Introduction Installation Preparing to Install

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Introduction Installation Preparing to Install Introduction Welcome to the Ubuntu Server Guide! Download the Ubuntu server guide as a PDF. This is the preliminary and in development for the next Ubuntu LTS, Focal Fossa. Contents may have errors and omissions. Changes, Errors, and Bugs If you find any errors or have suggestions for improvements to pages, please use the link at thebottomof each topic titled: “Help improve this document in the forum.” This link will take you to the Server Discourse forum for the specific page you are viewing. There you can share your comments or let us know aboutbugs with each page. Support There are a couple of different ways that Ubuntu Server Edition is supported: commercial support and community support. The main commercial support (and development funding) is available from Canonical, Ltd. They supply reasonably- priced support contracts on a per desktop or per server basis. For more information see the Ubuntu Advantage page. Community support is also provided by dedicated individuals and companies that wish to make Ubuntu the best distribution possible. Support is provided through multiple mailing lists, IRC channels, forums, blogs, wikis, etc. The large amount of information available can be overwhelming, but a good search engine query can usually provide an answer to your questions. See the Ubuntu Support page for more information. Installation This chapter provides a quick overview of installing Ubuntu 20.04 Server Edition. For more detailed instruc- tions, please refer to the Ubuntu Installation Guide. Preparing to Install This section explains various aspects to consider before starting the installation. System Requirements Ubuntu 20.04 Server Edition provides a common, minimalist base for a variety of server applications, such as file/print services, web hosting, email hosting, etc. This edition supports four (4) major architectures: AMD64, ARM, POWER8, LinuxONE and z Systems. The “live server” installer (sometimes called “Ubiquity for Servers” or simply “subiquity”) provides a user friendly and fast installation experience. The older installer, based on debian-installer, is still available if you can’t use the live server installer for some reason. The table below lists recommended minimum hardware specifications. Depending on your needs, you might manage with less than this, but it is not generally recommended. 1 Install Type CPU RAM Hard Drive Space Server (Standard) 1 gigahertz 512 megabytes 1.5 gigabyte 2.5 gigabytes live server 1 gigahertz (amd64 only) 1 gigabyte 1.5 gigabyte n/a Server (Minimal) 300 megahertz 384 megabytes 1.5 gigabytes 2.5 gigabytes Server and Desktop Differences The Ubuntu Server Edition and the Ubuntu Desktop Edition use the same apt repositories, making it just as easy to install a server application on the Desktop Edition as on the Server Edition. One major difference is that the graphical environment used for the Desktop Edition is not installed for the Server. This includes the graphics server itself, the graphical utilities and applications, and the various user-supporting services needed by desktop users. The Server Edition’s kernel used to be tuned differently from Desktop, but currently both rely on the same Linux configuration. Backing Up • Before installing Ubuntu Server Edition you should make sure all data on the system is backed up. If this is not the first time an operating system has been installed on your computer, it is likelyyou will need to re-partition your disk to make room for Ubuntu. Any time you partition your disk, you should be prepared to lose everything on the disk should you make a mistake or something goes wrong during partitioning. The programs used in installation are quite reliable, most have seen years of use, but they also perform destructive actions. Installing using the live server installer The basic steps to install Ubuntu Server Edition are the same as those for installing any operating system. Unlike the Desktop Edition, the Server Edition does not include a graphical installation program. The Live Server installer uses a text-based console interface which runs on the default virtual console. The interface can be entirely driven by the enter, up and down arrow keys (with some occasional typing). During the installation you can switch to a different console (by pressing Ctrl-Alt-F<n> or Ctrl-Alt-Right) to get access to a shell, if needed. Up until the point where the installation begins, you can use the “back” buttons to go back to previous screens and choose different options. • Download the appropriate ISO file from the Ubuntu web site. • Boot the system from media (e.g. USB key) containing the ISO file. • At the boot prompt you will be asked to select a language. • From the main boot menu there are some additional options to install Ubuntu Server Edition. You can install a basic Ubuntu Server, check the installation media for defects, check the system’s RAM, or boot from first hard disk. The rest of this section will cover the basic Ubuntu Server install. • After booting into the installer, it will ask you which language to use. • Next, the installation process begins by asking for your keyboard layout. You can ask the installer to attempt auto-detecting it, or you can select it manually from a list. Later stages of the installation will require you to type ASCII characters, so if the layout you select does not allow that, you will be 2 prompted for a key combination to switch between a layout that does and the one you select. The default keystroke for this is Alt + Shift. • Next, the installer offers the choice to install the system as a vanilla Ubuntu server,a MAAS bare-metal cloud rack controller or a MAAS region controller. If you select one of the MAAS options you will be asked for some details. • The installer configures the network to run DHCP on each network interface. If this is not sufficient to get access to the internet you should configure at least one interface manually. Select an interface to configure it. • If the Ubuntu archive can only be accessed via a proxy in your environment, it can be entered on the next screen. Leave the field blank if it is not required. • You can then choose to let the installer use an entire disk or configure the partitioning manually. The first disk you create a partition on will be selected as the boot disk and have an extra partition created on it to contain the bootloader; you can move the boot partition to a different drive with the “Select as boot disk” button. Once you move on from this screen, the installation progress will begin. It will not be possible to move back to this or previous screens and any data on the disks you have configured the installer to use will be lost. • The next screen configures the initial user for the system. You can import SSH keys from Launchpad or Github but a password is still required to be set, as this user will have root access through the sudo utility. • The final screen shows the progress of the installer. Once the installation has completed, youwillbe prompted to reboot into your newly installed system. Advanced Installation Software RAID Redundant Array of Independent Disks “RAID” is a method of using multiple disks to provide different balances of increasing data reliability and/or increasing input/output performance, depending on the RAID level being used. RAID is implemented in either software (where the operating system knows about both drives and actively maintains both of them) or hardware (where a special controller makes the OS think there’s only one drive and maintains the drives ‘invisibly’). The RAID software included with current versions of Linux (and Ubuntu) is based on the ‘mdadm’ driver and works very well, better even than many so-called ‘hardware’ RAID controllers. This section will guide you through installing Ubuntu Server Edition using two RAID1 partitions on two physical hard drives, one for / and another for swap. Partitioning Follow the installation steps until you get to the Partition disks step, then: Select Manual as the partition method. Select the first hard drive, and agree to “Create a new empty partition table on this device?”. Repeat this step for each drive you wish to be part of the RAID array. Select the “FREE SPACE” on the first drive then select “Create a new partition”. 3 Next, select the Size of the partition. This partition will be the swap partition, and a general rule for swap size is twice that of RAM. Enter the partition size, then choose Primary, then Beginning. Note A swap partition size of twice the available RAM capacity may not always be desirable, especially on systems with large amounts of RAM. Calculating the swap partition size for servers is highly dependent on how the system is going to be used. Select the “Use as:” line at the top. By default this is “Ext4 journaling file system”, change that to “physical volume for RAID” then “Done setting up partition”. For the / partition once again select “Free Space” on the first drive then “Create a new partition”. Use the rest of the free space on the drive and choose Continue, then Primary. As with the swap partition, select the “Use as:” line at the top, changing it to “physical volume for RAID”. Also select the “Bootable flag:” line to change the value to “on”. Then choose “Done setting up partition”. Repeat steps three through eight for the other disk and partitions. RAID Configuration With the partitions setup the arrays are ready to be configured: Back in the main “Partition Disks” page, select “Configure Software RAID” at the top. Select “yes” to write the changes to disk.
Recommended publications
  • Kdump, a Kexec-Based Kernel Crash Dumping Mechanism
    Kdump, A Kexec-based Kernel Crash Dumping Mechanism Vivek Goyal Eric W. Biederman Hariprasad Nellitheertha IBM Linux NetworkX IBM [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Abstract important consideration for the success of a so- lution has been the reliability and ease of use. Kdump is a crash dumping solution that pro- Kdump is a kexec based kernel crash dump- vides a very reliable dump generation and cap- ing mechanism, which is being perceived as turing mechanism [01]. It is simple, easy to a reliable crash dumping solution for Linux R . configure and provides a great deal of flexibility This paper begins with brief description of what in terms of dump device selection, dump saving kexec is and what it can do in general case, and mechanism, and plugging-in filtering mecha- then details how kexec has been modified to nism. boot a new kernel even in a system crash event. The idea of kdump has been around for Kexec enables booting into a new kernel while quite some time now, and initial patches for preserving the memory contents in a crash sce- kdump implementation were posted to the nario, and kdump uses this feature to capture Linux kernel mailing list last year [03]. Since the kernel crash dump. Physical memory lay- then, kdump has undergone significant design out and processor state are encoded in ELF core changes to ensure improved reliability, en- format, and these headers are stored in a re- hanced ease of use and cleaner interfaces. This served section of memory. Upon a crash, new paper starts with an overview of the kdump de- kernel boots up from reserved memory and pro- sign and development history.
    [Show full text]
  • Linux Core Dumps
    Linux Core Dumps Kevin Grigorenko [email protected] Many Interactions with Core Dumps systemd-coredump abrtd Process Crashes Ack! 4GB File! Most Interactions with Core Dumps Poof! Process Crashes systemd-coredump Nobody abrtd Looks core kdump not Poof! Kernel configured Crashes So what? ● Crashes are problems! – May be symptoms of security vulnerabilities – May be application bugs ● Data corruption ● Memory leaks – A hard crash kills outstanding work – Without automatic process restarts, crashes lead to service unavailability ● With restarts, a hacker may continue trying. ● We shouldn't be scared of core dumps. – When a dog poops inside the house, we don't just `rm -f $poo` or let it pile up, we try to figure out why or how to avoid it again. What is a core dump? ● It's just a file that contains virtual memory contents, register values, and other meta-data. – User land core dump: Represents state of a particular process (e.g. from crash) – Kernel core dump: Represents state of the kernel (e.g. from panic) and process data ● ELF-formatted file (like a program) User Land User Land Crash core Process 1 Process N Kernel Panic vmcore What is Virtual Memory? ● Virtual Memory is an abstraction over physical memory (RAM/swap) – Simplifies programming – User land: process isolation – Kernel/processor translate virtual address references to physical memory locations 64-bit Process Virtual 8GB RAM Address Space (16EB) (Example) 0 0 16 8 EB GB How much virtual memory is used? ● Use `ps` or similar tools to query user process virtual memory usage (in KB): – $ ps -o pid,vsz,rss -p 14062 PID VSZ RSS 14062 44648 42508 Process 1 Virtual 8GB RAM Memory Usage (VSZ) (Example) 0 0 Resident Page 1 Resident Page 2 16 8 EB GB Process 2 How much virtual memory is used? ● Virtual memory is broken up into virtual memory areas (VMAs), the sum of which equal VSZ and may be printed with: – $ cat /proc/${PID}/smaps 00400000-0040b000 r-xp 00000000 fd:02 22151273 /bin/cat Size: 44 kB Rss: 20 kB Pss: 12 kB..
    [Show full text]
  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP2 Autoyast Guide Autoyast Guide SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP2
    SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP2 AutoYaST Guide AutoYaST Guide SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP2 AutoYaST is a system for unattended mass deployment of SUSE Linux Enterprise Server systems. AutoYaST installations are performed using an AutoYaST control le (also called a “prole”) with your customized installation and conguration data. Publication Date: September 24, 2021 SUSE LLC 1800 South Novell Place Provo, UT 84606 USA https://documentation.suse.com Copyright © 2006– 2021 SUSE LLC and contributors. All rights reserved. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or (at your option) version 1.3; with the Invariant Section being this copyright notice and license. A copy of the license version 1.2 is included in the section entitled “GNU Free Documentation License”. For SUSE trademarks, see https://www.suse.com/company/legal/ . All other third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Trademark symbols (®, ™ etc.) denote trademarks of SUSE and its aliates. Asterisks (*) denote third-party trademarks. All information found in this book has been compiled with utmost attention to detail. However, this does not guarantee complete accuracy. Neither SUSE LLC, its aliates, the authors nor the translators shall be held liable for possible errors or the consequences thereof. Contents 1 Introduction to AutoYaST 1 1.1 Motivation 1 1.2 Overview and Concept 1 I UNDERSTANDING AND CREATING THE AUTOYAST CONTROL FILE 4 2 The AutoYaST Control
    [Show full text]
  • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 Does Not Provide the Repair System Anymore
    General System Troubleshooting Sascha Wehnert Premium Service Engineer Attachmate Group Germany GmbH [email protected] What is this about? • This session will cover the following topics: ‒ How to speed up a service request ‒ How to gather system information using supportconfig ‒ Configure serial console in grub to trace kernel boot messages ‒ Accessing a non booting systems using the rescue system ‒ System crash situations and how to prepare (i586/x86_64 only) 2 The challenge of a service request • Complete service request description: “We need to increase our disk space.” 3 The challenge of a service request • Which SUSE® Linux Enterprise Server version? • Is this a physical or virtual environment? • If virtual, what virtualization solution is being used? • If physical, local SCSI RAID array? What hardware? • If using HBAs, dm-multipathing or iSCSI connected disks or a 3rd party solution? • Disk and system partition layout? • What has been done so far? What was achieved? What failed? • What information do I need in order to help? 4 What information would be needed? • SUSE Linux Enterprise Server version → /etc/SuSE-release, uname -a • Physical → dmidecode XEN → /proc/xen/xsd_port KVM → /proc/modules • Hardware information → hwinfo • Partition information → parted -l, /etc/fstab • Multipathing/iSCSI → multipath, iscsiadm • Console output or /var/log/YaST2/y2log in case YaST2 has been used 5 supportconfig • Since SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10 SP4 included in default installation. • Maintained package, updates available via patch channels. For best results always have latest version installed from channels installed. • One single command to get (almost) everything. • Splits data into files separated by topic. • Can be modified to exclude certain data, either via /etc/supportconfig.conf or command options.
    [Show full text]
  • Embedded Linux Conference Europe 2019
    Embedded Linux Conference Europe 2019 Linux kernel debugging: going beyond printk messages Embedded Labworks By Sergio Prado. São Paulo, October 2019 ® Copyright Embedded Labworks 2004-2019. All rights reserved. Embedded Labworks ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT ✗ This document is available under Creative Commons BY- SA 4.0. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ ✗ The source code of this document is available at: https://e-labworks.com/talks/elce2019 Embedded Labworks $ WHOAMI ✗ Embedded software developer for more than 20 years. ✗ Principal Engineer of Embedded Labworks, a company specialized in the development of software projects and BSPs for embedded systems. https://e-labworks.com/en/ ✗ Active in the embedded systems community in Brazil, creator of the website Embarcados and blogger (Portuguese language). https://sergioprado.org ✗ Contributor of several open source projects, including Buildroot, Yocto Project and the Linux kernel. Embedded Labworks THIS TALK IS NOT ABOUT... ✗ printk and all related functions and features (pr_ and dev_ family of functions, dynamic debug, etc). ✗ Static analysis tools and fuzzing (sparse, smatch, coccinelle, coverity, trinity, syzkaller, syzbot, etc). ✗ User space debugging. ✗ This is also not a tutorial! We will talk about a lot of tools and techniches and have fun with some demos! Embedded Labworks DEBUGGING STEP-BY-STEP 1. Understand the problem. 2. Reproduce the problem. 3. Identify the source of the problem. 4. Fix the problem. 5. Fixed? If so, celebrate! If not, go back to step 1. Embedded Labworks TYPES OF PROBLEMS ✗ We can consider as the top 5 types of problems in software: ✗ Crash. ✗ Lockup. ✗ Logic/implementation error. ✗ Resource leak. ✗ Performance.
    [Show full text]
  • Generating a White List for Hardware Which Works with Kexec/Kdump
    Generating a White List for Hardware which Works with Kexec/Kdump Fernando Luis Vázquez Cao NTT Open Source Software Center [email protected] Abstract nally, the capture of the crash dump. Kdump is very good at the first two but there are still some The mainstream Linux kernel lacked a crash issues when the dump capture kernel takes control dumping mechanism from its inception until the of the system. In particular the new kernel may fail recent adoption of kdump. This, despite the fact to initialise the underlying devices which, in turn, that there were several solutions available out-of- is likely to lead to a kernel panic or an oops. tree and some of them were even included in major distributions. However concerns about their intru- siveness and reliability prevented them from mak- The underlying problem is that the state of the ing it into the mainstream kernel (aka vanilla ker- devices during a kdump boot is not predictable nel), the main argument being that relying on the because no device shutdown is performed in the resources of a crashing kernel to capture a dump, crashed kernel (it cannot be trusted), and the as they did, is inherently dangerous. firmware stage of the standard boot process is skipped (the dump capture kernel is a soft-booted The appearance of Eric Biederman’s kexec kernel after all). In other words, the inherent as- patches and its subsequent inclusion in the kernel sumption that the firmware (known as the BIOS on as a new system call paved the way for the imple- some systems) is always there to do the dirty work mentation of an idea that had been floating around is not valid anymore.
    [Show full text]
  • Evaluating Linux Kernel Crash Dumping Mechanisms
    Evaluating Linux Kernel Crash Dumping Mechanisms Fernando Luis Vázquez Cao NTT Data Intellilink [email protected] Abstract 1 Introduction There have been several kernel crash dump cap- turing solutions available for Linux for some Mainstream Linux lacked a kernel crash dump- time now and one of them, kdump, has even ing mechanism for a long time despite the made it into the mainline kernel. fact that there were several solutions (such as Diskdump [1], Netdump [2], and LKCD [3]) But the mere fact of having such a feature does available out of tree . Concerns about their in- not necessary imply that we can obtain a dump trusiveness and reliability prevented them from reliably under any conditions. The LKDTT making it into the vanilla kernel. (Linux Kernel Dump Test Tool) project was created to evaluate crash dumping mechanisms Eventually, a handful of crash dumping so- in terms of success rate, accuracy and com- lutions based on kexec [4, 5] appeared: pleteness. Kdump [6, 7], Mini Kernel Dump [8], and Tough Dump [9]. On paper, the kexec-based A major goal of LKDTT is maximizing the approach seemed very reliable and the impact coverage of the tests. For this purpose, LKDTT in the kernel code was certainly small. Thus, forces the system to crash by artificially recre- kdump was eventually proposed as Linux ker- ating crash scenarios (panic, hang, exception, nel’s crash dumping mechanism and subse- stack overflow, hang, etc.), taking into ac- quently accepted. count the hardware conditions (such as ongoing DMA or interrupt state) and the load of the sys- tem.
    [Show full text]
  • Porting Linux Embedded Linux Conference (Europe)
    Porting Linux Embedded Linux Conference (Europe) Porting Linux About Jon Masters ● Been playing with Linux for 14 years (and the kernel for 13 of those), since the age of 13. ● Built embedded NMR scientific instruments, worked with Montavista UK, now at Red Hat. ● Author of the LKML Summary Podcast and the kernel column in Linux User & Developer. ● Co-author of Building Embedded Linux Systems (second edition) – O'Reilly (2008) ● My car still has an empeg :) Porting Linux Overview ● Why port Linux anyway? ● Background pre-requisities ● Early board work ● Bootloader bringup ● Initial kernel bringup ● Debugging ● Working with Upstream ● Trends Porting Linux Why port Linux anyway? ● Linux is very portable ● Supports 23 architectures in the upstream “mainline” kernel tree of Linus Torvalds. ● Kernel is mostly written in C, with some assembly (most architectures only need a dozen such files) ● Split between high-level generic functions and low- level functions to abstract architectural differences. Porting Linux Why port Linux anyway? ● Linux is competitive ● The number of Linux kernel developers contributing to the official kernel has tripled since 2005. ● Feature growth continues with an average of 10K new lines of source code added every day. ● In the hour you spend here 5.45 patches will on average be added to the upstream Linux kernel. ● Source: Linux Foundation analysis Porting Linux Why port Linux anyway? ● Linux is cost effective. ● A large amount of code to build upon. ● Large (growing) community of developers. ● I think we all know the rest. Porting Linux Background pre-requisities ● Hardware ● Development board or simulator – Optional debugger, some kind of UART – Boards range in value from $200-$crazy – Implement the same architecture and platform as the final design but maybe with a number of hacks.
    [Show full text]
  • Reinitialization of Devices After a Soft-Reboot
    RReeiinniittiiaalliizzaattiioonn ooff ddeevviicceess aafftteerr aa ssoofftt--rreebboooott 2007/2/12 NTT Open Source Software Center Fernando Luis Vázquez Cao Copyright(C)2007 NTT Open Source Software Center 1 Agenda 1. Kexec/kdump reboot 2. Device reinitialization 3. Tackling device reinitialization 4. Device configuration restore Copyright(C)2007 NTT Open Source Software Center 2 11 kkeexxeecc//kkdduummpp rreebboooott Copyright(C)2007 NTT Open Source Software Center 3 1.1. Standard boot process power on hardware stage firmware stage boot loader t o o kernel stage b e r working shutdown -r device shutdown machine shutdown HW reset Copyright(C)2007 NTT Open Source Software Center 4 1.2. Kexec boot process power on hardware stage firmware stage l e boot loader n r l e e k n t r s r kernel stage kernel stage e i f k d n o working working c e s kexec device shutdown machine shutdown HW reset Copyright(C)2007 NTT Open Source Software Center 5 1.3. Kdump boot process power on hardware stage firmware stage l e boot loader n r l e e k n t r s r e i kernel stage kernel stage f k d n o working working c e crash s minimal machine shutdown HW reset Copyright(C)2007 NTT Open Source Software Center 6 22 ddeevviiccee rreeiinniittiiaalliizzaattiioonn Copyright(C)2007 NTT Open Source Software Center 7 2.1. Device reinitialization issue State of devices after a kdump boot is unknown ➢ The first kernel and what it knows is unreliable ✗ No device shutdown in the crashing kernel ➢ Firmware stage of the boot process is skipped ✗ Devices are not reset Consequences ➢ Devices may be operational or in an unstable state Kexec is also vulnerable when the first kernel's shutdown functions do not do their job properly Copyright(C)2007 NTT Open Source Software Center 8 2.2.
    [Show full text]
  • Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Kernel Administration Guide
    Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Kernel Administration Guide Examples of Tasks for Managing the Kernel Last Updated: 2018-05-21 Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Kernel Administration Guide Examples of Tasks for Managing the Kernel Marie Dolezelova Red Hat Customer Content Services [email protected] Mark Flitter Red Hat Customer Content Services Douglas Silas Red Hat Customer Content Services Eliska Slobodova Red Hat Customer Content Services Jaromir Hradilek Red Hat Customer Content Services Maxim Svistunov Red Hat Customer Content Services Robert Krátký Red Hat Customer Content Services Stephen Wadeley Red Hat Customer Content Services Florian Nadge Red Hat Customer Content Services Legal Notice Copyright © 2018 Red Hat, Inc. The text of and illustrations in this document are licensed by Red Hat under a Creative Commons Attribution–Share Alike 3.0 Unported license ("CC-BY-SA"). An explanation of CC-BY-SA is available at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ . In accordance with CC-BY-SA, if you distribute this document or an adaptation of it, you must provide the URL for the original version. Red Hat, as the licensor of this document, waives the right to enforce, and agrees not to assert, Section 4d of CC-BY-SA to the fullest extent permitted by applicable law. Red Hat, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the Shadowman logo, JBoss, OpenShift, Fedora, the Infinity logo, and RHCE are trademarks of Red Hat, Inc., registered in the United States and other countries. Linux ® is the registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States and other countries. Java ® is a registered trademark of Oracle and/or its affiliates.
    [Show full text]
  • Kdump and Introduction to Vmcore Analysis How to Get Started with Inspecting Kernel Failures
    KDUMP AND INTRODUCTION TO VMCORE ANALYSIS HOW TO GET STARTED WITH INSPECTING KERNEL FAILURES PATRICK LADD TECHNICAL ACCOUNT MANAGER, RED HAT [email protected] slides available at https://people.redhat.com/pladd SUMMARY TOPICS TO BE COVERED WHAT IS A VMCORE, AND WHEN IS IS CAPTURED? CONFIGURATION OF THE KDUMP UTILITY AND TESTING SETTING UP A VMCORE ANALYSIS SYSTEM USING THE "CRASH" UTILITY FOR INITIAL ANALYSIS OF VMCORE CONTENTS WHAT IS A VMCORE? It is the contents of system RAM. Ordinarily, captured via: makedumpfile VMWare suspend files QEMU suspend-to-disk images # hexdump -C vmcore -s 0x00011d8 -n 200 000011d8 56 4d 43 4f 52 45 49 4e 46 4f 00 00 4f 53 52 45 |VMCOREINFO..OSRE| 000011e8 4c 45 41 53 45 3d 32 2e 36 2e 33 32 2d 35 37 33 |LEASE=2.6.32-573| 000011f8 2e 32 32 2e 31 2e 65 6c 36 2e 78 38 36 5f 36 34 |.22.1.el6.x86_64| 00001208 0a 50 41 47 45 53 49 5a 45 3d 34 30 39 36 0a 53 |.PAGESIZE=4096.S| 00001218 59 4d 42 4f 4c 28 69 6e 69 74 5f 75 74 73 5f 6e |YMBOL(init_uts_n| 00001228 73 29 3d 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 38 31 61 39 36 |s)=ffffffff81a96| 00001238 39 36 30 0a 53 59 4d 42 4f 4c 28 6e 6f 64 65 5f |960.SYMBOL(node_| 00001248 6f 6e 6c 69 6e 65 5f 6d 61 70 29 3d 66 66 66 66 |online_map)=ffff| 00001258 66 66 66 66 38 31 63 31 61 36 63 30 0a 53 59 4d |ffff81c1a6c0.SYM| 00001268 42 4f 4c 28 73 77 61 70 70 65 72 5f 70 67 5f 64 |BOL(swapper_pg_d| 00001278 69 72 29 3d 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 66 38 31 61 38 |ir)=ffffffff81a8| 00001288 64 30 30 30 0a 53 59 4d 42 4f 4c 28 5f 73 74 65 |d000.SYMBOL(_ste| 00001298 78 74 29 3d 66 66 66 66 |xt)=ffff| 000012a0 WHEN IS ONE WRITTEN? By default, when the kernel encounters a state in which it cannot gracefully continue execution.
    [Show full text]
  • Kdump on the Mainframe
    LinuxCon Europe 2012 Kdump on the Mainframe Michael Holzheu <[email protected]> Kdump! Stand-alone dump! VMDUMP! © 2012 IBM Corporation Trademarks & Disclaimer The following are trademarks of the International Business Machines Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. AIX* IBM* PowerVM System z10 z/OS* BladeCenter* IBM eServer PR/SM WebSphere* zSeries* DataPower* IBM (logo)* Smarter Planet z9* z/VM* DB2* InfiniBand* System x* z10 BC z/VSE FICON* Parallel Sysplex* System z* z10 EC GDPS* POWER* System z9* zEnterprise HiperSockets POWER7* zEC12 * Registered trademarks of IBM Corporation IBM, the IBM logo, and ibm.com are trademarks or registered trademarks of International Business Machines Corp., registered in many jurisdictions worldwide. Other product and service names might be trademarks of IBM or other companies. A current list of IBM trademarks is available on the Web at Copyright and trademark information at www.ibm.com/legal/copytrade.shtml. The following are trademarks or registered trademarks of other companies. Adobe, the Adobe logo, PostScript, and the PostScript logo are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the United States, and/or other countries. IT Infrastructure Library is a registered trademark of the Central Computer and Telecommunications Agency which is now part of the Office of Government Commerce. Intel, Intel logo, Intel Inside, Intel Inside logo, Intel Centrino, Intel Centrino logo, Celeron, Intel Xeon, Intel SpeedStep, Itanium, and Pentium are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States, other countries, or both.
    [Show full text]