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edump

Efficient Erlang Crashdump Analysis Tools.

I find erl_crash.dump files essential for debugging production systems after they've crashed, but these files are a pain to deal with by hand. OTP comes with crashdump_viewer, but that tool doesn't work with really large files, is hard to use programatically, and tricky to build on.

Note: crashdump_viewer had poor large file support in 2015, but since then it seems to have had updates to use a similar segment indexing strategy. crashdump_viewer probably works reasonably with large files now, but my complaints about it being hard to use programmatically are still true.

edump is an Erlang library for efficiently parsing and analysing information in erl_crash.dump files. The main trick it uses is to build an index of segments in a full crashdump file. Indexing the file, or reading the file without an index requires reading the entire thing to find what you want, but an edump *.eidx file will give you random access to segments inside a crashdump of any size.

This library includes code for parsing different kinds of crashdump segment, can reconstruct process dictionaries, message queues and stacks from process heaps, and perform a number of basic analysis on information usually present in crashdumps.

Build

$ rebar3 compile

If you'd like the 'edump' escript tool as well, run

$ rebar3 escriptize

Use

Reading a crashdump

$ rebar3 shell
> Handle = edump:open("/path/to/erl_crash.dump").
...<edump Handle>

edump:open parses a crashdump file, creates an index of segments in the dump, (by default) writes the index file to CrashdumpFile ++ ".eidx" and returns a usable handle to the index. Further crashdump investigation functions use a Handle. This is optimized if there's already an eidx file for the dump - we skip the dump file completely and load the index.

Basic info

> edump:ports(Handle).
[{port,<<"#Port<0.1>">>},
 {port,<<"#Port<0.47>">>},
 {port,<<"#Port<0.404>">>},
 {port,<<"#Port<0.413>">>}]
> edump:processes(Handle).
[{proc,<<"<0.0.0>">>},
 {proc,<<"<0.3.0>">>},
 {proc,<<"<0.5.0>">>},
 {proc,<<"<0.6.0>">>},
 {proc,<<"<0.8.0>">>},
 {proc,<<"<0.9.0>">>},
 {proc,<<"<0.10.0>">>}|...]

Indexes store data about crashdump file segments. Segments have ids, for instance {proc, <<"<0.0.0>">>} or {port, <<"#Port<0.1>">>}. You can get more information about a segment by id:

> edump:info({port,<<"#Port<0.1>">>}, Handle).
{port,[{slot,1},
       {connected,{proc,<<"<0.3.0>">>}},
       {links,{proc,<<"<0.3.0>">>}},
       {driver,<<"efile">>}],
      []}

Drawing Process Graphs

There are some analysis modules that will construct a graph of erlang entities (port, processes, nodes, etc) from the data in a crashdump and turn these into GraphViz dot files for viewing.

> Graph = edump:proc_graph(Handle)
{digraph,700451,704546,708644,true}
> edump_proc_dot:to_dot("priv/erl_crash.dot", Graph,
                        #{include_edge => fun edump_proc_dot:fewer_edges/3}).
ok

This produces a graph like this when rendered with GraphViz (edump produces only the .dot file): image

Edump escript

The edump escript (found in _build/default/bin) provides a commandline interface to some common functionality:

  • edump index parses dump files and produces index files
$ edump index -c full test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.dump
Indexing "test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.dump" [{checking,full},
                                     {file,"test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.dump"},
                                     {rebuild,false}]
Indexed "test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.dump" in 0.218382s
  • edump graph produces a GraphViz dot file from a dump file. It will index the dump file if necessary.
edump graph test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.dump -d test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.full.dot -g "rankdir="TB";size=\"12,8\""
Graph opts: #{graph_attributes => ["rankdir=TB","size=\"12,8\""],
              include_edge => #Fun<edump_proc_dot.fewer_edges.3>}
Wrote graph to "test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.full.dot"
  • edump info prints a description of various information from the dump file. Without options (or --info basic), edump presents a basic summary:
$ edump info test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.dump
Crashdump "test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.dump"
Crashed: <<"Wed Oct  3 23:53:30 2012">>
Slogan: A test crash
Total memory:  9.060 Mb
   78.56% system:  7.117 Mb
   44.69% code:  4.049 Mb
   21.44% processes:  1.943 Mb (100.00% used)
    7.10% ets:  0.644 Mb
    2.14% atom:  0.194 Mb ( 90.07% used)
    1.86% binary:  0.168 Mb
  • edump info --info processes (a really clumsy CLI, I don't know how to fix that yet)
$ edump info test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.dump --info processes
Crashdump "test/dumpfiles/eshell_forced_crash.dump"
Processes (32 of 32):
   1         <0.31.0>                      (Running, 0 msgq, 4181 mem, 86159 reds)
   2          <0.6.0> application_controll (Waiting, 0 msgq, 28657 mem, 7881 reds)
   3          <0.3.0>      erl_prim_loader (Waiting, 0 msgq, 6765 mem, 270453 reds)
   4         <0.10.0>           kernel_sup (Waiting, 0 msgq, 4181 mem, 37621 reds)
   5         <0.18.0>          code_server (Waiting, 0 msgq, 4181 mem, 155017 reds)
   6          <0.0.0>                 init (Waiting, 0 msgq, 2584 mem, 3414 reds)
   7         <0.24.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 2584 mem, 24580 reds)
   8         <0.25.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 2584 mem, 6347 reds)
   9         <0.22.0>             user_drv (Waiting, 0 msgq, 987 mem, 8140 reds)
  10          <0.5.0>         error_logger (Waiting, 0 msgq, 610 mem, 280 reds)
  11         <0.41.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 610 mem, 957 reds)
  12         <0.44.0>         disk_log_sup (Waiting, 0 msgq, 610 mem, 236 reds)
  13          <0.8.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 377 mem, 44 reds)
  14         <0.17.0>        file_server_2 (Waiting, 0 msgq, 377 mem, 514 reds)
  15         <0.27.0>      kernel_safe_sup (Waiting, 0 msgq, 377 mem, 195 reds)
  16         <0.45.0>      disk_log_server (Waiting, 0 msgq, 377 mem, 228 reds)
  17          <0.9.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 69 reds)
  18         <0.11.0>                  rex (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 35 reds)
  19         <0.12.0>   global_name_server (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 50 reds)
  20         <0.13.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 20 reds)
  21         <0.14.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 3 reds)
  22         <0.15.0>              inet_db (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 234 reds)
  23         <0.16.0>         global_group (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 59 reds)
  24         <0.19.0>   standard_error_sup (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 41 reds)
  25         <0.20.0>       standard_error (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 9 reds)
  26         <0.21.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 62 reds)
  27         <0.23.0>                 user (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 36 reds)
  28         <0.26.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 268 reds)
  29         <0.34.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 23 reds)
  30         <0.35.0>                      (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 49 reds)
  31         <0.36.0>            edump_sup (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 102 reds)
  32         <0.37.0>         edump_viewer (Waiting, 0 msgq, 233 mem, 27 reds)

Todo list

  • edump pstree (ala unix pstree)
  • map support (maybe this works already if they're emitted as erl_dist_external?)
  • follow binary references when reconstructing proc stacks/dict/messages
  • Check all commits in crashdump_viewer since 2015

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Erlang Crashdump Analysis Suite

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