Am 27.11.24 um 09:55 schrieb Lennart Poettering:
SIGABRT has a pretty clear usecase: to abnormally terminate a program
while creating a coredump. It seems you want to redefine what SIGABRT
is supposed to do? That's quite problematic I would say. What's the
rationale for that?

Note that systemd sends SIGABRT for various reasons on its own, for
example in context of the per-service watchdog logic. Hence,
redefining locally what it means substantially changes the contract
between services and the service manager.

The program has its own abort handler and does not use the core dump 
functionality
of the system. It does its own analysis by starting gdb via fork() and execl(3),
running some gdb scripts and then exits.

The requested extra SIGKILL would only be used if something goes really wrong
in these steps (instead of leaving the service in the "failed" state).

Best regards,
Georg

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