I'm writing error handling code for a server on FreeBSD. For extremely serious errors I want to avoid data corruption by immediately terminating. That's easy, exit(3)
. Before I exit, I output my relevant variables that led me there. However, ideally, this termination would be accompanied by a .core
so that I could fully investigate what got me to this catastrophic (and likely hard to reproduce) state.
How can I force this to happen?
kill -QUIT process_id
will cause a core dump from a running process (assuming that resource limits allow it).
Or see man 3 abort
for causing a program to dump itself.
Added: From an interactive shell, a running program can be made to abort with the quit key, usually Ctrl+\, which sends a SIGQUIT just as the more common Ctrl+C sends a SIGINT. This is identical to the kill -QUIT…
it's just easier to type if you are on the controlling terminal. See man 1 stty
if your default quit key is different.