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456 lines
19 KiB
456 lines
19 KiB
'\"! tbl | nroff \-man
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'\" t macro stdmacro
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.de SAMPLE
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.br
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.RS 0
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.nf
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.nh
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..
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.de ESAMPLE
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.hy
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.fi
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.RE
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..
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.TH DEBUGINFOD 8
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.SH NAME
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debuginfod \- debuginfo-related http file-server daemon
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B debuginfod
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[\fIOPTION\fP]... [\fIPATH\fP]...
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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\fBdebuginfod\fP serves debuginfo-related artifacts over HTTP. It
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periodically scans a set of directories for ELF/DWARF files and their
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associated source code, as well as archive files containing the above, to
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build an index by their buildid. This index is used when remote
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clients use the HTTP webapi, to fetch these files by the same buildid.
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If a debuginfod cannot service a given buildid artifact request
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itself, and it is configured with information about upstream
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debuginfod servers, it queries them for the same information, just as
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\fBdebuginfod-find\fP would. If successful, it locally caches then
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relays the file content to the original requester.
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Indexing the given PATHs proceeds using multiple threads. One thread
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periodically traverses all the given PATHs logically or physically
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(see the \fB\-L\fP option). Duplicate PATHs are ignored. You may use
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a file name for a PATH, but source code indexing may be incomplete;
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prefer using a directory that contains the binaries. The traversal
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thread enumerates all matching files (see the \fB\-I\fP and \fB\-X\fP
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options) into a work queue. A collection of scanner threads (see the
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\fB\-c\fP option) wait at the work queue to analyze files in parallel.
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If the \fB\-F\fP option is given, each file is scanned as an ELF/DWARF
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file. Source files are matched with DWARF files based on the
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AT_comp_dir (compilation directory) attributes inside it. Caution:
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source files listed in the DWARF may be a path \fIanywhere\fP in the
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file system, and debuginfod will readily serve their content on
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demand. (Imagine a doctored DWARF file that lists \fI/etc/passwd\fP
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as a source file.) If this is a concern, audit your binaries with
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tools such as:
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.SAMPLE
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% eu-readelf -wline BINARY | sed -n '/^Directory.table/,/^File.name.table/p'
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or
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% eu-readelf -wline BINARY | sed -n '/^Directory.table/,/^Line.number/p'
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or even use debuginfod itself:
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% debuginfod -vvv -d :memory: -F BINARY 2>&1 | grep 'recorded.*source'
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^C
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.ESAMPLE
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If any of the \fB\-R\fP, \fB-U\fP, or \fB-Z\fP options is given, each
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file is scanned as an archive file that may contain ELF/DWARF/source
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files. Archive files are recognized by extension. If \-R is given,
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".rpm" files are scanned; if \-D is given, ".deb" and ".ddeb" files
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are scanned; if \-Z is given, the listed extensions are scanned.
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Because of complications such as DWZ-compressed debuginfo, may require
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\fItwo\fP traversal passes to identify all source code. Source files
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for RPMs are only served from other RPMs, so the caution for \-F does
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not apply. Note that due to Debian/Ubuntu packaging policies &
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mechanisms, debuginfod cannot resolve source files for DEB/DDEB at
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all.
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If no PATH is listed, or none of the scanning options is given, then
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\fBdebuginfod\fP will simply serve content that it accumulated into
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its index in all previous runs, and federate to any upstream
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debuginfod servers.
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.SH OPTIONS
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.TP
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.B "\-F"
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Activate ELF/DWARF file scanning. The default is off.
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.TP
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.B "\-Z EXT" "\-Z EXT=CMD"
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Activate an additional pattern in archive scanning. Files with name
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extension EXT (include the dot) will be processed. If CMD is given,
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it is invoked with the file name added to its argument list, and
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should produce a common archive on its standard output. Otherwise,
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the file is read as if CMD were "cat". Since debuginfod internally
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uses \fBlibarchive\fP to read archive files, it can accept a wide
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range of archive formats and compression modes. The default is no
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additional patterns. This option may be repeated.
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.TP
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.B "\-R"
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Activate RPM patterns in archive scanning. The default is off.
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Equivalent to \fB\%\-Z\~.rpm=cat\fP, since libarchive can natively
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process RPM archives. If your version of libarchive is much older
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than 2020, be aware that some distributions have switched to an
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incompatible zstd compression for their payload. You may experiment
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with \fB\%\-Z\ .rpm='(rpm2cpio|zstdcat)<'\fP instead of \fB\-R\fP.
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.TP
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.B "\-U"
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Activate DEB/DDEB patterns in archive scanning. The default is off.
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Equivalent to \fB\%\-Z\ .deb='dpkg-deb\ \-\-fsys\-tarfile\fP'
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\fB\%\-Z\ .ddeb='dpkg-deb\ \-\-fsys\-tarfile'\fP.
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.TP
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.B "\-d FILE" "\-\-database=FILE"
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Set the path of the sqlite database used to store the index. This
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file is disposable in the sense that a later rescan will repopulate
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data. It will contain absolute file path names, so it may not be
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portable across machines. It may be frequently read/written, so it
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should be on a fast filesystem. It should not be shared across
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machines or users, to maximize sqlite locking performance. The
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default database file is \%$HOME/.debuginfod.sqlite.
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.TP
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.B "\-D SQL" "\-\-ddl=SQL"
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Execute given sqlite statement after the database is opened and
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initialized as extra DDL (SQL data definition language). This may be
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useful to tune performance-related pragmas or indexes. May be
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repeated. The default is nothing extra.
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.TP
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.B "\-p NUM" "\-\-port=NUM"
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Set the TCP port number (0 < NUM < 65536) on which debuginfod should
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listen, to service HTTP requests. Both IPv4 and IPV6 sockets are
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opened, if possible. The webapi is documented below. The default
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port number is 8002.
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.TP
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.B "\-I REGEX" "\-\-include=REGEX" "\-X REGEX" "\-\-exclude=REGEX"
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Govern the inclusion and exclusion of file names under the search
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paths. The regular expressions are interpreted as unanchored POSIX
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extended REs, thus may include alternation. They are evaluated
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against the full path of each file, based on its \fBrealpath(3)\fP
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canonicalization. By default, all files are included and none are
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excluded. A file that matches both include and exclude REGEX is
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excluded. (The \fIcontents\fP of archive files are not subject to
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inclusion or exclusion filtering: they are all processed.) Only the
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last of each type of regular expression given is used.
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.TP
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.B "\-t SECONDS" "\-\-rescan\-time=SECONDS"
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Set the rescan time for the file and archive directories. This is the
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amount of time the traversal thread will wait after finishing a scan,
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before doing it again. A rescan for unchanged files is fast (because
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the index also stores the file mtimes). A time of zero is acceptable,
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and means that only one initial scan should performed. The default
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rescan time is 300 seconds. Receiving a SIGUSR1 signal triggers a new
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scan, independent of the rescan time (including if it was zero),
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interrupting a groom pass (if any).
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.TP
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.B "\-g SECONDS" "\-\-groom\-time=SECONDS"
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Set the groom time for the index database. This is the amount of time
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the grooming thread will wait after finishing a grooming pass before
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doing it again. A groom operation quickly rescans all previously
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scanned files, only to see if they are still present and current, so
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it can deindex obsolete files. See also the \fIDATA MANAGEMENT\fP
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section. The default groom time is 86400 seconds (1 day). A time of
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zero is acceptable, and means that only one initial groom should be
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performed. Receiving a SIGUSR2 signal triggers a new grooming pass,
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independent of the groom time (including if it was zero), interrupting
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a rescan pass (if any)..
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.TP
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.B "\-G"
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Run an extraordinary maximal-grooming pass at debuginfod startup.
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This pass can take considerable time, because it tries to remove any
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debuginfo-unrelated content from the archive-related parts of the index.
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It should not be run if any recent archive-related indexing operations
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were aborted early. It can take considerable space, because it
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finishes up with an sqlite "vacuum" operation, which repacks the
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database file by triplicating it temporarily. The default is not to
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do maximal-grooming. See also the \fIDATA MANAGEMENT\fP section.
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.TP
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.B "\-c NUM" "\-\-concurrency=NUM"
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Set the concurrency limit for the scanning queue threads, which work
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together to process archives & files located by the traversal thread.
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This important for controlling CPU-intensive operations like parsing
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an ELF file and especially decompressing archives. The default is the
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number of processors on the system; the minimum is 1.
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.TP
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.B "\-L"
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Traverse symbolic links encountered during traversal of the PATHs,
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including across devices - as in \fIfind\ -L\fP. The default is to
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traverse the physical directory structure only, stay on the same
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device, and ignore symlinks - as in \fIfind\ -P\ -xdev\fP. Caution: a
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loops in the symbolic directory tree might lead to \fIinfinite
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traversal\fP.
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.TP
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.B "\-\-fdcache\-fds=NUM" "\-\-fdcache\-mbs=MB" "\-\-fdcache\-prefetch=NUM2"
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Configure limits on a cache that keeps recently extracted files from
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archives. Up to NUM requested files and up to a total of MB megabytes
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will be kept extracted, in order to avoid having to decompress their
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archives over and over again. In addition, up to NUM2 other files
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from an archive may be prefetched into the cache before they are even
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requested. The default NUM, NUM2, and MB values depend on the
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concurrency of the system, and on the available disk space on the
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$TMPDIR or \fB/tmp\fP filesystem. This is because that is where the
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most recently used extracted files are kept. Grooming cleans this
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cache.
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.TP
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.B "\-\-fdcache\-mintmp=NUM"
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Configure a disk space threshold for emergency flushing of the cache.
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The filesystem holding the cache is checked periodically. If the
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available space falls below the given percentage, the cache is
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flushed, and the fdcache will stay disabled until the next groom
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cycle. This mechanism, along a few associated /metrics on the webapi,
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are intended to give an operator notice about storage scarcity - which
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can translate to RAM scarcity if the disk happens to be on a RAM
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virtual disk. The default threshold is 25%.
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.TP
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.B "\-v"
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Increase verbosity of logging to the standard error file descriptor.
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May be repeated to increase details. The default verbosity is 0.
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.SH WEBAPI
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.\" Much of the following text is duplicated with debuginfod-find.1
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debuginfod's webapi resembles ordinary file service, where a GET
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request with a path containing a known buildid results in a file.
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Unknown buildid / request combinations result in HTTP error codes.
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This file service resemblance is intentional, so that an installation
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can take advantage of standard HTTP management infrastructure.
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There are three requests. In each case, the buildid is encoded as a
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lowercase hexadecimal string. For example, for a program \fI/bin/ls\fP,
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look at the ELF note GNU_BUILD_ID:
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.SAMPLE
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% readelf -n /bin/ls | grep -A4 build.id
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Note section [ 4] '.note.gnu.buildid' of 36 bytes at offset 0x340:
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Owner Data size Type
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GNU 20 GNU_BUILD_ID
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Build ID: 8713b9c3fb8a720137a4a08b325905c7aaf8429d
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.ESAMPLE
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Then the hexadecimal BUILDID is simply:
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.SAMPLE
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8713b9c3fb8a720137a4a08b325905c7aaf8429d
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.ESAMPLE
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.SS /buildid/\fIBUILDID\fP/debuginfo
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If the given buildid is known to the server, this request will result
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in a binary object that contains the customary \fB.*debug_*\fP
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sections. This may be a split debuginfo file as created by
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\fBstrip\fP, or it may be an original unstripped executable.
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.SS /buildid/\fIBUILDID\fP/executable
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If the given buildid is known to the server, this request will result
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in a binary object that contains the normal executable segments. This
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may be a executable stripped by \fBstrip\fP, or it may be an original
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unstripped executable. \fBET_DYN\fP shared libraries are considered
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to be a type of executable.
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.SS /buildid/\fIBUILDID\fP/source\fI/SOURCE/FILE\fP
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If the given buildid is known to the server, this request will result
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in a binary object that contains the source file mentioned. The path
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should be absolute. Relative path names commonly appear in the DWARF
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file's source directory, but these paths are relative to
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individual compilation unit AT_comp_dir paths, and yet an executable
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is made up of multiple CUs. Therefore, to disambiguate, debuginfod
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expects source queries to prefix relative path names with the CU
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compilation-directory, followed by a mandatory "/".
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Note: the caller may or may not elide \fB../\fP or \fB/./\fP or extraneous
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\fB///\fP sorts of path components in the directory names. debuginfod
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accepts both forms. Specifically, debuginfod canonicalizes path names
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according to RFC3986 section 5.2.4 (Remove Dot Segments), plus reducing
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any \fB//\fP to \fB/\fP in the path.
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For example:
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.TS
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l l.
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#include <stdio.h> /buildid/BUILDID/source/usr/include/stdio.h
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/path/to/foo.c /buildid/BUILDID/source/path/to/foo.c
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\../bar/foo.c AT_comp_dir=/zoo/ /buildid/BUILDID/source/zoo//../bar/foo.c
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.TE
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.SS /metrics
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This endpoint returns a Prometheus formatted text/plain dump of a
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variety of statistics about the operation of the debuginfod server.
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The exact set of metrics and their meanings may change in future
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versions. Caution: configuration information (path names, versions)
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may be disclosed.
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.SH DATA MANAGEMENT
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debuginfod stores its index in an sqlite database in a densely packed
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set of interlinked tables. While the representation is as efficient
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as we have been able to make it, it still takes a considerable amount
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of data to record all debuginfo-related data of potentially a great
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many files. This section offers some advice about the implications.
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As a general explanation for size, consider that debuginfod indexes
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ELF/DWARF files, it stores their names and referenced source file
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names, and buildids will be stored. When indexing archives, it stores
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every file name \fIof or in\fP an archive, every buildid, plus every
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source file name referenced from a DWARF file. (Indexing archives
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takes more space because the source files often reside in separate
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subpackages that may not be indexed at the same pass, so extra
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metadata has to be kept.)
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Getting down to numbers, in the case of Fedora RPMs (essentially,
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gzip-compressed cpio files), the sqlite index database tends to be
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from 0.5% to 3% of their size. It's larger for binaries that are
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assembled out of a great many source files, or packages that carry
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much debuginfo-unrelated content. It may be even larger during the
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indexing phase due to temporary sqlite write-ahead-logging files;
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these are checkpointed (cleaned out and removed) at shutdown. It may
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be helpful to apply tight \-I or \-X regular-expression constraints to
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exclude files from scanning that you know have no debuginfo-relevant
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content.
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As debuginfod runs, it periodically rescans its target directories,
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and any new content found is added to the database. Old content, such
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as data for files that have disappeared or that have been replaced
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with newer versions is removed at a periodic \fIgrooming\fP pass.
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This means that the sqlite files grow fast during initial indexing,
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slowly during index rescans, and periodically shrink during grooming.
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There is also an optional one-shot \fImaximal grooming\fP pass is
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available. It removes information debuginfo-unrelated data from the
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archive content index such as file names found in archives ("archive
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sdef" records) that are not referred to as source files from any
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binaries find in archives ("archive sref" records). This can save
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considerable disk space. However, it is slow and temporarily requires
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up to twice the database size as free space. Worse: it may result in
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missing source-code info if the archive traversals were interrupted,
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so that not all source file references were known. Use it rarely to
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polish a complete index.
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You should ensure that ample disk space remains available. (The flood
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of error messages on -ENOSPC is ugly and nagging. But, like for most
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other errors, debuginfod will resume when resources permit.) If
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necessary, debuginfod can be stopped, the database file moved or
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removed, and debuginfod restarted.
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sqlite offers several performance-related options in the form of
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pragmas. Some may be useful to fine-tune the defaults plus the
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debuginfod extras. The \-D option may be useful to tell debuginfod to
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execute the given bits of SQL after the basic schema creation
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commands. For example, the "synchronous", "cache_size",
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"auto_vacuum", "threads", "journal_mode" pragmas may be fun to tweak
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via \-D, if you're searching for peak performance. The "optimize",
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"wal_checkpoint" pragmas may be useful to run periodically, outside
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debuginfod. The default settings are performance- rather than
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reliability-oriented, so a hardware crash might corrupt the database.
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In these cases, it may be necessary to manually delete the sqlite
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database and start over.
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As debuginfod changes in the future, we may have no choice but to
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change the database schema in an incompatible manner. If this
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happens, new versions of debuginfod will issue SQL statements to
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\fIdrop\fP all prior schema & data, and start over. So, disk space
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will not be wasted for retaining a no-longer-useable dataset.
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In summary, if your system can bear a 0.5%-3% index-to-archive-dataset
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size ratio, and slow growth afterwards, you should not need to
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worry about disk space. If a system crash corrupts the database,
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or you want to force debuginfod to reset and start over, simply
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erase the sqlite file before restarting debuginfod.
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.SH SECURITY
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debuginfod \fBdoes not\fP include any particular security features.
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While it is robust with respect to inputs, some abuse is possible. It
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forks a new thread for each incoming HTTP request, which could lead to
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a denial-of-service in terms of RAM, CPU, disk I/O, or network I/O.
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If this is a problem, users are advised to install debuginfod with a
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HTTPS reverse-proxy front-end that enforces site policies for
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firewalling, authentication, integrity, authorization, and load
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control. The \fI/metrics\fP webapi endpoint is probably not
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appropriate for disclosure to the public.
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When relaying queries to upstream debuginfods, debuginfod \fBdoes not\fP
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include any particular security features. It trusts that the binaries
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returned by the debuginfods are accurate. Therefore, the list of
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servers should include only trustworthy ones. If accessed across HTTP
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rather than HTTPS, the network should be trustworthy. Authentication
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information through the internal \fIlibcurl\fP library is not currently
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enabled.
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.SH "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES"
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.TP
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.B TMPDIR
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This environment variable points to a file system to be used for
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temporary files. The default is /tmp.
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.TP
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.B DEBUGINFOD_URLS
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This environment variable contains a list of URL prefixes for trusted
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debuginfod instances. Alternate URL prefixes are separated by space.
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Avoid referential loops that cause a server to contact itself, directly
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or indirectly - the results would be hilarious.
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.TP
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.B DEBUGINFOD_TIMEOUT
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This environment variable governs the timeout for each debuginfod HTTP
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connection. A server that fails to provide at least 100K of data
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within this many seconds is skipped. The default is 90 seconds. (Zero
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or negative means "no timeout".)
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.TP
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.B DEBUGINFOD_CACHE_PATH
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This environment variable governs the location of the cache where
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downloaded files are kept. It is cleaned periodically as this
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program is reexecuted. If XDG_CACHE_HOME is set then
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$XDG_CACHE_HOME/debuginfod_client is the default location, otherwise
|
|
$HOME/.cache/debuginfod_client is used. For more information regarding
|
|
the client cache see \fIdebuginfod_find_debuginfo(3)\fP.
|
|
|
|
.SH FILES
|
|
.LP
|
|
.PD .1v
|
|
.TP 20
|
|
.B $HOME/.debuginfod.sqlite
|
|
Default database file.
|
|
.PD
|
|
|
|
.TP 20
|
|
.B $XDG_CACHE_HOME/debuginfod_client
|
|
Default cache directory for content from upstream debuginfods.
|
|
If XDG_CACHE_HOME is not set then \fB$HOME/.cache/debuginfod_client\fP
|
|
is used.
|
|
.PD
|
|
|
|
|
|
.SH "SEE ALSO"
|
|
.I "debuginfod-find(1)"
|
|
.I "sqlite3(1)"
|
|
.I \%https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/exporters/
|