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Date:      Fri, 22 Nov 2002 17:45:58 -0600
From:      "Brandon Bossenbroek" <bossenbr@hotmail.com>
To:        marcus@marcuscom.com
Cc:        freebsd-gnome@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Nautilus2 crashing
Message-ID:  <F77Kt8mNNgn6pbmKWD800015e89@hotmail.com>

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Well, the process ID changes when it crashes. At the moment, it says 
"Application 'nautilus' (process 97059) has crashed due to a fatal error. 
(Segmentation fault)" What's strange to me, is if I do a top, while I'm 
getting the message, nautilus is still running. It's only after I click 
"Close" that nautilus dies and restarts with a different PID.

-Brandon



>From: Joe Marcus Clarke <marcus@marcuscom.com>
>To: Brandon Bossenbroek <bossenbr@hotmail.com>
>CC: freebsd-gnome@FreeBSD.ORG
>Subject: Re: Nautilus2 crashing
>Date: 22 Nov 2002 16:26:28 -0500
>
>On Fri, 2002-11-22 at 16:21, Brandon Bossenbroek wrote:
> > Well, I doubt if this is going to help, but I did the:
> >
> > gdb /usr/X11R6/bin/nautilus
> >
> > typed run and got:
> >
> > (no debugging symbols found)...(no debugging symbols found)...
> > (no debugging symbols found)...(no debugging symbols found)...
> > (no debugging symbols found)...(no debugging symbols found)...
> > (no debugging symbols found)...(no debugging symbols found)...
> > (no debugging symbols found)...(no debugging symbols found)...
> >
> > a bunch of times and then when I did a "bt" I got no stack. Nautilus did
> > crash, though, and kept crashing.
>
>What is the process that actually crashing?  If you do a dmesg you
>should see a PID that exited on a signal 6, 10, or 11 (or something like
>that).  What's the name of the process?
>
>Joe
>
> >
> > -Brandon
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > >From: Joe Marcus Clarke <marcus@marcuscom.com>
> > >To: Brandon Bossenbroek <bossenbr@hotmail.com>
> > >CC: freebsd-gnome@FreeBSD.ORG
> > >Subject: Re: Nautilus2 crashing
> > >Date: 22 Nov 2002 16:07:28 -0500
> > >
> > >On Fri, 2002-11-22 at 15:52, Brandon Bossenbroek wrote:
> > > > Ok, there is no nautilus.core anywhere on the system. Strange. I did 
>the
> > > > portupgrade -ra, and I have gtk-1.2.10_9 and gtk-2.0.9 installed. 
>When
> > > > nautilus crashes and I shutdown X, I'm getting:
> > > >
> > > > (gnome-panel:96446): Gtk-CRITICAL **: file gtkwidget.c: line 2933
> > > > (gtk_widget_event): assertion `WIDGET_REALIZED_FOR_EVENT (widget,
> > >event)'
> > > > failed
> > > > (gnome-panel:96446): Gtk-CRITICAL **: file gtkwidget.c: line 2933
> > > > (gtk_widget_event): assertion `WIDGET_REALIZED_FOR_EVENT (widget,
> > >event)'
> > > > failed
> > > > (gnome-panel:96446): Gtk-CRITICAL **: file gtkwidget.c: line 2933
> > > > (gtk_widget_event): assertion `WIDGET_REALIZED_FOR_EVENT (widget,
> > >event)'
> > > > failed
> > >
> > >These messages are fine.  Plus, they're not coming from Nautilus.
> > >
> > > >
> > > > So, it seems like it does have something to do with gtk. Can gtk20 
>and
> > >gtk12
> > > > not play together?
> > >
> > >No, they can coexist just fine.  You'll have to start Nautilus from gdb
> > >if you're not getting a core file.  To do that, do:
> > >
> > >gdb /usr/X11R6/bin/nautilus
> > >
> > >Then, at the (gdb) prompt, type run.  When Nautilus crashes, you'll be
> > >back at the gdb prompt, and then you can type bt to get a backtrace.
> > >
> > >Joe
> > >
> > >--
> > >PGP Key : http://www.marcuscom.com/pgp.asc
> >
> >
> > _________________________________________________________________
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>--
>PGP Key : http://www.marcuscom.com/pgp.asc


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