The Crashdump Viewer is an HTML based tool for browsing Erlang crashdumps. Crashdump Viewer runs under the WebTool application.
The easiest way to start Crashdump Viewer is to use the
provided shell script named
The default browser is Internet Explorer on Windows, open on Mac OS X,
or else Firefox. To use another browser, give the browser's start command
as the second argument to
Under Windows the batch file
It is also possible to start the Crashdump Viewer from within
an erlang node by calling
Point your web browser to the address displayed, and you should now see the start page of WebTool. At the top of the page, you will see a link to "CrashDumpViewer". Click this link to get to the start page for Crashdump Viewer. (Note that if webtool is on localhost, you must configure your web browser to have direct connection to the internet, or you must set no proxy for localhost.)
From the start page of Crashdump Viewer, push the "Load
Crashdump" button to load a crashdump into the tool. Then enter
the filename of the crashdump in the entry field and push the
"Ok" button. This will bring you to the General Information
page, i.e. the same page as the
Crashdumps generated by OTP R9C and later are loaded directly
into the Crashdump Viewer, while dumps from earlier releases first
are translated by the Crashdump Translater. The Crashdump
Translater creates a new file with the same name as the original
crashdump, but with the extension
The lefthand frame contains a menu. Menu folders can be expanded and collapsed by clicking the folder picture. When a menu item is clicked, the item information is shown in the big information frame.
The filename frame above the information frame shows the full name of the currently viewed Erlang crashdump.
To load a new crashdump, click the "Load New Crashdump" button in the menu frame.
The various information shown in the information frame will contain links to process identifiers (PIDs) and port identifiers. Clicking one of these links will take you to the detailed information page for the process or port in question. Use the "Back" button in your browser to get back to the startingpoint. If the process or port resided on a remote node, there will be no information available. Clicking the link will then take you to the information about the remote node.
Further help on how to use the Crashdump Viewer tool can be found in the tool's menu under 'Documentation':
'Crashdump Viewer help' is a short document describing each information page and any additional information that might occur, compared to the raw dump described in 'How to interpret Erlang crashdumps'.
'How to interpret Erlang crashdumps' is a document from the Erlang runtime system describing details in the raw crashdumps. Here you will also find information about each single field in the different information pages. This document can also be found directly in the OTP online documentation, via the Erlang runtime system user's guide.