On Mon, 13 Oct 2014, Erik Christiansen <[email protected]> wrote:
> "By default, systemd saves core dumps to the journal, instead of the
> file system. Core dumps must be explicitly queried using coredumpctl4"

I doubt that would be a mandatory feature.

While it sounds like an extreme thing to do, there are many systems out there 
which have a problem of managing core dumps.  It's a particular problem when 
running proprietary software.

Some years ago when 9G SCSI hard drives were common in servers (and 46G was 
the biggest hard drive I owned) I managed a number of Solaris systems that had 
CA Unicenter installed.  Unicenter was total rubbish like all CA software.  I 
wrote a script to gather the core dumps from the ~10 servers that ran 
Unicenter and collected about 500M of core dumps per day.  The volume of core 
files was great enough that systems were at risk of running out of disk space 
from core files.

If I was to run low quality proprietary software on a number of Linux servers 
then it would be useful to send core dumps to the systemd journal and then 
limit the journal size to something that won't cause problems.

-- 
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