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Date:      Sat, 5 Jun 2004 15:21:29 -0400 (EDT)
From:      Daniel Eischen <eischen@vigrid.com>
To:        Sean McNeil <sean@mcneil.com>
Cc:        freebsd-threads@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: All my amd64 problems appear to be KSE
Message-ID:  <Pine.GSO.4.10.10406051518530.29855-100000@pcnet5.pcnet.com>
In-Reply-To: <1086458607.18813.37.camel@server.mcneil.com>

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On Sat, 5 Jun 2004, Sean McNeil wrote:

> On Sat, 2004-06-05 at 09:57, Daniel Eischen wrote:
> > On Sat, 5 Jun 2004, Sean McNeil wrote:
> > 
> > > With regards to gnome-specific or if KDE has the same issue, I cannot
> > > answer.  I do not use KDE.  It would appear to be gnome-specific
> > > (gtk-specific?).  Emacs has never given me any problems, but neither has
> > 
> > That includes glib also, right?
> 
> right.
> 
> > > nautilus, the panel, or a number of other gnome applications.
> > > 
> > > For the moment, I highly suspect this is a pthread/readline interaction
> > > causing the crashes.
> > 
> > Why do you suspect that?
> 
> I suspect libreadline because the only time I get a crash is when I type
> in a character to an application or when it is starting up (resize?). 
> Sorry, it just occurred to me that this might be useful information.
> 
> Looking at my bash problem, I can see there is an issue with any program
> that might get a signal and then want to call an older installed handler
> as
> 
> sa_handler(sig)
> 
> What happens is that sigaction is called and returns a context with the
> _thr_sig_handler function.  So the new signal handler is called and then
> it in turn wants to call the old one.  But the old handler isn't called
> as a sigaction.
> 
> I suppose it is really libreadline at fault here and it should check
> SA_SIGINFO.  Do you think there might be others that don't check either?

I don't know; perhaps.

> Why doesn't this show an issue in i386?  Is it just luck that info has
> been null and not caused a bad dereference?

When I write signal handlers, I usually check info and ucp to
make sure they are not null before using them.  Actually, I
rarely use them anyways so it doesn't matter if they are null
or not.

-- 
Dan Eischen



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