fcatch (1) - Linux Manuals
fcatch: print a stack back-trace of a program as it crashes
NAME
fcatch - print a stack back-trace of a program as it crashes
SYNOPSIS
-
fcatch [options] {program
arg ... }
DESCRIPTION
fcatch
Stack Print Options
-number-of-frames count
- Limit the back-trace to count frames. The default is to limit the back-trace to 10 frames. Specify 0 or "all" to print all frames.
-lite
- Perform a light-weight stack backtrace containing only minimal information. Equivalent to -print -.
-rich
- Perform a detailed stack back-trace that includes, where possible, inlined function calls, parameter names and values, and debug-names. Equivalent to -print inline,params,debug-names.
-print print-option,...
-
Specify the level of detail to include in a stack back-trace.
print-option
can be any of:
debug-names: use debug information, such as DWARF, to determine the name of functions
paths: include the full path to source files and libraries
inline: include in-line function in back-trace
locals: to include local variables from each frame
params: include the function parameters
To negate a print-option prefix it with "-".
Standard Frysk Options
-exe
- The full path of the executable to read.
-noexe
- Do not attempt to read the corresponding executable when loading a core file.
-sysroot directory
- The system root directory under which all executables, libraries, and source are located.
-debug class=level...
- Set internal debug-tracing of the specified Java class to level (level can be NONE, INFO, WARNING, FINE, and FINEST). If the level is absent, FINE is assumed; if the class is absent, the global level is set.
EXAMPLE
-
fcatch 1234
-
fcatch /usr/bin/foo
BUGS
Report bugs to m[blue]http://sourceware.org/fryskm[]
SEE ALSO
frysk(7)