systemd-coredump, systemd-coredump.socket, systemd-coredump@.service — Acquire, save and process core dumps
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-coredump
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-coredump --backtrace
systemd-coredump@.service
systemd-coredump.socket
systemd-coredump@.service is a system service to process core dumps. It will
    log a summary of the event to
    systemd-journald.service(8),
    including information about the process identifier, owner, the signal that killed the process, and the
    stack trace if possible. It may also save the core dump for later processing. See the "Information about
    the crashed process" section below.
The behavior of a specific program upon reception of a signal is governed by a few factors which are described in detail in core(5). In particular, the core dump will only be processed when the related resource limits are sufficient.
Core dumps can be written to the journal or saved as a file. In both cases, they can be retrieved for further processing, for example in gdb(1). See coredumpctl(1), in particular the list and debug verbs.
By default, systemd-coredump will log the core dump to the journal, including a
    backtrace if possible, and store the core dump (an image of the memory contents of the process) itself in
    an external file in /var/lib/systemd/coredump. These core dumps are deleted after a
    few days by default; see /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/systemd.conf for details. Note that the
    removal of core files from the file system and the purging of journal entries are independent, and the
    core file may be present without the journal entry, and journal entries may point to since-removed core
    files. Some metadata is attached to core files in the form of extended attributes, so the core files are
    useful for some purposes even without the full metadata available in the journal entry.
For further details see systemd Coredump Handling.
The systemd-coredump executable does the actual work. It is invoked twice:
      once as the handler by the kernel, and the second time in the
      systemd-coredump@.service to actually write the data to the journal and process
      and save the core file.
When the kernel invokes systemd-coredump to handle a core dump, it runs in
      privileged mode, and will connect to the socket created by the
      systemd-coredump.socket unit, which in turn will spawn an unprivileged
      systemd-coredump@.service instance to process the core dump. Hence
      systemd-coredump.socket and systemd-coredump@.service are
      helper units which do the actual processing of core dumps and are subject to normal service
      management.
It is also possible to invoke systemd-coredump with
      --backtrace option. In this case, systemd-coredump expects a
      journal entry in the journal
      Journal Export Format
      on standard input. The entry should contain a MESSAGE= field and any additional
      metadata fields the caller deems reasonable. systemd-coredump will append additional
      metadata fields in the same way it does for core dumps received from the kernel. In this mode, no core
      dump is stored in the journal.
For programs started by systemd, process resource limits can be set by directive
    LimitCORE=, see
    systemd.exec(5).
    
In order to be used by the kernel to handle core dumps,
    systemd-coredump must be configured in
    sysctl(8)
    parameter kernel.core_pattern. The syntax of this parameter is explained in
    core(5).
    systemd installs the file /usr/lib/sysctl.d/50-coredump.conf which configures
    kernel.core_pattern accordingly. This file may be masked or overridden to use a different
    setting following normal
    sysctl.d(5)
    rules. If the sysctl configuration is modified, it must be updated in the kernel before it
    takes effect, see
    sysctl(8)
    and
    systemd-sysctl(8).
    
In order to be used in the --backtrace mode, an appropriate backtrace
    handler must be installed on the sender side. For example, in case of
    python(1), this
    means a sys.excepthook must be installed, see
    systemd-coredump-python.
    
The behavior of systemd-coredump itself is configured through the configuration file
    /etc/systemd/coredump.conf and corresponding snippets
    /etc/systemd/coredump.conf.d/*.conf, see
    coredump.conf(5). A new
    instance of systemd-coredump is invoked upon receiving every core dump. Therefore, changes
    in these files will take effect the next time a core dump is received.
Resources used by core dump files are restricted in two ways. Parameters like maximum size of acquired
    core dumps and files can be set in files /etc/systemd/coredump.conf and snippets mentioned
    above. In addition the storage time of core dump files is restricted by systemd-tmpfiles,
    corresponding settings are by default in /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/systemd.conf. The default is
    to delete core dumps after a few days; see the above file for details.
To disable potentially resource-intensive processing by systemd-coredump, set
Storage=none ProcessSizeMax=0
in coredump.conf(5).
coredumpctl(1) can be used to retrieve saved core dumps independently of their location, to display information, and to process them e.g. by passing to the GNU debugger (gdb).
Data stored in the journal can be also viewed with
    journalctl(1) as usual
    (or from any other process, using the
    sd-journal(3) API).
    The relevant messages have MESSAGE_ID=fc2e22bc6ee647b6b90729ab34a250b1:
$ journalctl MESSAGE_ID=fc2e22bc6ee647b6b90729ab34a250b1 -o verbose … MESSAGE_ID=fc2e22bc6ee647b6b90729ab34a250b1 COREDUMP_PID=552351 COREDUMP_UID=1000 COREDUMP_GID=1000 COREDUMP_SIGNAL_NAME=SIGSEGV COREDUMP_SIGNAL=11 COREDUMP_TIMESTAMP=1614342930000000 COREDUMP_COMM=Web Content COREDUMP_EXE=/usr/lib64/firefox/firefox COREDUMP_USER_UNIT=app-gnome-firefox-552136.scope COREDUMP_CMDLINE=/usr/lib64/firefox/firefox -contentproc -childID 5 -isForBrowser … COREDUMP_CGROUP=/user.slice/user-1000.slice/user@1000.service/app.slice/app-….scope COREDUMP_FILENAME=/var/lib/systemd/coredump/core.Web….552351.….zst …
The following fields are saved (if known) with the journal entry
COREDUMP_UID=, COREDUMP_PID=, COREDUMP_GID=¶The process number (PID), owner user number (UID), and group number (GID) of the crashed process.
When the crashed process was part of a container (or in a process or user namespace in
        general), those are the values as seen outside, in the namespace where
        systemd-coredump is running.
COREDUMP_TIMESTAMP=¶The time of the crash as reported by the kernel (in μs since the epoch).
COREDUMP_RLIMIT=¶The core file size soft resource limit, see getrlimit(2).
COREDUMP_UNIT=, COREDUMP_SLICE=¶The system unit and slice names.
When the crashed process was in container, those are the units names outside, in the main system manager.
COREDUMP_CGROUP=¶The primary cgroup of the unit of the crashed process.
When the crashed process was in a container, this is the full path, as seen outside of the container.
COREDUMP_PROC_CGROUP=¶Control group information in the format used in
        /proc/self/cgroup. On systems with the unified cgroup hierarchy, this is a
        single path prefixed with "0::", and multiple paths prefixed with controller numbers
        on legacy systems.
When the crashed process was in a container, this is the full path, as seen outside of the container.
COREDUMP_OWNER_UID=, COREDUMP_USER_UNIT=, COREDUMP_SESSION=¶The numerical UID of the user owning the login session or systemd user unit of the crashed process, the user manager unit, and the session identifier. All three fields are only present for user processes.
When the crashed process was in container, those are the values outside, in the main system.
COREDUMP_SIGNAL_NAME=, COREDUMP_SIGNAL=¶The terminating signal name (with the "SIG" prefix
        [1]) and numerical value. (Both are included because signal numbers vary by
        architecture.)
COREDUMP_CWD=, COREDUMP_ROOT=¶The current working directory and root directory of the crashed process.
When the crashed process is in a container, those paths are relative to the root of the container's mount namespace.
COREDUMP_DUMPABLE=¶The PR_GET_DUMPABLE field as reported by the kernel, see
        prctl(2).
        
COREDUMP_OPEN_FDS=¶Information about open file descriptors, in the following format:
fd:/path/to/filepos: ... flags: ... ...fd:/path/to/filepos: ... flags: ... ...
The first line contains the file descriptor number fd and the path,
        while subsequent lines show the contents of
        /proc/.
        pid/fdinfo/fd
COREDUMP_EXE=¶The destination of the /proc/
        symlink.pid/exe
When the crashed process is in a container, that path is relative to the root of the container's mount namespace.
COREDUMP_CMDLINE=, COREDUMP_COMM=, COREDUMP_ENVIRON=, COREDUMP_PROC_AUXV=, COREDUMP_PROC_LIMITS=, COREDUMP_PROC_MAPS=, COREDUMP_PROC_MOUNTINFO=, COREDUMP_PROC_STATUS=¶Fields that map the per-process entries in the /proc/
        filesystem: /proc/ (the command line of
        the crashed process), pid/cmdline/proc/ (the command
        name associated with the process), pid/comm/proc/
        (the environment block of the crashed process),
        pid/environ/proc/ (the auxiliary vector of the crashed
        process, see getauxval(3)),
        pid/auxv/proc/ (the soft and hard resource limits),
        pid/limits/proc/ (memory regions visible to the process
        and their access permissions), pid/maps/proc/
        (mount points in the process's mount namespace),
        pid/mountinfo/proc/ (various metadata about the
        process).pid/status
See proc(5) for more information.
COREDUMP_HOSTNAME=¶The system hostname.
When the crashed process was in container, this is the container hostname.
COREDUMP_CONTAINER_CMDLINE=¶For processes running in a container, the command line of the process spawning the container (the first parent process with a different mount namespace).
COREDUMP=¶When the core is stored in the journal, the core image itself.
COREDUMP_FILENAME=¶When the core is stored externally, the path to the core file.
COREDUMP_TRUNCATED=¶Set to "1" when the saved coredump was truncated. (A partial core
        image may still be processed by some tools, though obviously not all information is available.)
        
COREDUMP_PACKAGE_NAME=, COREDUMP_PACKAGE_VERSION=, COREDUMP_PACKAGE_JSON=¶If the executable contained .package metadata ELF notes, they will be
        parsed and attached. The package and packageVersion
        of the 'main' ELF module (ie: the executable) will be appended individually. The
        JSON-formatted content of all modules will be appended as a single JSON object, each with
        the module name as the key. For more information about this metadata format and content, see
        the coredump metadata spec.
MESSAGE=¶The message generated by systemd-coredump that includes the
        backtrace if it was successfully generated. When systemd-coredump is invoked with
        --backtrace, this field is provided by the caller.
Various other fields exist in the journal entry, but pertain to the logging process, i.e. systemd-coredump, not the crashed process. See systemd.journal-fields(7).
The following fields are saved (if known) with the external file listed in
    COREDUMP_FILENAME= as extended attributes:
user.coredump.pid, user.coredump.uid, user.coredump.gid, user.coredump.signal, user.coredump.timestamp, user.coredump.rlimit, user.coredump.hostname, user.coredump.comm, user.coredump.exe¶Those are the same as COREDUMP_PID=,
        COREDUMP_UID=, COREDUMP_GID=,
        COREDUMP_SIGNAL=, COREDUMP_TIMESTAMP=,
        COREDUMP_RLIMIT=, COREDUMP_HOSTNAME=,
        COREDUMP_COMM=, and COREDUMP_EXE=, described above.
        
Those can be viewed using getfattr(1). For the core file described in the journal entry shown above:
$ getfattr --absolute-names -d /var/lib/systemd/coredump/core.Web….552351.….zst # file: /var/lib/systemd/coredump/core.Web….552351.….zst user.coredump.pid="552351" user.coredump.uid="1000" user.coredump.gid="1000" user.coredump.signal="11" user.coredump.timestamp="1614342930000000" user.coredump.comm="Web Content" user.coredump.exe="/usr/lib64/firefox/firefox" …