From owner-freebsd-mozilla@FreeBSD.ORG Tue Jul 1 18:40:46 2003 Return-Path: Delivered-To: freebsd-mozilla@freebsd.org Received: from mx1.FreeBSD.org (mx1.freebsd.org [216.136.204.125]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id A7F5E37B401 for ; Tue, 1 Jul 2003 18:40:46 -0700 (PDT) Received: from sc2k-ntrdcss3.nsc.com (mail2.nsc.com [12.151.32.16]) by mx1.FreeBSD.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id CABB243FF7 for ; Tue, 1 Jul 2003 18:40:45 -0700 (PDT) (envelope-from Randy.Sato@nsc.com) Received: from 139.187.179.130 by SC2k-NTRDCSS2.nsc.com with ESMTP (-Hi- (MMS v5.5.0)); Tue, 01 Jul 2003 18:40:38 -0700 Received: from nastro.nsc.com by scmh1.nsc.com with ESMTP for freebsd-mozilla@freebsd.org; Tue, 1 Jul 2003 18:40:37 -0700 Received: from nastro.nsc.com (dhcp1 [172.18.5.184]) by nastro.nsc.com ( 8.12.5+Sun/8.12.5) with ESMTP id h621ebP3007944 for ; Tue, 1 Jul 2003 18:40:37 -0700 (PDT) Message-ID: <3F023863.30809@nastro.nsc.com> Date: Tue, 01 Jul 2003 18:41:55 -0700 From: "Randy Sato" User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X Mach-O; en-US; rv: 1.4b) Gecko/20030602 Thunderbird/0.1a X-Accept-Language: en-us, en To: freebsd-mozilla@freebsd.org MIME-Version: 1.0 X-WSS-ID: 131CE79C608581-01-01 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Subject: mozilla port on alpha X-BeenThere: freebsd-mozilla@freebsd.org X-Mailman-Version: 2.1.1 Precedence: list List-Id: Mozilla browser issues List-Unsubscribe: , List-Archive: List-Post: List-Help: List-Subscribe: , X-List-Received-Date: Wed, 02 Jul 2003 01:40:46 -0000 I am new to freebsd. I just moved from RH 7.1 to freebsd 5.1 release and have been trying to compile various mozillas from the ports. They all seem to fail at about the same place. I am guessing that the problem has something to do with transformiix. I did have mozilla 1.4 running on the same machine when it was RH. Does anyone have something newer then mozilla 1.3.1 running on alpha? If not is anybody looking at the problem? Is there a secret to getting past regchrome core dumps? Thanks, Randy