I found this in a Linux log when I tested XML page on Linux: [Wed Jan 24 20:48:39 2001] [notice] child pid 24731 exit signal Segmentation fault (11) The line occured once for each time the script blew up. Bug Database wrote: > > ID: 8647 > Updated by: dbeu > Reported By: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Old-Status: Open > Status: Feedback > Bug Type: Reproduceable crash > Assigned To: > Comments: > > can you please append some *short* reproducing code? > > i tested file() with a file greater than 100k and it didn't crash. > > Previous Comments: > --------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > [2001-01-10 21:05:56] [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Loading array via file(). File is 4Mb of text. Bang, PHP died. > > I increased PHP memory from 8 MB to 20 Mb but did not fix it. I cut the file down to >about 10Kb but that did not fix it. When I comment out the line containing file(), >that removes the problem. > > I thought it might not be file(), it might be any part of the code that uses the >array so I commented out file() and inserted statements that manually load the array >with data. The script ran to completion using the manual array. > > gdb backtrace is gobbledygook to me. I am reading your documentation page to see if >any of it is relevant to Windows environment. If your page helps me change my php >setup to produce additional diagnostics, I will add them to this report. > > Apache is the latest Apache 1.14 or something from about 3 weeks ago. PHP is PHP >4.0.4 from the large download file. NT 4.0 SP6a running without a hitch for 6 months. >The code I am working on was working in the middle of last year on a PHP3 downloaded >in the middle of last year. > > --------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Full Bug description available at: http://bugs.php.net/?id=8647 -- PHP Development Mailing List <http://www.php.net/> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To contact the list administrators, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]