Provided by: kopano-server_8.7.0-7.1ubuntu11_amd64 bug

Name

       kopano-coredump — Coredump generation settings

Description

       Coredump  generation  is  largely  controlled by the surrounding operating system.  Kopano
       daemons only have little control over it (see end of this document).

System configuration

   Location for dumps
       Ensure that the kernel.core_pattern sysctl specifies a template which is writable for  the
       (unprivileged)  daemon  process. If the template is left at the default value ("core") and
       the working directory of the daemon, controlled with the "running_path" directive  in  the
       config  file,  happens  to  be  an unwritable directory such as the root directory, a dump
       cannot be generated.

       If in doubt, set kernel.core_pattern to something  like  /tmp/core.%E.%p,  which  produces
       standard  uncompressed  ELF  cores.  Ensure  enough  disk  space  is available. You should
       compress it before sending it to Kopano.

       sysctls may not necessarily be settable from within a Linux container, in which case  this
       has to be done in the top namespace.

   Applicable limits
       When  starting  the  service  via systemd/systemctl: The coredump size limit is by default
       infinite. It is possible to define a global coredump limit in /etc/systemd/system.conf, so
       ensure that no custom value (cf.  "DefaultLimitCORE" directive) has been set.

       To  check  for a particular service's current applied policy, you can also use: `systemctl
       show kopano-server` and look at the LimitCORE= directive.

       Alternatively, when starting the program directly from a shell prompt without the use of a
       service  manager: The user shell limits are defined in /etc/security/limits.conf and often
       need to be adjusted, such as by adding a line like:
            * hard core unlimited

Kopano service settings

       Once the system is set up for core generation, there is one  more  option  on  the  kopano
       side.

       •   kopano-dagent,  kopano-gateway and kopano-spooler offer a "coredump_enabled" directive
           in their configuration file, and its default value is "systemdefault".

       •   kopano-server has a "coredump_enabled" directive as well, and it defaults to "yes".

       All other daemons which recognize no such directive in their  config  file  behave  as  if
       coredump_enabled=systemdefault was in effect.

       •   When  coredump_enabled=no,  the  daemon  sets  the  maximum  core  size to zero, which
           effectively deactivates dump generation even if otherwise permitted by the system.

       •   When coredump_enabled=systemdefault, the system configuration is used as is.

       •   When coredump_enabled=yes, the  daemon  attempts  to  increase  the  inherited  system
           default  value  for  itself  to  infinity. This is only really necessary if the system
           defaults (LimitNCORE, see above) specify a low limit.

Dump generation via gdb

       There is an alternate way of  generating  dumps,  using  gdb,  which  is  helpful  if  the
       automatic  generation  as  explained  above does not work for whatever reason (such as the
       inability to edit kernel.core_pattern).

       Using gdb, one can attach to a particular process  or  start  a  new  instance,  and  then
       inspect its state.

   Generate dumpfile
       Thread 1 "kopano-dagent" received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
       0x0000000000000000 in ?? ()
       (gdb) gcore
       warning: target file /proc/25097/cmdline contained unexpected null characters
       Saved corefile core.25097

   Backtrace
       A  backtrace  produced  by  gdb  is  usually a higher quality than the one produced by the
       process itself. For this, the debuginfo must be available in the system.  (When running  a
       version  built  yourself, the info is inside the executable.  (When running a version from
       prebuilt binaries, look for package names containing "debug", "dbg" or similar.)

       (gdb) thread apply all bt

   Signal interruptions
       Some signals are received under normal conditions, such as SIGPIPE. To have gdb  not  stop
       and require user input all the time, SIGPIPE should be ignored:

       (gdb) handle SIGPIPE nostop noprint
       If  you  expect  to  observe a process for a really long time, it may make sense to do the
       same for SIGHUP too.

       Note that openssl will, on certain architectures (ARM, PPC, s390x,  sparcv9),  use  "smoke
       testing" to determine CPU capabilities, where it issues CPU instructions that not all CPUs
       understand. openssl sets up a signal handler to deal with it, but said signals will  still
       stop gdb and you need to issue "continue" a few times.