Provided by: minicoredumper_2.0.7-4_amd64 bug

NAME

       minicoredumper.recept.json - a recept file used by the minicoredumper(1)

DESCRIPTION

       A   recept  configuration  file  defines  the  dump  behavior  of  the  minicoredumper(1).
       minicoredumper.recept.json is a sample recept file name. The actual name  depends  on  the
       recept option in the main configuration file minicoredumper.cfg.json(5).

FILE FORMAT

       The file uses the JSON format. The options are:

       stacks (list)  A  set  of  options  specifying  how and which stacks are to be dumped. See
              STACKS for details about the available options.

       maps   (list) A set of options specifying  shared  objects,  whose  virtual  memory  areas
              should also be dumped. See MAPS for details about the available options.

       buffers
              (array)  A  set of buffers, each specifying global data within the application that
              should also be dumped. See BUFFERS for configuration options for a buffer.

       compression
              (list) A set of options specifying if and what type of compression should  be  used
              for the core(5) file. See COMPRESSION for details about the available options.

       dump_auxv_so_list
              (boolean)  Whether  the shared object list should be dumped. This is used by gdb(1)
              to determine which shared objects were  linked  and  to  which  address  they  were
              mapped.

       dump_pthread_list
              (boolean)  Whether  the  pthread  list  should be dumped. This is used by gdb(1) to
              identify and iterate through all the threads.

       dump_robust_mutex_list
              (boolean) Whether the list of robust mutexes should be  dumped.  This  is  used  by
              gdb(1) to identify mutex attributes and states in shared memory.

       dump_scope
              (integer) Only registered dumps at or below this value will be dumped.

       live_dumper
              (boolean)   Whether   the   minicoredumper(1)   should   trigger   all   registered
              libminicoredumper(7) applications when a dump occurs.

       write_proc_info
              (boolean) Whether interesting /proc files should be copied to the dump directory.

       write_debug_log
              (boolean) Whether minicoredumper(1) messages should be logged to "debug.txt" in the
              dump  directory.  This  is particularly useful if syslog(3) is not available on the
              system.

       dump_fat_core
              (boolean) Whether all virtual memory areas should be dumped.  This will generate  a
              separate  "fatcore"  file  that  is typically larger than the default Linux core(5)
              files. This is really only useful for debugging minicoredumper(1).

STACKS

       The stacks option specifies a set of options related to dumping stacks.  The options are:

       dump_stacks
              (boolean) Whether stack dumping should occur. If this option is  false,  all  other
              stacks options are ignored.

       first_thread_only
              (boolean) Whether only the stack of the crashing thread should be dumped.

       max_stack_size
              (integer) The maximum stack size in bytes to dump. 0 for no limit.

       The  minicoredumper(1)  only  dumps  the  actual  used part of a stack area. If a stack is
       truncated because of the max_stack_size option, the bottommost part of the used  stack  is
       dumped (i.e. the part of the stack that includes the function that caused the core dump).

MAPS

       The  maps option specifies a set of options for shared objects, whose virtual memory areas
       should also be dumped. This is useful if the shared objects maintain their own static off-
       stack data that will be required during debugging. The options are:

       dump_by_name
              (array  of  strings)  Shared object names to be dumped. The names can contain the *
              character for wildcard matching.

       Although not critical, gdb(1) often tries to access data from the "[vdso]" virtual  shared
       object.  If this is not dumped, gdb(1) may complain with the warning:

              Failed to read a valid object file image from memory.

BUFFERS

       The  buffers option specifies an array of buffers, with each buffer specifying global data
       within the application that should also be dumped. The options for each  specified  buffer
       are:

       symname
              (string) The name of the global variable/symbol.

       follow_ptr
              (boolean)  Whether the global variable is a pointer and the data pointed to by that
              pointer should be dumped.

       data_len
              (integer) The size of the global variable in bytes. If follow_ptr is true, this  is
              the size of the data pointed to.

       ident  (string)  An optional string to identify the binary dump later. This corresponds to
              the   ident   argument   of   the   mcd_dump_data_register_bin(3)    function    of
              libminicoredumper(7).   It must be unique! If specified, the data will be dumped to
              an external file named ident instead of the core(5) file. This data can be inserted
              into the core(5) file later using the coreinject(1) tool.

COMPRESSION

       The  compression  option  specifies a set of options related to compression of the core(5)
       file. The options are:

       compressor
              (string) Use a compressor to compress the core(5) file. The compressor must support
              stdin  as  input  and  stdout as output.  Examples of such compressors are gzip(1),
              bzip2(1), xz(1), cat(1).  Either the full path to the compressor can  be  specified
              or  just  the  compressor  filename  if  the compressor can be found in the default
              search path. The uncompressed core(5) file and (if enabled) the sparse tar  archive
              are  created  in  memory.  Thus  the  compressor  option can be very useful if very
              limited dump space is available.

       extension
              (string) The file extension of the compressed tar archive. It is  appended  to  the
              filename  "core.tar."  as a convenience to the user. If not specified, "compressed"
              will be appended.

       in_tar (boolean) Whether the core(5) file should be packed as a sparse file into a  tar(1)
              archive  before  being  compressed.  This  preserves  the  sparse properties of the
              core(5) file. If enabled, a compressor must be specified.

NOTES

       The dump_auxv_so_list, dump_pthread_list, dump_robust_mutex_list options should  generally
       be  set  to  true.  They  provide important information to gdb(1) and require a relatively
       small dump space.

EXAMPLE

       Here is an example of a recept file:

       {
           "stacks": {
               "dump_stacks": true,
               "first_thread_only": true,
               "max_stack_size": 16384
           },
           "maps": {
               "dump_by_name": [
                   "*my_lib_to_debug*so*",
                   "[vdso]"
               ]
           },
           "buffers": [
               {
                   "symname": "my_allocated_struct",
                   "follow_ptr": true,
                   "data_len": 42
               },
               {
                   "symname": "my_short",
                   "follow_ptr": false,
                   "data_len": 2,
                   "ident": "my_short_data.bin"
               }
           ],
           "compression": {
               "compressor": "gzip",
               "extension": "gz",
               "in_tar": true
           },
           "dump_auxv_so_list": true,
           "dump_pthread_list": true,
           "dump_robust_mutex_list": true,
           "dump_scope": 8,
           "live_dumper": false,
           "write_proc_info": true,
           "write_debug_log": false,
           "dump_fat_core": false
       }

SEE ALSO

       minicoredumper(1),   libminicoredumper(7),   minicoredumper.cfg.json(5),    coreinject(1),
       minicoredumper_regd(1)

       The DiaMon Workgroup: <http://www.diamon.org>