Linux allows you to create a core dump file if an application crashes, which contains the data the application had in memory at the time of the crash. You can analyze the file to locate the fault.
Generally, when a service application crashes, its container exits and is reclaimed and destroyed. Therefore, container core files need to be permanently stored on the host or cloud storage. This topic describes how to configure container core dumps.
When a container core dump is persistently stored to OBS (parallel file system or object bucket), the default mount option umask=0 is used. As a result, although the core dump file is generated, the core dump information cannot be written to the core file.
Log in to the node, run the following command to enable core dump, and set the path and format for storing core files:
echo "/tmp/cores/core.%h.%e.%p.%t" > /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern
%h, %e, %p, and %t are placeholders, which are described as follows:
After the core dump function is enabled by running the preceding command, the generated core file is named in the format of core.{Host name}.{Program file name}.{Process ID}.{Time}.
You can also configure a pre-installation or post-installation script to automatically run this command when creating a node.
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: coredump spec: volumes: - name: coredump-path hostPath: path: /home/coredump containers: - name: ubuntu image: ubuntu:12.04 command: ["/bin/sleep","3600"] volumeMounts: - mountPath: /tmp/cores name: coredump-path
Create a pod using kubectl.
kubectl create -f pod.yaml
After the pod is created, access the container and trigger a segmentation fault of the current shell terminal.
$ kubectl get pod NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE coredump 1/1 Running 0 56s $ kubectl exec -it coredump -- /bin/bash root@coredump:/# kill -s SIGSEGV $$ command terminated with exit code 139
Log in to the node and check whether a core file is generated in the /home/coredump directory. The following example indicates that a core file is generated.
# ls /home/coredump core.coredump.bash.18.1650438992