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r: 61603
b: refs/heads/master
c: bb90110
h: refs/heads/master
i:
  61601: 77226d7
  61599: 609983e
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Kawai, Hidehiro authored and Linus Torvalds committed Jul 19, 2007
1 parent 5d69e12 commit 1fbf6fc
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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion [refs]
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refs/heads/master: ee78b0a61f0514ffc3d59257fbe6863b43477829
refs/heads/master: bb90110dcb9e93bf79e3c988abc6cbcabd46d57f
38 changes: 38 additions & 0 deletions trunk/Documentation/filesystems/proc.txt
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Expand Up @@ -42,6 +42,7 @@ Table of Contents
2.12 /proc/<pid>/oom_adj - Adjust the oom-killer score
2.13 /proc/<pid>/oom_score - Display current oom-killer score
2.14 /proc/<pid>/io - Display the IO accounting fields
2.15 /proc/<pid>/coredump_filter - Core dump filtering settings

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Preface
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -2184,4 +2185,41 @@ those 64-bit counters, process A could see an intermediate result.
More information about this can be found within the taskstats documentation in
Documentation/accounting.

2.15 /proc/<pid>/coredump_filter - Core dump filtering settings
---------------------------------------------------------------
When a process is dumped, all anonymous memory is written to a core file as
long as the size of the core file isn't limited. But sometimes we don't want
to dump some memory segments, for example, huge shared memory. Conversely,
sometimes we want to save file-backed memory segments into a core file, not
only the individual files.

/proc/<pid>/coredump_filter allows you to customize which memory segments
will be dumped when the <pid> process is dumped. coredump_filter is a bitmask
of memory types. If a bit of the bitmask is set, memory segments of the
corresponding memory type are dumped, otherwise they are not dumped.

The following 4 memory types are supported:
- (bit 0) anonymous private memory
- (bit 1) anonymous shared memory
- (bit 2) file-backed private memory
- (bit 3) file-backed shared memory

Note that MMIO pages such as frame buffer are never dumped and vDSO pages
are always dumped regardless of the bitmask status.

Default value of coredump_filter is 0x3; this means all anonymous memory
segments are dumped.

If you don't want to dump all shared memory segments attached to pid 1234,
write 1 to the process's proc file.

$ echo 0x1 > /proc/1234/coredump_filter

When a new process is created, the process inherits the bitmask status from its
parent. It is useful to set up coredump_filter before the program runs.
For example:

$ echo 0x7 > /proc/self/coredump_filter
$ ./some_program

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