Smaller companies probably have some one in the team with access, in most scenarios. Others, when all hope is lost, you can still get your dump, by reaching out to your admins. Which is the point of the core dump anyway in most production circumstances - to be able to provide the final frontier of the problem if and when logs and traces fail. Swallowing it instead makes no sense to me.
On Mon, Feb 11, 2019 at 5:14 AM Jan Claeys <li...@janc.be> wrote: > On Wed, 2019-02-06 at 05:57 +0530, Prasanna V. Loganathar wrote: > > Now, having said that, systemd-coredump in the Red Hat land just > > leave the dumps on the host. > > I wonder how that would be useful when the people who are responsible > for the applications running inside the container have no (root) access > to the host...? (Doesn't seem to me like that would be uncommon?) > > > -- > Jan Claeys > > > -- > Ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list > Ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel-discuss >
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