On May 18, 7:27pm, Thomas, Mark wrote: > I need to tell Bash to save a core file when an application segfaults. Can > someone tell me how this is done? ulimit -c somevalue E.g, "ulimit -c 20000" will allow you to create 20MB core files. On several of my systems, the installed bash is actually bash-2.X. If this is the case, you'll need to modify your scripts in /etc to use "ulimit -S -c 0" instead of "ulimit -c 0". (On my systems, the critical file is /etc/rc.d/init.d/functions that needs to be modified.) The -S specifies a soft limit. If you don't use -S, the hard limit is set for some of daemons which run early on which in turn are inherited by your login process. If this is the case, you (as a normal user) will not be able to change the core limit setting with ulimit. If you're using a stock Red Hat system, you won't have this problem yet. One of the OS engineers tells me that if they install bash-2.X at all, they will install it as bash2 because too many other scripts break. So don't expect to see bash-2.X installed as bash on Red Hat systems any time soon. The other thing worth mentioning on this issue is that on many systems /etc/profile contains a ulimit command which sets the default ulimit for all users. You'll want to check to see if your /etc/profile does or not, and if so what it is set to. Finally, you'll want to decide whether the use of the -S switch in this setting is appropriate or not. (I think it is, but there may be times when you don't want to allow users to create core dumps at all.) Kevin -- Kevin Buettner kev@primenet.com, kevinb@redhat.com