Debugging options¶
In case the resolver crashes, it is often helpful to collect a coredump from the crashed process. Configuring the system to collect coredump from crashed process is out of the scope of this documentation, but some tips can be found here.
Kresd uses its own mechanism for assertions. They are checks that should always pass and indicate some weird or unexpected state if they don’t. In such cases, they show up in the log as errors. By default, the process recovers from those states if possible, but the behaviour can be changed with the following options to aid further debugging.
- debugging.assertion_abort = false|true¶
- Return
boolean (default: false in meson’s release mode, true otherwise)
Allow the process to be aborted in case it encounters a failed assertion. (Some critical conditions always lead to abortion, regardless of settings.)
- debugging.assertion_fork = milliseconds¶
- Return
int (default: 5 minutes in meson’s release mode, 0 otherwise)
If a process should be aborted, it can be done in two ways. When this is set to nonzero (default), a child is forked and aborted to obtain a coredump, while the parent process recovers and keeps running. This can be useful to debug a rare issue that occurs in production, since it doesn’t affect the main process.
As the dumping can be costly, the value is a lower bound on delay between consecutive coredumps of each process. It is randomized by +-25% each time.