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# When rebooting after kernel panic ABRT should detect the new vmcore appearing in {{filename|/var/crash}}, create a crash report and notify | # When rebooting after kernel panic ABRT should detect the new vmcore appearing in {{filename|/var/crash}}, create a crash report and notify | ||
you via the notification area | you via the notification area | ||
}} | }} | ||
[[Category:Package_abrt_test_cases]] | [[Category:Package_abrt_test_cases]] |
Revision as of 09:58, 26 April 2012
Description
This test case tests the functionality of the ABRT vmcore feature.
How to test
- Ensure you have the plugin installed with the following command:
su -c 'yum install abrt-addon-vmcore'
- Ensure you have necessary packages for producing vmcore and its processing:
su -c 'yum install kexec-tools crash system-config-kdump'
- Ensure that the system log watcher service is running -
systemctl status abrt-vmcore.service
- If you have to change anything, restart abrtd:
su -c 'systemctl restart abrtd.service'
- If you have to change anything, restart abrtd:
- Add "crashkernel=128M" to kernel command line (say, via system-config-kdump -> "Enable", "Apply").
- Reboot.
- Ensure that the kdump service is running -
systemctl status kdump.service
. If it doesn't, no vmcore will be saved on crash. - Crash the machine:
sync; echo 1 >/proc/sys/kernel/sysrq; echo c >/proc/sysrq-trigger
- When rebooting after kernel panic ABRT should detect the new vmcore appearing in
/var/crash
, create a crash report and notify
you via the notification area
Expected Results
- Step #1 completes without error
- The system boots into runlevel 5
- Program completes with exit code 0