See the crash report that is dumped on your disk. The directory you want is /var/crash/ and it will contain several files pointing you to the package it is about and what the crash is.
This directory holds system crash dumps. As of the date of this release of the standard, system crash dumps were not supported under
Linux but may be supported by other systems which may comply with the
FHS.
Ubuntu releases use this (optional) directory to dump crashes and the package that does that is called apport (and whoopsie). The link has a detailed description and also has a PDF that describes the crash report data format.
Depends on what you call "get rid". The ideal fix would be to check what is inside the reports, and try and find a fix for it. If the package it is about is unneeded or benign you could also purge it. Most times it is a core functionality though.
If you can not understand those crash reports most times you can google the error notice (there will always be one in there). Or drop a message in chat. Generally crashes are off topic on AU as those are bugs and would need to be reported (through this service ;) ).
You can pick any of these to remove the crash report up to actually removing the package (would be rather ironic if the error comes from apport itself):
sudo rm /var/crash/* will delete old crashes and stop informing you about them until some package crashes again.
You can stop the service with sudo systemctl disable apport (and enable it again with sudo systemctl enable apport)
If you do not want to see crash reports you can disable it by doing sudo vim /etc/default/apport and changingenabled=1 to enabled=0. (or sudo nano /etc/default/apport). Editing it in reverse will enable it again.
You can delete the service with sudo apt purge apport (and install it again with sudo apt install apport)
And there is also a desktop method (option "problem reporting":
See the crash report that is dumped on your disk. The directory you want is
/var/crash/
and it will contain several files pointing you to the package it is about and what the crash is.This directory is described as:
Ubuntu releases use this (optional) directory to dump crashes and the package that does that is called apport (and whoopsie). The link has a detailed description and also has a PDF that describes the crash report data format.
If you want really detailed reports on a crash install GDB: The GNU Project Debugger with
sudo apt-get install gdb
.Depends on what you call "get rid". The ideal fix would be to check what is inside the reports, and try and find a fix for it. If the package it is about is unneeded or benign you could also purge it. Most times it is a core functionality though.
If you can not understand those crash reports most times you can google the error notice (there will always be one in there). Or drop a message in chat. Generally crashes are off topic on AU as those are bugs and would need to be reported (through this service ;) ).
You can pick any of these to remove the crash report up to actually removing the package (would be rather ironic if the error comes from apport itself):
sudo rm /var/crash/*
will delete old crashes and stop informing you about them until some package crashes again.You can stop the service with
sudo systemctl disable apport
(and enable it again withsudo systemctl enable apport
)If you do not want to see crash reports you can disable it by doing
sudo vim /etc/default/apport
and changingenabled=1
toenabled=0
. (orsudo nano /etc/default/apport
). Editing it in reverse will enable it again.You can delete the service with
sudo apt purge apport
(and install it again withsudo apt install apport
)And there is also a desktop method (option "problem reporting":
how to read and use crash reports? has some interesting answers. It has an example crash report and a method to retrace crashes.
Apport is an ubuntu functionality which reports errors in ubuntu.
it is non-critical and can be safely disabled without any adverse effects.
it's purpose is to aid Ubuntu devs in identifing issues as they occur on user's PCs
How to disable apport:
you must edit a file:
and replace the
1
with a0
like so :
then Ctrl+X and Y to save.
If you don't want to reboot to apply you can disable it on the spot:
You may also completely uninstall apport:
After that you will no longer see this window.
More usefull information can be found here :https://www.linuxbabe.com/ubuntu/disable-apport-error-reporting-ubuntu-16-04-lts
What I suggest is that you delete these crash reports. Open a terminal and use the following command: