Is there an easy way to trigger the dump without much configuration? On what platform are you - I know prayer used to have some fatal alignment/cast issues on sparc64...
On 29 Jun 2011 02:17, "Eric Schnoebelen" <
eric%cirr.com@localhost> wrote:
>
> David Brownlee writes:
> - Does this help? :)
>
> Yes, it's being very helpful. Now if I can just figure out a
> segmentation fault while its starting up, we'll all be happy.
>
> - ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> - From: "David Brownlee" <
abs%netbsd.org@localhost>
> - Date: 26 Jun 2011 20:14
> - Subject: Re: mail/prayer - (Was: non-DESTDIR status: 54 to go)
> - To: "Francois Tigeot" <
ftigeot%wolfpond.org@localhost>
> -
> - On 26 June 2011 12:16, Francois Tigeot <
ftigeot%wolfpond.org@localhost> wrote:
> - > On Sun, Jun 26, 2011 at 11:33:38AM +0200, Thomas Klausner wrote:
> - >> Please note that obache has a separate thread suggesting the removal
> - >> of a few of these packages.
> - >>
> - >> prayer-1.3.2nb1
> - >
> - > I somehow missed the thread but I hope prayer will be left alone; it is
> - > very much used around here.
> -
> - I've put a test updated prayer package at:
> -
ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/misc/abs/prayer-1.3.3-pkgsrc.tbz
> - I've not used prayer in... a very long time - is anyone able to test
> - the above package?
> -
> - Thanks
> - On 27 Jun 2011 02:31, "Eric Schnoebelen" <
eric%cirr.com@localhost> wrote:
> - >
> - > Francois Tigeot writes:
> - > - On Sun, Jun 26, 2011 at 11:33:38AM +0200, Thomas Klausner wrote:
> - > - > Please note that obache has a separate thread suggesting the removal
> - > - > of a few of these packages.
> - > - >
> - > - > prayer-1.3.2nb1
> - > -
> - > - I somehow missed the thread but I hope prayer will be left alone; it is
> - > - very much used around here.
> - >
> - > This message/thread is about the number/list of packages still
> - > needing user-destdir support.
> - >
> - > I'm about to take a look at mail/prayer now.
>
> --
> Eric Schnoebelen
eric%cirr.com@localhost http://www.cirr.com> Friendships are fragile things, and require as much handling as
> any other fragile and precious thing. -Randolph S. Bourne