Justin thanks for the information!
I'm running Ubuntu 16.04.
I'll try to prepare for the next crash.
Couldn't find anything this time.


--
regards,
Jakub Glapa


On Mon, Nov 26, 2018 at 4:52 PM Justin Pryzby <pry...@telsasoft.com> wrote:

> Hi, thanks for following through.
>
> On Mon, Nov 26, 2018 at 04:38:35PM +0100, Jakub Glapa wrote:
> > I had a look at dmesg and indeed I see something like:
> >
> > postgres[30667]: segfault at 0 ip 0000557834264b16 sp 00007ffc2ce1e030
> > error 4 in postgres[557833db7000+6d5000]
>
> That's useful, I think "at 0" means a null pointer dereferenced.
>
> Can you check /var/log/messages (or ./syslog or similar) and verify the
> timestamp matches the time of the last crash (and not an unrelated crash) ?
>
> The logs might also indicate if the process dumped a core file anywhere.
>
> I don't know what distribution/OS you're using, but it might be good to
> install
> abrt (RHEL) or apport (ubuntu) or other mechanism to save coredumps, or to
> manually configure /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern.
>
> On centos, I usually set:
> /etc/abrt/abrt-action-save-package-data.conf
> OpenGPGCheck = no
>
> Also, it might be good to install debug symbols, in case you do find a core
> dump now or get one later.
>
> On centos: yum install postgresql10-debuginfo or debuginfo-install
> postgresql10-server
> Make sure this exactly matches the debug symbols exactly match the server
> version.
>
> Justin
>

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