minor improvements to backtrace generation notes

git-svn-id: https://origsvn.digium.com/svn/asterisk/trunk@7109 65c4cc65-6c06-0410-ace0-fbb531ad65f3
This commit is contained in:
Kevin P. Fleming
2005-11-16 00:56:10 +00:00
parent 9cdcba170e
commit 1fb64fa4bd
2 changed files with 39 additions and 20 deletions

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@@ -1,5 +1,7 @@
2005-11-15 Kevin P. Fleming <kpfleming@limerick.digium.com>
* doc/README.backtrace: add note about properly building Asterisk to be able to produce backtraces; wrap text and remove DOS line endings
* channels/chan_sip.c (add_codec_to_sdp): add 'annexb=no' to G.729A SDP (issue #5539)
* channels/chan_alsa.c (alsa_hangup): handle autohangup properly (issue #5672)

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@@ -1,14 +1,19 @@
This document is to provide information on how to obtain the
backtraces required on the asterisk bug tracker, available at
http://bugs.digium.com. The information is required by developers to
help fix problem with bugs of any kind. Backtraces provide information
about what was wrong when a program crashed; in our case,
Asterisk. There are two kind of backtraces (aka 'bt'), which are
useful: bt and bt full.
First of all, when you start Asterisk, you MUST start it with option
-g (this tells Asterisk to produce a core file if it crashes).
This document is to provide information on how to obtain the backtraces required on the asterisk bug tracker, available at http://bugs.digium.com.
The information is required by developers to help fix problem with bugs of any kind.
Backtraces provide information about what was wrong when a program crashed; in our case, Asterisk.
There are two kind of backtraces (aka 'bt'), which are useful: bt and bt full.
If you start Asterisk with the safe_asterisk script, it automatically
starts using the option -g.
First of all, when you start Asterisk, you MUST start it with option -g (this tells Asterisk to produce a core file if it crashes).
If you start Asterisk with the safe_asterisk script, it automatically starts using the option -g.
If you're not sure if Asterisk is running with the -g option, type the following command in your shell:
If you're not sure if Asterisk is running with the -g option, type the
following command in your shell:
debian:/tmp# ps aux | grep asterisk
root 17832 0.0 1.2 2348 788 pts/1 S Aug12 0:00 /bin/sh /usr/sbin/safe_asterisk
@@ -17,9 +22,14 @@ root 26686 0.0 2.8 15544 1744 pts/1 S Aug13 0:02 asterisk -vvvg
The interesting information is located in the last column.
Second, your copy of Asterisk must have been built without
optimization or the backtrace will be (nearly) unusable. This can be
done by using 'make dont-optimize' intead of 'make install' to build
and install the Asterisk binary and modules.
After Asterisk crashes, a core file will be "dumped" in your /tmp/ directory
To make sure it's really there, you can just type the following command in your shell:
After Asterisk crashes, a core file will be "dumped" in your /tmp/
directory. To make sure it's really there, you can just type the
following command in your shell:
debian:/tmp# ls -l /tmp/core.*
-rw------- 1 root root 10592256 Aug 12 19:40 /tmp/core.26252
@@ -30,12 +40,14 @@ debian:/tmp# ls -l /tmp/core.*
-rw------- 1 root root 8331264 Aug 13 00:32 /tmp/core.26647
debian:/tmp#
Now that we've verified the core file has been written to disk, the final part is to extract 'bt' from the core file.
Core files are pretty big, don't be scared, it's normal.
Now that we've verified the core file has been written to disk, the
final part is to extract 'bt' from the core file. Core files are
pretty big, don't be scared, it's normal.
*** NOTE: Don't attach core files on the bug tracker, we only need the bt and bt full. ***
For extraction, we use a really nice tool, called gdb. To verify that you have gdb installed on your system:
For extraction, we use a really nice tool, called gdb. To verify that
you have gdb installed on your system:
debian:/tmp# gdb -v
GNU gdb 6.3-debian
@@ -84,7 +96,7 @@ You would see output similar to:
(gdb)
The bt's output is the informations that we need on the bug tracker.
The bt's output is the information that we need on the bug tracker.
Now do a bt full as follows:
(gdb) bt full
@@ -127,12 +139,14 @@ No symbol table info available.
No symbol table info available.
(gdb)
We also need gdb's output.
That output gives more details compared to the simple "bt". So we recommend that you use bt full instead of bt.
We also need gdb's output. That output gives more details compared to
the simple "bt". So we recommend that you use bt full instead of bt.
But, if you could include both, we appreciate that.
The final "extraction" would the to know all traces by all threads. Even if asterisk runs on the same thread for each calls, it could have some new threads created.
The final "extraction" would the to know all traces by all
threads. Even if asterisk runs on the same thread for each calls, it
could have some new threads created.
To make sure we have the correct informations, just do:
(gdb) thread apply all bt
@@ -160,11 +174,14 @@ Thread 1 (process 26252):
That output tell us crucial informations for threads.
Now, just create a output.txt and dump your "bt full" (and/or "bt") AND with "thread apply all bt".
Now, just create a output.txt and dump your "bt full" (and/or "bt")
AND with "thread apply all bt".
Note: Please ATTACH your output, DO NOT paste it as a note.
And you're ready for upload on bug tracker.
Questions or comments regarding this documentation, feel free to pass by #asterisk-bugs on FreeNode.
Questions or comments regarding this documentation, feel free to pass
by #asterisk-bugs on FreeNode.