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Fedora 12 gcc 4.4.1

I am doing some programming, and my program gave me a stack dump.

However, there is no core file for me to examine.

So I did:

ulimit -c unlimited

and got this error message:

bash: ulimit: core file size: cannot modify limit: Operation not permitted

I also tried setting ulimit to 50000 and still got the same error.

The results of ulimit -a:

$ ulimit -a
core file size          (blocks, -c) 0
data seg size           (kbytes, -d) unlimited
scheduling priority             (-e) 0
file size               (blocks, -f) unlimited
pending signals                 (-i) 12275
max locked memory       (kbytes, -l) 64
max memory size         (kbytes, -m) unlimited
open files                      (-n) 1024
pipe size            (512 bytes, -p) 8
POSIX message queues     (bytes, -q) 819200
real-time priority              (-r) 0
stack size              (kbytes, -s) 10240
cpu time               (seconds, -t) unlimited
max user processes              (-u) 1024
virtual memory          (kbytes, -v) unlimited
file locks                      (-x) unlimited

2 Answers 2

26

Grep for a hard limit setting in your bash initialization files. From the bash man page.

A hard limit cannot be increased once it is set; a soft limit may be increased up to the value of the hard limit.

The hard limit is set via the ulimit -H flag. It may be set in /etc/bash* or /etc/profile* files. Look for a ulimit -Hc setting.

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  • 1
    man ulimit: If neither -H nor -S is specified, both the soft and hard limits are set. So looking for -H or -S isn't necessarily going to lead you to the correct solution. Just grep for ulimit and then figure out if -H or -S or both implicitly are set. Of course, this is a decade later so the behavior or man pages might have been updated since the original question/answer.
    – Jim
    Apr 9, 2019 at 17:13
1

I had this happen to me when I used dropbear as an SSH server. Apparently, dropbear sets some hard limits before spawning your shell.

Switching to OpenSSH solved the problem.

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