SYNOPSIS
- coredumpctl [OPTIONS...] {COMMAND} [PID|COMM|EXE|MATCH...]
DESCRIPTION
coredumpctl
OPTIONS
The following options are understood:
-h, --help
- Print a short help text and exit.
--version
- Print a short version string and exit.
--no-legend
- Do not print column headers.
--no-pager
- Do not pipe output into a pager.
-1
- Show information of a single core dump only, instead of listing all known core dumps.
-F FIELD, --field=FIELD
- Print all possible data values the specified field takes in matching core dump entries of the journal.
-o FILE, --output=FILE
- Write the core to FILE.
-D DIR, --directory=DIR
- Use the journal files in the specified DIR.
COMMANDS
The following commands are understood:
list
-
List core dumps captured in the journal matching specified characteristics. If no command is specified, this is the implied default.
It's worth noting that different restrictions apply to data saved in the journal and core dump files saved in /var/lib/systemd/coredump, see overview in systemd-coredump(8). Thus it may very well happen that a particular core dump is still listed in the journal while its corresponding core dump file has already been removed.
info
- Show detailed information about core dumps captured in the journal.
dump
- Extract the last core dump matching specified characteristics. The core dump will be written on standard output, unless an output file is specified with --output=.
gdb
- Invoke the GNU debugger on the last core dump matching specified characteristics.
MATCHING
A match can be:
PID
- Process ID of the process that dumped core. An integer.
COMM
- Name of the executable (matches COREDUMP_COMM=). Must not contain slashes.
EXE
- Path to the executable (matches COREDUMP_EXE=). Must contain at least one slash.
MATCH
- General journalctl predicates (see journalctl(1)). Must contain an equal sign.
EXIT STATUS
On success, 0 is returned; otherwise, a non-zero failure code is returned. Not finding any matching core dumps is treated as failure.
EXAMPLES
Example 1. List all the core dumps of a program named foo
-
# coredumpctl list foo
Example 2. Invoke gdb on the last core dump
-
# coredumpctl gdb
Example 3. Show information about a process that dumped core, matching by its PID 6654
-
# coredumpctl info 6654
Example 4. Extract the last core dump of /usr/bin/bar to a file named bar.coredump
-
# coredumpctl -o bar.coredump dump /usr/bin/bar