On 12/29/2010 08:34 AM, Charles Lepple wrote:
On Dec 27, 2010, at 9:36 AM, Zach La Celle wrote:
I ran this in debug mode and captures the backtrace.
r...@*********:/etc/nut# upsd -D
Network UPS Tools upsd 2.4.3
0.000000 listening on 0.0.0.0 port 3493
0.000354 Connected to UPS [rack1ups]: apcsmart-rack1ups
2.550554 User [email protected] logged into UPS [rack1ups]
*** glibc detected *** upsd: free(): invalid next size (fast):
0x00000000012c9870 ***
Can you give us some background information about this system? What OS
and version, who built the package, etc.
Do you have valgrind available?
Your version of glibc probably has some more thorough memory
corruption detection algorithms than the default - "man malloc" on one
of my systems suggests that setting the MALLOC_CHECK_ environment
variable to either 1 or 2 will print some additional diagnostics.
Output of uname -a:
Linux www 2.6.32-27-server #49-Ubuntu SMP Thu Dec 2 02:05:21 UTC 2010
x86_64 GNU/Linux
Information about glibc:
GNU C Library (Ubuntu EGLIBC 2.11.1-0ubuntu7.6) stable release version
2.11.1, by Roland McGrath et al.
Compiled by GNU CC version 4.4.3.
Compiled on a Linux >>2.6.24-28-server<< system on 2010-11-17.
I didn't know about that MALLOC_CHECK_ variable: I've set it and am
running the software again to see if I get a better error.
I can install valgrind if necessary. Let me see what happens this time.
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