405 journal_file_append_data (libsystemd-shared-233.so) Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: #4 0x00007f46d71c4b7c journal_file_append_entry (libsystemd-shared-233.so) Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: #5 0x00005577688cf056 write_to_journal (systemd-journald) Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-coredump[18801]: #6 0x00005577688d2e98 dispatch_message_real (systemd-journald) Feb 26 16:37:54 kernel: systemd-coredum: 9 output lines suppressed due to ratelimiting Feb 26 16:37:54 systemd-journald[18810]: Journal started Feb 26 16:50:59 systemd-coredump[19229]: Due to PID 1 having crashed coredump collection will now be turned off. Feb 26 16:51:00 systemd[1]: Caught <SEGV>, dumped core as pid 19228. Feb 26 16:51:00 systemd[1]: Freezing execution. Feb 26 16:51:00 systemd-coredump[19229]: Process 19228 (systemd) of user 0 dumped core. Stack trace of thread 19228: #0 0x00007fab82075c47 kill (libc.so.6) #1 0x000055fdf7c38b6b crash (systemd) #2 0x00007fab824175c0 __restore_rt (libpthread.so.0) #3 0x00007fab82148573 epoll_wait (libc.so.6) #4 0x00007fab8366f84a sd_event_wait (libsystemd-shared-233.so) #5 0x00007fab836701de sd_event_run (libsystemd-shared-233.so) #6 0x000055fdf7c4a380 manager_loop (systemd) #7 0x000055fdf7c402c2 main (systemd) #8 0x00007fab82060401 __libc_start_main (libc.so.6) #9 0x000055fdf7c3818a _start (systemd) Poor machine ;)
Diffstat (limited to 'test/TEST-06-SELINUX')
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