"MORAUSKE,TIM (HP-Boise,ex1)" <tim_morauske(a)hp.com> wrote:
 Here is the C stack Backtrace results.  It doesn't look like much
to me but
 I have never looked at one before. 
     I don't know what's causing the problem, but:
* You either compiled with optimization, or you stripped the binary (I
  think you stripped the binary, but I'm not positive).  If you compiled
  with optimization, try getting the latest HP ANSI C compiler.  There
  probably aren't any major compiler optimizer bugs in 11.XX, but the
  early 10.20 compilers were problematic.  It's probably worth a try
  upgrading.
* You might want to compile with -g (debug).  The stack trace you
  provided really isn't useful, aside from the fact that the crash
  appears to be in some shared library.  Your stack trace contains no
  symbol information whatsoever, which is usually indicative of a
  stripped binary, a hopelessly corrupted stack, or an old/buggy
  debugger.
  [ For that matter, you're using a really old version of wildebeest,
    and you really should upgrade).  Wildebeest 3.0 entered beta at the
    end of July, and should be released "soon".  ]
* A long shot is the X11 libraries.  I don't know about 11.XX, but you
  really needed to patch the HP-UX 10.XX and 9.XX X11 libraries.  All
  sorts of strange problems would occur, otherwise.
* You probably didn't do this (as the symptoms are different), but you
  didn't enable native sound, right?  The HP-UX audio library drags in
  the dce library, which is incompatible with XEmacs.  There is no
  workaround for this, aside from not using native sound.
-- 
	Darryl Okahata
	darrylo(a)soco.agilent.com
DISCLAIMER: this message is the author's personal opinion and does not
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