Indeed:

$ sudo mv /usr/lib/serna/plugins/pyplugin  /usr/lib/serna/plugins/pyplugin.old
$ serna

This did the trick ! I could register (someone at syntext should even
be able to check that). and I was able to create a C++ sample (will
lots of error about python missing plugins of course)

At least this indicate the conflict with current python version.

On Mon, Jan 25, 2010 at 12:16 PM, Andrew Sichevoi <kon...@syntext.com> wrote:
> Hello,
> �...@mathie: please try to move temporarily
> out /usr/lib/serna/plugins/pyplugin/ directory somewhere and try to run
> Serna again.
>                   this should show if the problem is in python or not.
> Regards,
> On Mon, Jan 25, 2010 at 1:45 PM, Joachim Breitner <nome...@debian.org>
> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Mathie,
>>
>> wow, that was a fast bug report, serna was just now accepted into the
>> archive. I assume your crash occurs at the very first start, without an
>> existing ~/.serna-free-* directory?
>>
>> If it’s possible for you, can you upgrade python to the version in
>> unstable and try again?
>>
>> It seems not to be reproducible on my unstable machine. Andrew, or
>> anyone else on the serna-developers list, any obvious idea what might be
>> the cause?
>>
>> Greetings,
>> Joachim
>>
>> Am Montag, den 25.01.2010, 10:24 +0100 schrieb Mathieu Malaterre:
>> > Package: serna
>> > Version: 0.svn235-1
>> > Severity: normal
>> >
>> >
>> > Hi,
>> >
>> > I cannot start serna on my lenny system:
>> >
>> > $ strace serna
>> > ...
>> > getdents(19, [3]    32117 segmentation fault  strace serna
>> >
>> > Here is the backtrace:
>> > Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
>
>
> --
> Andrew Sichevoi (http://thekondor.net)
> true perfection has to be imperfect
>



-- 
Mathieu



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