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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Free() corrupted unsorted chunks Post 302843437 by jim mcnamara on Tuesday 13th of August 2013 08:19:41 AM
Old 08-13-2013
Solaris has a high performance malloc library for threading. It's behavior may be different enough from Linux, such that the the problem did not occur on Solaris, but does show up in Linux.

But that is grabbing at straws.

I would suspect that while porting someone altered code. Is this a verbatim copy of the Solaris code? i.e., do checksums match? If you want to fix this mess, don't simply say 'yes', do a checksum.

If checksums match for the code, then grep the make files for the word malloc to see if the library (specifically Solaris (lib)mtmalloc) I mentioned are being used. If there is a Linux version of it with the same name it probably has nothing in common with Solaris libmtmalloc. Do not use it. RHEL links threaded Pro*C just fine normally.
 

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ARCHCODE(3PVM)							  PVM Version 3.4						    ARCHCODE(3PVM)

NAME
pvm_archcode - Returns the data representation code for a PVM architecture name. SYNOPSIS
C int cod = pvm_archcode( char *arch ) Fortran call pvmfarchcode( arch, cod ) PARAMETERS
arch Character string containing the architecture name. cod Integer returning architecture code. DESCRIPTION
The routine pvm_archcode returns an integer given an architecture name. The code returned identifies machines with compatible binary data formats. For example, SUN4 and RS6K have the same code, while ALPHA has a different one (because a few datatypes have different sizes). This lets you know when you can get away with using PvmDataRaw instead of PvmDataDefault encoding to pass messages between tasks on two machines. Naturally, you shouldn't assume the values returned by pvm_archcode are etched in stone; the numbers have no intrinsic meaning except that if two different arch names map to the same value then they're compatible. This routine is actually obsolete in the sense that the architecture codes returned are already available in the hi_dsig field of the pvmhostinfo structure returned by pvm_config(), as shown in the below example. The routine is maintained for backwards compatibility only. EXAMPLES
C: struct pvmhostinfo *hip; int i; pvm_config((int *)0, (int *)0, &hip); i = pvm_archcode(hip[0].hi_arch); /* or you could just do: i = hip[0].hi_dsig; */ Fortran: CALL PVMFARCHCODE( 'RS6K', k ) ERRORS
On success, pvm_archcode returns a positive integer data signature. The following error conditions can be returned as well: PvmBadParam giving an invalid architecture name. PvmNotFound there is no host with the given architecture name in the current virtual machine configuration. PvmSysErr pvmd not responding. SEE ALSO
pvm_config(3PVM), pvm_initsend(3PVM), pvm_notify(3PVM), pvm_tasks(3PVM), pvm_tidtohost(3PVM) 15 March, 1994 ARCHCODE(3PVM)
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