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Date:      Fri, 23 Nov 2001 19:13:25 -0500
From:      Steve Brown <gtabug@prayforwind.com>
To:        Jim Conner <jconner@enterit.com>, questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: .CORE files
Message-ID:  <20011123191325.A574@prayforwind.com>
In-Reply-To: <5.1.0.14.0.20011123185020.030944e0@mail.enterit.com>; from jconner@enterit.com on Fri, Nov 23, 2001 at 06:55:03PM -0500
References:  <20011123182901.A529@prayforwind.com> <5.1.0.14.0.20011123185020.030944e0@mail.enterit.com>

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Hi Jim, that was quick, thanks!

I got a gcore, a RAY.score, a savecore; no valid .core files
and I tried it in uppercase too. I guess I must have a very
well administered system ;) (I installed it fresh 2 weeks ago
so I'm not surprised I've not mucked it up yet)

Thanks again,
Cheers, Steve

On Fri, Nov 23, 2001 at 06:55:03PM -0500, Jim Conner wrote:
> At 18:29 11.23.2001 -0500, Steve Brown wrote:
> >Hello there,
> >
> > >From time to time Netscape bonks out and when I leave X
> >I find the message "Netscape blah blah core dumped"
> >Sometimes I can find a .CORE file, other times I don't
> >know where to look. So I have 2 questions:
> >
> >- How can I find -ALL- *CORE files, is there an equivalent
> >   of the old MS DOS "dir /s" ?
> >- Why does it "dump core"? Am I supposed to do something
> >   with the resulting file?
> 
> 1. find / -name "*core" -type f -ls
> Be careful about cores that you find.  Only remove those that are actually 
> core files.  You can use the command:
> 
> file corename
> 
> That should tell you if the file is a real core file or not since there are 
> other files on the system (or directories which you shouldn't see with my 
> find command stated above) that are called core.
> 
> 2. Netscape cores on probably everybody's machine at some time or 
> another.  It is usually the result of poor coding (on Netscape's part) and 
> sometimes its the result of a poorly admin'ed system.  In your case, I 
> would bet its netscapes code since I know a ton of people that get this 
> problem.  It could also be a poorly set up Netscape that could cause 
> cores.  Usually, the best thing to do is to remove the core file since its 
> really not needed for your sake.  OR, you could send the core dumps to 
> Netscape so that they can examine why the core happened which is the 
> purpose of core dumps anyway.  A core file is a physical readout of the 
> memory that netscape was using at the time it core'd.
> 
> - Jim
> 
> >Appreciate any advice, or hints as to where to RTFM.
> >
> >Thanks in advance,
> >Steve
> >
> >
> >To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
> >with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
> 
> 
> 
> - Jim
> 
> -~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-
> http://www.perlmonks.org/index.pl?node_id=67861&lastnode_id=67861
> 
> -----BEGIN PERL GEEK CODE BLOCK-----      ------BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK------
> Version: 0.01                             Version: 3.12
> P++>*@$c?P6?R+++>++++@$M                  GIT/CM/J d++(--) s++:++ a-
>  >++++$O!MA->++++E!> PU-->+++BD            C++++(+) UB++++$L++++$S++++$
> $C-@D!>++++(-)$S++++@$X?WP+>++++MO!>+++   P++(+)>+++++ L+++(++++)>+++++$ !E*
> +PP+++>++++n-CO?PO!o >++++G               W++(+++) N+ o !K w--- PS---(-)@ PE
>  >*(!)$A-->++++@$Ee---(-)Ev++uL++>*@$uB+   Y+>+++ PGP t+(+++)>+++@ 5- X++ R@
>  >*@$uS+>*@$uH+uo+w-@$m!                   tv+ b? DI-(+++) D+++(++) G(++++)
> ------END PERL GEEK CODE BLOCK------      ------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------
> 

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