Jay Anderson <horndud...@gmail.com> writes: > On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 1:41 AM, David Kastrup <d...@gnu.org> wrote: >> Can you use git bisect for identifying the commit where things go wrong >> for you? > > Git bisect results: > 20670d51f8d97fd390210dd239b3b2427f071e7c is the first bad commit > commit 20670d51f8d97fd390210dd239b3b2427f071e7c > Author: Mike Solomon <m...@apollinemike.com> > Date: Fri Sep 30 08:16:07 2011 +0200 > > It looks like this was reverted and a revised version was committed > the next day: 4f49b000d6e257724e311b406e2346b8388c1f0e. I've verified > that the commit right before this doesn't cause a segfault and this > one does. The only other information I have that's relevant is that > I've only seen this segfault happen on my 64-bit OS and not 32-bit.
Grob::get_vertical_axis_group is not protected against the case where g has an axis group interface but no Y_AXIs parent. The second if in Grob::vertical_less has a test that can obviously not be true. Either don't look like 64bit problems. Perhaps something needs a live-check? -- David Kastrup _______________________________________________ lilypond-devel mailing list lilypond-devel@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel