Em 22/08/2009 16:20,  Schwab,Wilhelm K <[email protected]> escreveu:
> 
> I saw that, but one wonders whether we might be alone and should
> just stop whining :) I cannot understand how ignoring errors is a
> feature, but maybe it is to some???  One argument against the idea
> is that the file could grow very large over time, but it should not
> be too bad, and I would certainly want to know if my image is
> generating huge numbers of unhandled execeptions.  That is all the
> more true on servers and embedded systems.

> A possible compromise is something I did a while back and need to
> press back into service: a rotating (for lack of a better name) file
> stream.  It uses one stream for a set period of time, then opens a
> new file and begins writing to it.  It leaves a seriies of files
> named for when they were opened.  I did it to avoid having something
> get hung up (the concern was mostly defective USB drivers) and
> taking out all of our data from an experiment vs. just costing us
> the last ten minutes worth.  Something even simpler could probably
> work here.

Bill,

Perhaps we can address both with a 'technology' used in a lot of Linux
distributions: instead of opening a lot of newer files, the (let' call
it such way) current file is a regular text file (maybe following the
host OS line end conventions [it is a minor concern for me as I intend
to develop and test in a dual boot machine]) and the accumulated
history is compressed with some of the available methods in the devel
image, so we have to take care of only two files, 'normal' (thinking
of present) behaviour is almost not changed and the aditional benefits
for the situations you mention in addition to be able to see earlier
backtraces for all developers.

--
Cesar Rabak

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