corekeeper 1.6 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

corekeeper (1.6) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Prevent installation with other core dump handlers:
    http://lists.alioth.debian.org/pipermail/pkg-systemd-maintainers/2015-November/009344.html
  * Bump Standards-Version, no changes needed

 -- Paul Wise <email address hidden>  Thu, 12 Nov 2015 00:44:26 +0800

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Paul Wise (Debian)
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Paul Wise (Debian)
Architectures:
kfreebsd-any linux-any
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Bionic release universe misc
Xenial release universe misc

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
corekeeper_1.6.dsc 1.5 KiB 707148d1ba54253e5d04cd3d0771571a71eb51c986d767a6d9f1b4366ab164f3
corekeeper_1.6.tar.xz 5.3 KiB da706e063da31b07a41d2345bc631b6a722da32994e87304214673fd84089674

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

corekeeper: enable core files and report crashes to the sysadmin

 corekeeper enables core files, reports crashes to the sysadmin and
 deletes old core files after 7 days.
 .
 Core file dumping is enabled for all users, to restrict that, please
 remove or edit the config file at /etc/security/limits.d/corekeeper.conf
 .
 On Linux core files are written to private per-userid dirs in /var/crash.
 Linux 3.6 and earlier have an issue that means all core files are written
 to the directory for root. If your system is running Linux 3.6 or earlier
 and is single-user (or you don't care about the privacy of core file names),
 you can avoid this issue by editing /etc/sysctl.d/corekeeper.conf.
 .
 On kFreeBSD files are written to /var/crash, kernel limitations prevent
 core files from being written to private per-userid dirs.
 .
 To fully remove this package it needs to be purged and the system rebooted.