ops: snapshot crash executables
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@@ -241,8 +241,9 @@ Each bundle contains:
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- listener state from `ss -ltnp`
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- tailed runtime `syslog.log` and `syserr.log` files
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- metadata for any `core*` files found under `runtime/server/channels`
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- metadata for the executable inferred for each core file
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If you call it with `--include-cores`, matching core files are copied into the bundle as well.
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If you call it with `--include-cores`, matching core files are copied into the bundle as well. In the same mode, the inferred executable files are copied too, so a later redeploy does not destroy your ability to symbolicate the crash with the original binary snapshot.
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The runtime units now also declare `LimitCORE=infinity`, so after the next service restart the processes are allowed to emit core dumps when the host kernel/core policy permits it.
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@@ -252,4 +253,4 @@ For quick manual crash triage outside the incident bundle flow, use:
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metinctl backtrace
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```
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It defaults to the newest core file under the runtime tree, infers the executable path, and uses `gdb` or `lldb` when present on the host. If no supported debugger is installed, it still prints file/readelf metadata for the core and executable.
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It defaults to the newest core file under the runtime tree, infers the executable path, and uses `gdb` or `lldb` when present on the host. If no supported debugger is installed, it still prints file/readelf metadata for the core and executable. If the current executable is newer than the core file, the helper prints an explicit warning because the backtrace may no longer match the crashed binary.
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