On Tue, Sep 06, 2016 at 06:37:52AM -0600, George Joseph wrote:

"$ sysctl kernel.core_pattern" will show you where core files are written. For Asterisk to produce the core file, it has to be started with the '-g' option so make sure your asterisk.service file is adding the option.

On Tue, 6 Sep 2016, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:

Specifically, if the first character of core_pattern is '!', the rest should be an executable, to which the core file is handled. IIRC Centos7 had something of that type installed by default. On Debian Stable you have the package corekeeper (or maybe also systemd-coredump from backports). I haven't tried any of those.

I think that should be a 'pipe,' not an exclamation mark to hand off the core to an executable.

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