Lines Matching refs:core

424 >>4      byte               33             \b, core @ L1
425 >>4 byte 34 \b, core @ L2
443 >>4 byte 161 \b, core scalable @ L1
444 >>4 byte 162 \b, core scalable @ L2
445 >>4 byte 163 \b, core scalable @ L3
450 >>4 byte 193 \b, advanced core @ L1
451 >>4 byte 194 \b, advanced core @ L2
459 >>4 byte 229 \b, core studio @ L1
460 >>4 byte 230 \b, core studio @ L2
461 >>4 byte 231 \b, core studio @ L3
462 >>4 byte 232 \b, core studio @ L4
2570 # core file for 3b2
2571 0 string \000\004\036\212\200 3b2 core file
4529 0 belong 0605 Convex SOFF core
5156 # Basic recognition of Digital UNIX core dumps - Mike Bremford <mike@opac.bl.uk>
5160 # UNIX core dump file may produce too many false hits, so we include one
5164 0 string Core\001 Alpha COFF format core dump (Digital UNIX)
5166 0 string Core\002 Alpha COFF format core dump (Digital UNIX)
5443 # Modified by (2): Peter Tobias <tobias@server.et-inf.fho-emden.de> (core support)
5444 # Modified by (3): Christian 'Dr. Disk' Hechelmann <drdisk@ds9.au.s.shuttle.de> (fix of core suppor…
5457 >16 leshort 4 core file
8078 # XXX gross hack to identify core files
8086 7 string \357\020\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0\0 FreeBSD/i386 a.out core file
9330 0 long 0x015821a6 HP core file
9438 # HP-UX 10.20 core file format from /usr/include/sys/core.h
9443 # CORE_PROC, which contains the signal number that caused the core dump
9444 # CORE_FORMAT, which contains the version of the core file format (== 1)
9445 # The only observed order in real core files is KERNEL, EXEC, FORMAT, PROC
9457 >>>>>>>>0xB4 belong 4 core file
9476 >>>>>>>>0xB4 belong 4 core file
9498 >>>>>>>>0xB4 belong 4 core file
9520 >>>>>>>>0xB4 belong 4 core file
9542 >>>>>>>>0xB4 belong 4 core file
9563 >>>>>>>>0xB4 belong 4 core file
9674 4 belong &0x0feeddb0 AIX core file
11171 # core dump file, from Bill Reynolds <bill@goshawk.lanl.gov>
11172 216 lelong 0421 Linux/i386 core file
11786 >12 belong 4 core
13963 0 belong&0377777777 041400507 a.out NetBSD/i386 core
13985 0 belong&0377777777 041600507 a.out NetBSD/m68k core
14007 0 belong&0377777777 042000507 a.out NetBSD/m68k4k core
14029 0 belong&0377777777 042200507 a.out NetBSD/ns32532 core
14033 0 belong&0377777777 045200507 a.out NetBSD/powerpc core
14054 0 belong&0377777777 042400507 a.out NetBSD/sparc core
14076 0 belong&0377777777 042600507 a.out NetBSD/pmax core
14098 0 belong&0377777777 043000507 a.out NetBSD/vax 1k core
14120 0 belong&0377777777 045400507 a.out NetBSD/vax 4k core
14130 0 belong&0377777777 043200507 a.out NetBSD/alpha core
14152 0 belong&0377777777 043400507 a.out NetBSD/mips core
14174 # NetBSD/arm26 has always used ELF objects, but it shares a core file
14176 0 belong&0377777777 043600507 a.out NetBSD/arm core
14180 # Kernel core dump format
14181 0 belong&0x0000ffff 0x00008fca NetBSD kernel core file
14361 >>16 leshort 4 core file
14392 >>16 beshort 4 core file,
15885 # core files
15887 # 32bit core file
15888 0 belong 0xdeadadb0 IRIX core dump
15891 # 64bit core file
15892 0 belong 0xdeadad40 IRIX 64-bit core dump
15895 # N32bit core file
15896 0 belong 0xbabec0bb IRIX N32 core dump
16774 # Core files. "SPARC 4.x BCP" means "core file from a SunOS 4.x SPARC
16777 0 belong 0x080456 SunOS core file
17763 596 string \130\337\377\377 Ultrix core file
18516 0 string core core file (Xenix)