I've a problem I THINK might be a dual-core issue. I've read the "buffer 
overrun" threads.

Environment: A new dual-core 2 gig machine at a client site. Runs Win2K 
SP4, and VFP9 SP1.

I converted an application from VFP tables to mySQL, and have a VFP utility 
that loads the mySQL tables from the VFP tables to get things started. Uses 
SQL passthough. Uses the mySQL ODBC 3.51 driver.

I have no problems at all on my development machine; there are no problems 
if I run the upload on another machine on the network at the client site.

However, on the dual-core machine, the SQL INSERTs that I use to load the 
tables fail sometimes with SQL SYNTAX errors. mySQL complains about there 
being an error in the SQL statement, and the error message it sends back 
shows a corrupted INSERT statement. It does not happen on the same record 
each time - it is random. And if I simply re-issue the INSERT, it works. I 
modified the program to do retries, and I can upload the tables this way. 
On a 15000 record table, I might get 30 errors that work when retried.

I did some other tests - I created a remote view, and then updated the 
table this way - no problems - perhaps VFP is doing retries.

I am limiting memory via SYS(3050) to around 24 meg, just as a test.

On ONE occasion I got the dreaded "Buffer overrun" message from the C 
library. I also got this message once on my home machine. However, both 
machines are running SP1, which supposedly fixes this error.

Any thoughts? Is it possible to disable part of a dual-core machine via the 
BIOS? (This is an ACER machine, which I think uses an AMD chip set). That 
would be the proof.

Thoughts, anyone? I have no idea on how to solve this one.

Many thanks

Larry Bradley
Orleans (Ottawa), Ontario, CANADA 



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