On Tue, 2002-09-03 at 06:25, Peter Keller wrote:
Hi,
I am having trouble with the current version of ZWiki. ZWiki's author is puzzled, and suggested that I try one of the Zope lists. I set up a ZCatalog on a ZWiki folder as described at http://zwiki.org/HowToInstallAZwikiCatalog
The following DTML from ZWiki's RecentChanges:
<dtml-in Catalog sort=lastEditTime reverse>
causes a python core file to be produced, and with stupid log enabled I get this message:
2002-09-02T09:57:30 ERROR(200) zdaemon zdaemon: Mon Sep 2 10:57:30 2002: Aiieee! 322190 exited with error code: 136
The Zope file which prints that message is lib/python/zdaemon/Daemon.py, line 88, which gets the signal number from the waitpid() function in line 80 (or 82, depending on some heartbeat stuff I didn't care to check). Let's see what python has to say about this error code:
import os os.WIFSIGNALED(136) 1
hmm, the process was killed by a signal... let's see what signal that was:
os.WTERMSIG(136) 8
hmm, never seen that before, what is that signal? leo@spitfire:~$ kill -l 8 FPE Floating point exception?! Shouldn't python trap that and raise proper exception instead?
I am using Zope 2.5.1 with python 2.1.3 under HP (was Compaq) Tru64 Unix version 5.0
Does anyone have any suggestions about what is going wrong?
Try to run zope under a debugger. Follow instructions here: http://www.zope.org/Members/4am/debugspinningzope but type "continue" (w/out quotes) as soon as you get the gdb prompt to get zope to run normally. Then try to cause the error condition you saw. When Zope gets the sigfpe signal, this will cause gdb to step in and show you a prompt. Follow the last part of the instructions in the url above to get a python traceback (the proper python thread will probably already be selected). Of course, this all depends on how well gdb (or your preferred debugger, should you chose to adapt the instructions) works correctly with threads on True64. Would it be possible to try and reproduce your problem on a recent Linux installation? This is the only configuration I know for sure the above gdb recipe works Cheers, Leo -- Ideas don't stay in some minds very long because they don't like solitary confinement.