Bug#924496: 'realloc(): invalid next size: 0x000055a779ef2170' crash when opening iPod w/ ~12000 tracks

2019-03-24 Thread Bernhard Übelacker
Control: tags + 924496 unreproducible Hello Fred, Am 20.03.19 um 22:22 schrieb Fred Korz: > I loathe Heisenbugs!  Sorry for the time waste. > > I tried the same IPod on my home system which runs vanilla debian > testing and has the same version (3.4.3-2) of rhythmbox.  I could not > reproduce t

Bug#924496: 'realloc(): invalid next size: 0x000055a779ef2170' crash when opening iPod w/ ~12000 tracks

2019-03-20 Thread Fred Korz
I loathe Heisenbugs! Sorry for the time waste. I tried the same IPod on my home system which runs vanilla debian testing and has the same version (3.4.3-2) of rhythmbox. I could not reproduce the crash. Neither the rhythm box slowness nor the apparent memory failure happen. Thanks for the time

Bug#924496: 'realloc(): invalid next size: 0x000055a779ef2170' crash when opening iPod w/ ~12000 tracks

2019-03-19 Thread Fred Korz
Hello Bernhard, Now it (a) loads completely without crash from the same iPod (and no changes there), and (b) does so in <50% as long. Arrgh! I hate Heisenbugs It was entirely repeatable last week, 3 for 3. I've not rebooted since before my report, nor has the rhythmbox package changed versi

Bug#924496: 'realloc(): invalid next size: 0x000055a779ef2170' crash when opening iPod w/ ~12000 tracks

2019-03-19 Thread Bernhard Übelacker
Hello Fred Korz, I just tried to get some more information out of backtrace, without having an iPod or being involved on packaging rhythmbox... But am I right this "Debian Release: rodete" is a version of gLinux - Googles internal rebuild of Debian testing? Can this be downloaded somewhere? And a

Bug#924496: 'realloc(): invalid next size: 0x000055a779ef2170' crash when opening iPod w/ ~12000 tracks

2019-03-13 Thread Fred Korz
Package: rhythmbox Version: 3.4.3-2 Severity: important Dear Maintainer, * What led up to the situation? Plugged in a "classic" iPod with ~12000 tracks Selected it in Rhythmbox's interface It began reading the tracks ("syncing" appearing on the iPod's display) Sometime after ~7000 tracks, rhy