(Illustration by Gaich Muramatsu)
Why we need to run gdb for the first time? Because there is a BAD bug somewhere. I _think_ that some of our thread scheduling stuff isn't working right -- and I'm on my way to have a 50 line C program produce similar trouble. - Peter - On Mon, 15 Jun 1998, Bradley Marshall wrote: > Peter, > > > I know this is a terrible bug but to get your server off the ground you > > need to do: > > > > gdb /usr/sbin/srv > > > > run -rvm /var/log/rvm.log /var/log/rvm.data 20480000 > > > > You will see Fileserver started in your SrvLog (/vice/srv). Then type > > > > volutil shutdown > > > > Quit gdb. > > > > From here on, startserver will work. We don't know the cause of this > > problem but are working on it. > > That did it! Great, thanks heaps! Now to get the client running. :) > > Now I'm curious, why do you need to run gdb the first time? Does it > send some signal to the process? > > Thanks, > Brad > -- > Bradley Marshall > Sysadmin > Plugged In Software >Received on 1998-06-15 07:23:01