If your iPhone crashes randomly twice a week or more, you likely have a hardware problem. If it happens once a month, it’s probably a software bug. Why You Can’t Read the Raw Log Navigate to Settings > Privacy & Security > Analytics & Improvements > Analytics Data and search for a file starting with panic-full . Open it.
Have a panic log you can’t crack? Drop the PanicString in the comments—I’ll translate it for you. Iphone iDevice Panic Log Analyzer
Today, we’re looking at the —a tool (and methodology) that turns gibberish into a specific repair diagnosis. What is a Kernel Panic (on an iPhone)? In simple terms, a kernel panic is iOS’s version of a Blue Screen of Death. When the operating system detects an unrecoverable error (usually trying to read bad data from a hardware component), it crashes, reboots, and writes a "panic log" to memory. If your iPhone crashes randomly twice a week
You’ll see hex dumps, register states, and thread backtraces. It looks like a robot having a stroke. But we only care about one specific line: Open it
If you’ve ever woken up to an iPhone showing the “Apple logo” rebooting rather than your Lock Screen, you’ve experienced a kernel panic .