Abnormal System Shutdowns; Fast Dump - HP 9000 V-Class Operator's Manual

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Abnormal system shutdowns

Abnormal systems shutdowns (often referred to as system crashes) can
occur for many reasons. In some cases, the cause of the crash can be
easily determined. In some extreme cases, however, you may need to
analyze a snapshot (called a core dump or simply dump) of the
computer's memory in order to determine the cause of the crash or have
Hewlett-Packard do it for you.
V-Class servers using HP-UX Release 11.0 or greater employ a more
efficient dump mechanism than other HP servers using previous releases
of HP-UX. This mechanism is called fast dump.

Fast dump

When a system crashes, you can now choose whether or not to dump, and
if so, whether the dump should contain the relevant subset of memory or
all memory (without operator interaction).
By default fast dump selectively dumps only the parts of memory that
are expected to be useful in debugging. It improves system availability in
terms of both the time and space needed to dump and analyze a large
memory system.
The following commands allow you to configure, save, and manipulate
the fast core dump:
• crashconf—Configures the destination and contents of a crash
dump without rebooting. See the crashconf(1M) man page for more
information.
• savecrash—Runs at boot time and saves any information that may
be overwritten by normal system activity. See the savecrash(1M) man
page for more information.
• crashutil—Saves or manipulates the crash dump (if desired). It can
format the dump snapshot so that it can be read by the older
commands. See the crashutil(1M) man page for more information.
Installations that used to call savecore in any way other than by the
HP-supplied, unmodified /sbin/init.d/savecore script need to be updated
to use savecrash and/or crashutil.
Chapter 7
Recovering from failures
Abnormal system shutdowns
79

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