On Tuesday, 28 May 2013 at 21:06:14 UTC, Gary Willoughby wrote:
playing and I got a message of a seg fault and a core dump written to a log.

like this?

Segmentation fault (core dumped)


That's actually more of a linux thing than a D thing. The file will be called "core" in the current directory. If your executable file was called test, you can check out the core dump with gdb like this:

 gdb ./test core


$ ulimit -c 50000 # enable core dumps, see man bash for more info
$ ./test # this program writes to a null pointer
Segmentation fault (core dumped)

$ ls -lh core # newly created
-rw------- 1 me users 1.4M 2013-05-28 17:13 core

$ gdb ./test core # load the thing in the debugger
/* snip some irrelevant stuff */
Core was generated by `./test'.
Program terminated with signal 11, Segmentation fault.
#0  0x0805ca31 in _Dmain ()
(gdb)

Reply via email to