I am writing a program that copies a program and prints the program with a line count.
this is the program I wrote:
I am testing the program by doing a line count for Hello World.
both programs compile with gcc. My program that copies and counts lines is line_number.c and is compiled as line_number. I have to use ./ or my terminal can't find the file.
To read the hello world program I type at the command line:
./line_number < hello.c
and I get the following error message: Memory fault(coredump)
I am new to Unix and not sure how to fix this. Thanks for any help!
Cal State Northridge, Northridge(California), Dr, Gabrovsky, Comp322
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 All
Can anybody help me?
When ever am trying to run topas system gives me an error Segmentation fault(coredump)
does anybody ahve solution for this? (4 Replies)
Hey guys,
I am new to the Linux world and have a question to post.
When I ssh from a HP-UX machine to a ubuntu machine I get the following error message
Memory fault(coredump)
i.e. ssh 192.168.1.3
I get this message as shown below
Memory fault(coredump)
Can someone please explain... (2 Replies)
Getting memory fault (coredump) and segmentation fault(coredump)
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Regards
Eswar (2 Replies)
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Segmentation Fault(coredump)
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Hi,
Actually I am facing one issue while using the getenv() in the C/C++ program.
I want to take the file path from environment variables and if am not defining the environment path, its showing the message like this…!
Memory fault(coredump)
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i have few log files that are input to my perl script...
i am executing the script as below
cat RTR*.log | test.pl
and getting the following error
-ksh: 25014: Memory fault(coredump)
cat: write error: Connection reset by peer
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Hi Experts,
While running a command, i saw this error below
# ls -lrt
total 74008
-rw-r--r-- 1 rr57104 edcfes 37889134 May 16 12:41 LGTOnw.clnt.7.4.2.0.bff.tar.gz
drwxr-xr-x 2 root system 256 May 18 12:42 lost+found
# gunzip LGTOnw.clnt.7.4.2.0.bff.tar.gz
Memory fault(coredump)
... (2 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 SUSE
edata
END(3) Linux Programmer's Manual END(3)NAME
etext, edata, end - end of program segments
SYNOPSIS
extern etext;
extern edata;
extern end;
DESCRIPTION
The addresses of these symbols indicate the end of various program segments:
etext This is the first address past the end of the text segment (the program code).
edata This is the first address past the end of the initialized data segment.
end This is the first address past the end of the uninitialized data segment (also known as the BSS segment).
CONFORMING TO
Although these symbols have long been provided on most Unix systems, they are not standardized; use with caution.
NOTES
The program must explicitly declare these symbols; they are not defined in any header file.
On some systems the names of these symbols are preceded by underscores, thus: _etext, _edata, and _end. These symbols are also defined for
programs compiled on Linux.
At the start of program execution, the program break will be somewhere near &end (perhaps at the start of the following page). However,
the break will change as memory is allocated via brk(2) or malloc(3). Use sbrk(2) with an argument of zero to find the current value of
the program break.
EXAMPLE
When run, the program below produces output such as the following:
$ ./a.out
First address past:
program text (etext) 0x8048568
initialized data (edata) 0x804a01c
uninitialized data (end) 0x804a024
Program source
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
extern char etext, edata, end; /* The symbols must have some type,
or "gcc -Wall" complains */
int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
printf("First address past:
");
printf(" program text (etext) %10p
", &etext);
printf(" initialized data (edata) %10p
", &edata);
printf(" uninitialized data (end) %10p
", &end);
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
SEE ALSO objdump(1), readelf(1), sbrk(2), elf(5)COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.25 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can
be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
GNU 2008-07-17 END(3)