Hi,

Monday 21 July 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] rašė:
> One thing about multi-core, though: Does gapless playback work on your
> single-core? I found it worked on my old (single-core) machine but not on
> my new dual-core. I was wondering whether this may be an SMP problem. This
> is not directly related to the problem at hand, I just remember this being
> a problem and not having any single-core users around to ask. I'm aware
> that this is more a Xine problem than an Amarok problem.
Yes, crossfading works on my system.

> Attached as amarok_gdb_backtrace.log. It includes the whole session, not
> just the backtrace.
So we have yet another place of crash. This makes 3 of them.

> For some reason I couldn't reproduce with valgrind. You weren't kidding
> about the slowdown but Amarok was as stable as it ever was. No amount of
> track changing did anything. I tried quitting and restarting several times
> and even ran without valgrind again just to see if the problem was still
> present - and it was. This is probably indicative of something.
> Unfortunately, I have no idea what. I've attached the valgrind session as
> amarok_valgrind_session.log just in case.
valgrind prevents crashes due to memory corruption but it emits informative 
errors about the cause of it. Unfortunately, I could not find any in your 
valgrind session.

However, I have a few other ideas. You have amarok-engine-yauap installed. 
Please switch engine via Settings -> configure amarok -> Engine to Yauap. 
Please read [1] about getting support for various media codec in Yauap. 
Restart amarok and try reproducing the bug. If you fail to reproduce, try 
other Xine players to see it is Xine problem. Also try downgrading Xine to 
earlier version [2] (1.1.12 you had before July 17) and see if it helps.

1. $ apt-cache show yauap
2. http://snapshot.debian.net/package/xine-lib

-- 
Modestas Vainius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

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