savecore(1M) System Administration Commands savecore(1M)NAMEsavecore - save a crash dump of the operating system
SYNOPSIS
/usr/bin/savecore [-Lvd] [-f dumpfile] [directory]
DESCRIPTION
The savecore utility saves a crash dump of the kernel (assuming that
one was made) and writes a reboot message in the shutdown log. It is
invoked by the dumpadm service each time the system boots.
savecore can be configured by dumpadm(1M) to save crash dump data in
either a compressed or uncompressed format. For the compressed format,
savecore saves the crash dump data in the file directory/vmdump.N,
where N in the pathname is replaced by a number which increments by one
each time savecore is run in directory. The compressed file can be
uncompressed in a separate step using the -f dumpfile option. For the
uncompressed format, savecore saves the crash dump data in the file
directory/vmcore.N and the kernel's namelist in directory/unix.N.
Before writing out a crash dump, savecore reads a number from the file
directory/minfree. This is the minimum number of kilobytes that must
remain free on the file system containing directory. If after saving
the crash dump the file system containing directory would have less
free space the number of kilobytes specified in minfree, the crash dump
is not saved. if the minfree file does not exist, savecore assumes a
minfree value of 1 megabyte.
The savecore utility also logs a reboot message using facility LOG_AUTH
(see syslog(3C)). If the system crashed as a result of a panic,
savecore logs the panic string too.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-d
Disregard dump header valid flag. Force savecore to attempt to save
a crash dump even if the header information stored on the dump
device indicates the dump has already been saved.
-f dumpfile
Save a crash dump from the specified file instead of from the sys‐
tem's current dump device. When given directory/vmdump.N, uncom‐
press the file to vmcore.N and unix.N, where N is the same number
as in the compressed name.
This option may also be useful if the information stored on the
dump device has been copied to an on-disk file by means of the
dd(1M) command.
-L
Save a crash dump of the live running Solaris system, without actu‐
ally rebooting or altering the system in any way. This option
forces savecore to save a live snapshot of the system to the dump
device, and then immediately to retrieve the data and to write it
out to a new set of crash dump files in the specified directory.
Live system crash dumps can only be performed if you have config‐
ured your system to have a dedicated dump device using dumpadm(1M).
savecore-L does not suspend the system, so the contents of memory
continue to change while the dump is saved. This means that live
crash dumps are not fully self-consistent.
-v
Verbose. Enables verbose error messages from savecore.
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
directory
Save the crash dump files to the specified directory. If directory
is not specified, savecore saves the crash dump files to the
default savecore directory, configured by dumpadm(1M).
FILES
o directory/vmcore.N
o directory/unix.N
o directory/bounds
o directory/minfree
o /var/crash/`uname -n` (default crash dump directory)
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │system/core-os │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOadb(1), mdb(1), svcs(1), dd(1M), dumpadm(1M), svcadm(1M), syslog(3C),
attributes(5), smf(5)NOTES
The system crash dump service is managed by the service management
facility, smf(5), under the service identifier:
svc:/system/dumpadm:default
Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or
requesting restart, can be performed using svcadm(1M). The service's
status can be queried using the svcs(1) command.
If the dump device is also being used as a swap device, you must run
savecore very soon after booting, before the swap space containing the
crash dump is overwritten by programs currently running.
When savecore creates a file it appends the suffix .partial. After the
file is completed, it is renamed without the suffix. If files are found
in the dump directory with this suffix, it means that either savecore
is still busy, or that it was interrupted before completely writing the
file. In the former case, use ps(1) to find the PID of the running
savecore process and wait for it to complete. In the latter case,
remove the partial file and recreate it by running savecore-d.
SunOS 5.10 6 Dec 2011 savecore(1M)