gnucash currently has an RC bug on alpha; the program essentially no workie. Upstream does not have access to an alpha, nor do I, and mail to debian-alpha has not as yet turned up anyone who says "hey, here's an alpha with the build dependencies which you can debug on", nor has it turned up anyone who wanted to work on the bug themselves. Last I checked, there is no developer-accessible alpha machine available.
Steve Langasek was willing to try and get a more useful backtrace by recompiling a key library, and I don't know whether he succeeded in this or not. If alpha were not a release candidate, the bug would be important instead of serious, and I would just move on and not worry further. But alpha is a release candidate, which means I need to take one of three courses. Which should I take? 1: Wait for debian-alpha to make a machine available or fix the bug themselves, which has an unbounded delay; 2: Declare in the package file that alpha is not supported, and downgrade the bug to wishlist; 3: Leave the bug open and RC, and have gnucash excluded from the next Debian release. Thomas -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]