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Full Discussion: Multithreading in Pro*C
Top Forums Programming Multithreading in Pro*C Post 6635 by shaik786 on Sunday 9th of September 2001 04:17:12 AM
Old 09-09-2001
Question Multithreading in Pro*C

Smilie

Hi!

I have created a Multhreaded Application in Pro*C (using pthreads) with about 5 Threads running simultaneously. The Application is basically to Update a Centralized Table in Oracle, which updates different rows in the Table (Each Thread updates different rows!). The problem is that it gets compiled and when I execute, I get an error.

This happens like this ...

void *thread_1(void *nothing)
{
EXEC SQL BEGIN DECLARE SECTION;
.
.
.
EXEC SQL END DECLARE SECTION;

EXEC SQL CONTEXT USE :ctx0;
EXEC SQL WHENEVER SQLERROR DO sql_error();
printf(" In Here\n");
EXEC SQL CONNECT : uid IDENTIFIED BY : pwd;
printf(" Out Here\n");


.
.
.
}


The "In Here" is displayed on the Screen, but "Out Here" message is never shown on screen, but instead, I get the message:


In Here
Stack overflow: pid 17041, proc UPDATE, addr 0x140065ff0, pc 0x1200b961c
Memory fault(coredump)


The UID/PWD is right. But when I reduse some "EXEC SQL ..." statements from the function, the program works perfecty fine!

Could someone tell me what exactly is the error and how can it be avoided.

Thanks and Regards
SHAIK

Last edited by shaik786; 09-09-2001 at 08:25 AM..
shaik786
 

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gcore(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  gcore(1)

NAME
gcore -- get core images of running processes SYNOPSIS
gcore [-s] [-v] [-b size] [-o path | -c pathformat] pid DESCRIPTION
The gcore program creates a core file image of the process specified by pid. The resulting core file can be used with a debugger, e.g. lldb(1), to examine the state of the process. The following options are available: -s Suspend the process while the core file is captured. -v Report progress on the dump as it proceeds. -b size Limit the size of the core file to size MiBytes. The following options control the name of the core file: -o path Write the core file to path. -c pathformat Write the core file to pathformat. The pathformat string is treated as a pathname that may contain various special characters which cause the interpolation of strings representing specific attributes of the process into the name. Each special character is introduced by the % character. The format characters and their meanings are: N The name of the program being dumped, as reported by ps(1). U The uid of the process being dumped, converted to a string. P The pid of the process being dumped, converted to a string. T The time when the core file was taken, converted to ISO 8601 format. % Output a percent character. The default file name used by gcore is %N-%P-%T. By default, the core file will be written to a directory whose name is determined from the kern.corefile MIB. This can be printed or modified using sysctl(8). The directory where the core file is to be written must be accessible to the owner of the target process. gcore will not overwrite an existing file, nor will it create missing directories in the path. EXIT_STATUS The gcore utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. FILES
/cores/%N-%P-%T default pathname for the corefile. BUGS
With the -b flag, gcore writes out as much data as it can up to the specified limit, even if that results in an incomplete core image. Such a partial core dump may confuse subsequent programs that attempt to parse the contents of such files. SEE ALSO
lldb(1), core(5), Mach-O(5), sysctl(8), sudo(8). Darwin May 31, 2019 Darwin
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