How to Install and Uninstall corekeeper Package on Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla)
Last updated: December 24,2024
1. Install "corekeeper" package
This guide covers the steps necessary to install corekeeper on Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla)
$
sudo apt update
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$
sudo apt install
corekeeper
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2. Uninstall "corekeeper" package
Please follow the guidelines below to uninstall corekeeper on Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla):
$
sudo apt remove
corekeeper
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$
sudo apt autoclean && sudo apt autoremove
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3. Information about the corekeeper package on Ubuntu 20.10 (Groovy Gorilla)
Package: corekeeper
Architecture: amd64
Version: 1.7
Priority: extra
Section: universe/admin
Origin: Ubuntu
Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers
Original-Maintainer: Paul Wise
Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
Installed-Size: 34
Provides: core-dump-handler
Depends: procps
Conflicts: core-dump-handler
Replaces: core-dump-handler
Filename: pool/universe/c/corekeeper/corekeeper_1.7_amd64.deb
Size: 6520
MD5sum: c72988055a751ea66aed7d9dd17e7d8c
SHA1: d33354c471a1427e649b69c4a88821a727fbaf55
SHA256: 053e2e99382f571789285c8fdebd10bebe05bf309d0df32b9c4d512629ec04fb
SHA512: 97ebacf1a7dcfba9ce52290dca32ad14d87acd82b0ebd7ec0721a922101efa6f7fa4194038dd174c371e219fbe1339e5500dc0ff66423306059a8af395a7da61
Description-en: 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.
Description-md5: 287acd254e78c838d144e6715f2ca91f
Architecture: amd64
Version: 1.7
Priority: extra
Section: universe/admin
Origin: Ubuntu
Maintainer: Ubuntu Developers
Original-Maintainer: Paul Wise
Bugs: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+filebug
Installed-Size: 34
Provides: core-dump-handler
Depends: procps
Conflicts: core-dump-handler
Replaces: core-dump-handler
Filename: pool/universe/c/corekeeper/corekeeper_1.7_amd64.deb
Size: 6520
MD5sum: c72988055a751ea66aed7d9dd17e7d8c
SHA1: d33354c471a1427e649b69c4a88821a727fbaf55
SHA256: 053e2e99382f571789285c8fdebd10bebe05bf309d0df32b9c4d512629ec04fb
SHA512: 97ebacf1a7dcfba9ce52290dca32ad14d87acd82b0ebd7ec0721a922101efa6f7fa4194038dd174c371e219fbe1339e5500dc0ff66423306059a8af395a7da61
Description-en: 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.
Description-md5: 287acd254e78c838d144e6715f2ca91f