On Fri, Sep 21, 2012 at 03:51:22PM +0200, Olaf Hering wrote: > On Fri, Sep 21, Richard W.M. Jones wrote: > > > On Fri, Sep 21, 2012 at 03:40:35PM +0200, Olaf Hering wrote: > > > gdb is certainly more advanced, something like 'var="gdb --readnow -ex r > > > -ex bt -ex quit' ; $var guestfsd' would be good enough, or gdb > > > --command=FILE. > > > As you say, without adding debuginfo into guest the backtrace would be > > > not that useful. But its better than nothing. > > > > glibc -- on Fedora -- prints a stack trace on exit, so we've not had a > > need to get one out using gdb. A core dump would be the really useful > > thing for us. > > How does it do that, via a segfault handler? I mean, is that a private > patch or something in upstream glibc?
What I said there wasn't quite correct. Every C binary in Fedora is compiled with -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 which provides a stack trace when string functions fail. I was probably confused by seeing those. But segfaults are not included in this, and they in fact don't give a stack trace. Doing LD_PRELOAD=/lib64/libSegFault.so does cause all segfaulting programs to produce a stack trace. Rich. -- Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat http://people.redhat.com/~rjones Read my programming blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com Fedora now supports 80 OCaml packages (the OPEN alternative to F#) http://cocan.org/getting_started_with_ocaml_on_red_hat_and_fedora _______________________________________________ Libguestfs mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libguestfs
