[Kroupware] debian binaries

Thomas Zander zander at planescape.com
Sat May 17 16:52:04 CEST 2003


On Sat, May 17, 2003 at 03:59:49PM +0200, Martin Konold wrote:
> Am Samstag, 17. Mai 2003 13:01 schrieb Thomas Zander:
> 
> Hi Thomas,
> 
> > Please rename the debian-3.0 directory to debian-testing since it does not
> > work on debain-3.0  (thats stable naturally).
> 
> Debian 3.0 is the stable branch of Debian. Debian testing is a totally 
> different Debian branch and not necessarily binary compatible.

So we agree.



> > ROOT:> /kolab/bin/rpm -ihv binutils-2.13.2.1-1.2.0.ix86-linux2.4-kol.rpm
> > Preparing...                ###########################################
> > [100%] Segmentation fault
> 
> Hmm, maybe there is a different issue with your Debian installation or HW? Did 

Its a machine that is up and running for 2 years and only has had security
updates via apt. In other words; its old but stable software.
The installation of kolab provides an rpm binairy; I presume its linked
incorrectly.

> you try to debug the problem?
Well; I'm certainly not capable in gdb; but I'll try..

Ok, here is what I got, I'm afraid its not much.

ROOT at namlook:/kolab# gdb /kolab/lib/openpkg/rpm
GNU gdb 2002-04-01-cvs
Copyright 2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
GDB is free software, covered by the GNU General Public License, and you are
welcome to change it and/or distribute copies of it under certain conditions.
Type "show copying" to see the conditions.
There is absolutely no warranty for GDB.  Type "show warranty" for details.
This GDB was configured as "i386-linux"...(no debugging symbols found)...
(gdb)  set args -rcfile /kolab/etc/openpkg/rpmrc -ihv /home/zander/make-3.80-1.2.0.ix86-linux2.4-kol.rpm
(gdb) run
Starting program: /kolab/lib/openpkg/rpm -rcfile /kolab/etc/openpkg/rpmrc -ihv /home/zander/make-3.80-1.2.0.ix86-linux2.4-kol.rpm
warning: shared library handler failed to enable breakpoint

Program received signal SIGTRAP, Trace/breakpoint trap.
0x40000be0 in ?? ()
(gdb) bt
#0  0x40000be0 in ?? ()
Cannot access memory at address 0x0


Hope it helps.
-- 
Thomas Zander



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