From: <se...@ex...> - 2004-06-22 17:39:20
|
Hi everybody, I want to debug uml-skas cause I am experiencing mysterious crashes from time to time. So I compiled uml with symbols and started it under gdb. During the boot process alot of SIGSEGV happen , why ? Is this normal or a problem ? Or did I made sometinng wrong ? Thank you sebastian ------------------------------------------- Partition check: ubda: unknown partition table ubdb: unknown partition table ubdc: unknown partition table Initializing stdio console driver Netdevice 0 : TUN/TAP backend - IP = xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx NET4: Linux TCP/IP 1.0 for NET4.0 IP Protocols: ICMP, UDP, TCP IP: routing cache hash table of 512 buckets, 4Kbytes TCP: Hash tables configured (established 4096 bind 8192) NET4: Unix domain sockets 1.0/SMP for Linux NET4.0. reiserfs: found format "3.6" with standard journal Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0xa006bc9e in read_bitmaps (s=0xa01f7800) at string.h:411 411 string.h: No such file or directory. in string.h (gdb) c Continuing. Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0xa007e655 in __constant_c_and_count_memset (s=0xa4802000, pattern=0, count=17529) at string.h:485 485 string.h: No such file or directory. in string.h (gdb) c Continuing. Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0xa0078cd3 in reiserfs_allocate_list_bitmaps (p_s_sb=0xa01f7800, jb_array=0xa48020b4, bmap_nr=0) at string.h:411 411 in string.h (gdb) c Continuing. Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0xa0078cd3 in reiserfs_allocate_list_bitmaps (p_s_sb=0xa01f7800, jb_array=0xa48020b4, bmap_nr=0) at string.h:411 411 in string.h (gdb) c Continuing. Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0xa0078cd3 in reiserfs_allocate_list_bitmaps (p_s_sb=0xa01f7800, jb_array=0xa48020b4, bmap_nr=0) at string.h:411 411 in string.h (gdb) c Continuing. Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0xa0078cd3 in reiserfs_allocate_list_bitmaps (p_s_sb=0xa01f7800, jb_array=0xa48020b4, bmap_nr=0) at string.h:411 411 in string.h |