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 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org