#!/bin/sh # Copyright (C) 2003-2016 Free Software Foundation, Inc. # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with this program. If not, see . # # Script to generate a core file of a running program. # It starts up gdb, attaches to the given PID and invokes the gcore command. # if [ "$#" -eq "0" ] then echo "usage: i386-pc-linux-gnu-gcore [-o filename] pid" exit 2 fi # Need to check for -o option, but set default basename to "core". name=core if [ "$1" = "-o" ] then if [ "$#" -lt "3" ] then # Not enough arguments. echo "usage: i386-pc-linux-gnu-gcore [-o filename] pid" exit 2 fi name=$2 # Shift over to start of pid list shift; shift fi # Attempt to fetch the absolute path to the gcore script that was # called. binary_path=`dirname "$0"` if test "x$binary_path" = x. ; then # We got "." back as a path. This means the user executed # the gcore script locally (i.e. ./gcore) or called the # script via a shell interpreter (i.e. sh gcore). binary_basename=`basename "$0"` # If the gcore script was called like "sh gcore" and the script # lives in the current directory, "which" will not give us "gcore". # So first we check if the script is in the current directory # before using the output of "which". if test -f "$binary_basename" ; then # We have a local gcore script in ".". This covers the case of # doing "./gcore" or "sh gcore". binary_path="." else # The gcore script was not found in ".", which means the script # was called from somewhere else in $PATH by "sh gcore". # Extract the correct path now. binary_path_from_env=`which "$0"` binary_path=`dirname "$binary_path_from_env"` fi fi # Check if the GDB binary is in the expected path. If not, just # quit with a message. if [ ! -f "$binary_path"/i386-pc-linux-gnu-gdb ]; then echo "gcore: GDB binary (${binary_path}/i386-pc-linux-gnu-gdb) not found" exit 1 fi # Initialise return code. rc=0 # Loop through pids for pid in $* do # `