Hello. I recently upgraded to libc6 (dev,dbg, pic, etc) using the package from the "hamm" directory. (I realize this is VERY unstable stuff - I'm just glutton for punishment :-) Everything appears to be working well, although I have hit two minor snags.
The first is that the new version of "amd" (am-utils-6.0a5) won't compile with libc6, but it will with libc5. No big deal - just thought I'd mention it. The other is that I noticed in the large system I'm developing, test runs where I would generally get core dumps, I'm getting infinite hangs. Looking into this a little further, I developed the following test case: [ begin included source ] #include <signal.h> #include <stdlib.h> int flag; void catch_core_dumps( int ){ if( flag == 1){ exit(-1); } else if ( flag == 2 ){ signal( SIGSEGV, SIG_DFL ); } } int main( int argc, char *argv[] ){ flag = argc; signal( SIGSEGV, catch_core_dumps ); int *foo = (int *)0; *foo = 1; } [ end included source ] Basically, when you run this program, depending on the number of arguments you get it, it does different things. No arguments, it calls exit. Good enough. One argument, it resets the signal handler, and a core dump is generated. Again, good enough. More than one argument, under libc5 and solaris, a core dump is generated. Under libc6, I get an infinite hang. Is this because doing nothing is undefined, or is it a bug. Anyone running glibc-2.0.4 - if so, does it still do this? I.e. is this worth submitting as a bug report? Thanks, Dale -- +-------------------- finger for pgp public key ---------------------+ | Dale E. Martin | University of Cincinnati Savant Research Laboratory | | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.ececs.uc.edu/~dmartin | +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .