I am using Unix OpenServer Release 5.
When a run a application with user different to "Superuser" the application give me the following error:
"Memory Fault - Core Dump". What's that mean?
Thank you in advance.
Roberto Veras. (1 Reply)
We are running a SQR program on Unix Platform with Oracle RDBMS.
It's an interfacing program to integrate data from foreign sites to
PeopleSoft database, using a flat file input.
After many hours of processing, the program stops with a coredump error (memory fault). With top command we noticed... (1 Reply)
Dear All,
I made a program which do some simple jobs like reading data from other process's shared memory and writing messages to the queues of other process.
what happens is my program works fine and do all the task as expected but then then program ends it give Memory fault(coredump). I... (0 Replies)
Hi i have this code that used to wrok fine in unix mp-ras.
After the migration to linux suse i recompiled the script and now when it is executed i get a Memory fault (coredump) message.
Does anybody knows why' what should I change?
tks
SCRIPT
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/types.h>... (1 Reply)
We have migrated our application from HP UX to linux. The code is in 4gl and after migration it has started giving Memory fault while running a batch job. The trace shows segmentation fault after a series of recvfrom and sendto(DB read)
sigsegv segmentation fault @ 0 0
killed by SIGSEGV
The... (2 Replies)
I am not sure where to post this so i will put it in the newbie section.
I have set up a bog standard debain 6, LAMP environment in the cloud.
The specs
1 core at 2GH
2.5gb Memory
running Jommla, with about 1.6K visitors a day.
I am using AppFirst (appfirst.com) to monitor the... (2 Replies)
I am writing a program that copies a program and prints the program with a line count.
this is the program I wrote:
#include <stdio.h>
main()
{
int c;
int nl_cnt = 0;
while((c = getchar()) != EOF){
if(c = '\n'){
nl_cnt++;... (3 Replies)
Hi,
In my application we have one job which is used to process the files. But that job is failing with memory fault while processing a file or while shutting down the job. Sometime it generates the coredump and sometimes not. When I analysed the core dump I got below code snippet where it... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: shilpa_20
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
whereis
whereis(1B) SunOS/BSD Compatibility Package Commands whereis(1B)NAME
whereis - locate the binary, source, and manual page files for a command
SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/whereis [-bmsu] [-BMS directory... -f] filename...
DESCRIPTION
The whereis utility locates source/binary and manuals sections for specified files. The supplied names are first stripped of leading path-
name components and any (single) trailing extension of the form .ext, for example, .c. Prefixes of s. resulting from use of source code
control are also dealt with. whereis then attempts to locate the desired program in a list of standard places:
etc
/sbin
/usr/bin
/usr/ccs/bin
/usr/ccs/lib
/usr/lang
/usr/lbin
/usr/lib
/usr/sbin
/usr/ucb
/usr/ucblib
/usr/ucbinclude
/usr/games
/usr/local
/usr/local/bin
/usr/new
/usr/old
/usr/hosts
/usr/include
/usr/etc
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-b Searches only for binaries.
-B Changes or otherwise limits the places where whereis searches for binaries.
-f Terminates the last directory list and signals the start of file names, and must be used when any of the -B, -M, or -S options are
used.
-m Searches only for manual sections.
-M Changes or otherwise limits the places where whereis searches for manual sections.
-s Searches only for sources.
-S Changes or otherwise limit the places where whereis searches for sources.
-u Searches for unusual entries. A file is said to be unusual if it does not have one entry of each requested type. Thus `whereis -m -u
*' asks for those files in the current directory which have no documentation.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Finding files
Find all files in /usr/bin which are not documented in /usr/share/man/man1 with source in /usr/src/cmd:
example% cd /usr/ucb
example% whereis -u -M /usr/share/man/man1 -S /usr/src/cmd -f *
FILES
o /usr/src/*
o /usr/{doc,man}/*
o /etc, /usr/{lib,bin,ucb,old,new,local}
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Availability |SUNWscpu |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO chdir(2), attributes(5)BUGS
Since whereis uses chdir(2) to run faster, pathnames given with the -M, -S, or -B must be full; that is, they must begin with a `/'.
SunOS 5.11 10 Jan 2000 whereis(1B)