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Thread: core dump

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2001
    Posts
    2,828

    Unhappy

    hi

    if oracle gives me a core dump on an unix platform i c that the core dump file itself contains binary charcters.my problem is how do i asscertain what exactly is the reason for the coredump.

    is there any utility to read the contents of the coredump file in HUMAN legible form i mean??

    regards
    hrishy

    [Edited by hrishy on 05-22-2001 at 01:10 AM]

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2000
    Location
    Saskatoon, SK, Canada
    Posts
    3,925
    I assume that you know the basic scenrios unser which a core dump could occour:

    1. Memory miss map
    2. Trying to use a null pointer

    IF it is some kind of application, you could make use of the 'ddd' or gdb to trace the cause. I don't know of any took that could interpret the core dumps.

    Here is an article on CORE DUMP AND GETTING A TRACE from Metalik


    Introduction
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~
    This short article aims explain how to get a stack trace from a
    core dump produced by any of the Oracle products. By following
    the steps below you can provide Oracle Support with vital
    information to help identify the cause of a problem.

    Please note that it is important to include information about the
    tool being used, any code involved, the operation being performed,
    environment etc.. in addition to the details below.


    What is a 'core dump' ?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    A core dump is an image copy of a processes state at the instant
    it 'aborted'. It is produced in the form of a file called 'core'
    usually located in the current directory.


    What causes a core dump ?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    There are many situations which can cause a core dump to be produced,
    but it is usually because the process has attempted to do something
    which the operating system does not like. The most common causes
    of this are:

    The program tried to access memory outside its allowed range.

    The program tried to obtain a resource which was either
    exhausted or unavailable.

    An attempt was made to execute illegal instructions.

    An attempt was made to read unaligned data

    In Unix systems the offending process is sent one of a number of
    signals which force a core dump to be produced. It is also possible
    for a user to produce a core dump by sending one of these signals
    to a process manually.


    What should I do if I get a core dump ?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    As with any problem you should first note down the FULL version
    numbers of the product, the RDBMS, PL/SQL (if used) and any
    related products.

    You should also note the EXACT command you were running when
    this occurred. Eg: If it was a SQL*Forms problem and you were
    using 'mrunform30', write this down. This command will be referred
    to as 'program' below.

    Now follow the instructions below in order:

    1) Check you have a 'core' file, it should be in the directory where
    the command was issued, or in $ORACLE_HOME/dbs OR
    $ORACLE_HOME/dbs/core_NNNNN if it is the 'oracle' executable.


    2) Log in as ORACLE and change in to the $ORACLE_HOME/bin
    directory. Enter the command:

    file program

    and write the result down letter for letter. If the word 'dynamic'
    or 'dynamically linked' appears in the output of this command
    then please make a note of this as there are a few platforms on
    which Oracle does NOT support dynamic linking and this may be
    the cause of your problem.


    3) Now enter:

    chmod +r program

    to add read permission to the program.


    4) Log out , then log in as the user who encountered the error.
    The next step will vary slightly depending on which version of
    Unix you are using. One of the following commands should exist
    on your machine - try each in order until you find one that exists:

    Command NB Exit command Stack Trace command
    ------- -- ------------ -------------------
    dbx quit where
    xdb (HPUX 10) quit t
    gdb (HPUX 11) q bt
    sdb q t
    adb $q (or Ctrl-D) $c
    debug (PTX only) quit stack
    gdb (Linux) quit bt

    Change to the directory where the core dump is located and enter
    the commands as in the relevant example below. If you are not
    sure which program produced the 'core' file then on some Unix
    platforms the command 'file core' will tell you the executable
    name that the core file is from (this does not work on ALL
    Unix platforms).
    Example commands:

    DBX: $ script /tmp/mystack
    $ dbx $ORACLE_HOME/bin/program core
    (dbx) where
    ... << Stack should appear here
    (dbx) quit
    $ exit

    XDB: $ script /tmp/mystack
    $ xdb $ORACLE_HOME/bin/program core
    (xdb) t
    ... << Stack should appear here
    (xdb) quit
    $ exit

    SDB: $ script /tmp/mystack
    $ sdb $ORACLE_HOME/bin/program core
    (sdb) t
    ... << Stack should appear here
    (sdb) q
    $ exit

    (NOTE: In the 'adb' commands below literally type the $c & $q)
    ADB: $ script /tmp/mystack
    $ adb $ORACLE_HOME/bin/program core
    $c << NB: adb has no prompt so just enter $c
    ...
    $q
    $ exit

    DEBUG: $ script /tmp/mystack
    $ debug -c core $ORACLE_HOME/bin/program
    debug> stack
    ... << Stack should appear here
    debug> quit
    $ exit

    GDB: $ script /tmp/mystack
    $ gdb $ORACLE_HOME/bin/program core
    (gdb) bt
    ... << Stack should appear here
    (gdb) quit
    $ exit

    Assuming this worked then the stack trace should be shown in the
    file '/tmp/mystack'. Either FAX or EMAIL this to Oracle Support
    with any other details collected above making sure you include the
    problem log number.

    5) If the debug command failed to give a stack trace then try using
    a different debugger from the list above (if available).
    If all debuggers fail then there is probably a problem with
    either the permissions or the file type - see the section below
    and then contact Oracle Support with all the details you have so far.


    Common reasons for not getting a sensible stack
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Filesize Limits:
    Note that on some machines there may be a kernel parameter or
    user limit which controls the maximum size of core file that
    can be produced - you can usually check this by typing:

    limit in the C shell
    OR ulimit -a in the Bourne / Korn shells.

    If this limit is too small the core file will be useless -
    raise the limit and reproduce the problem.

    Stripped Executable
    Some program executables are stripped of symbol information.
    This makes the stack trace useless. If 'file program' shows
    the word 'stripped' or 'nm program' shows no output then it
    is likely that the executable is stripped of symbolic information.
    In this case the problem tool must be relinked without being
    stripped - on most Unix platforms this involves ensuring there is
    no '-s' option on the link line. Contact Oracle Support with
    details of the link line used to link the tool.

    HP Unix
    Some platforms like HP Unix need a special object file linking
    in at link time to ensure symbols in shared objects can be
    reported by the debug tool. Typically this involves relinking the
    tool including /usr/lib/end.o on the link line. The location of
    this special file may be different depending on your HPUX
    version. 'xdb' generally tells you the location of this file
    if it was not linked into the executable.


    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Hope this would help you,
    Sam
    Thanx
    Sam



    Life is a journey, not a destination!


  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2001
    Posts
    2,828

    Talking

    hey sam

    hmmmmmmmmmmmmm thanx for the great piece of info

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