On Sun, Apr 13, 2008 at 12:06 PM, Steven Bethard
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Apr 13, 2008 9:58:31 AM
> org.apache.uima.collection.impl.cpm.engine.CPMThreadGroup process
> SEVERE: The CPM thread group caught the following unhandled error:
> java.lang.StackOverflowError (Thread Name: [Procesing Pipeline#1
> Thread]::)
> java.lang.StackOverflowError
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$Curly.match1(Pattern.java:4258)
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$Curly.match(Pattern.java:4207)
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$GroupHead.match(Pattern.java:4578)
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$Loop.match(Pattern.java:4705)
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$GroupTail.match(Pattern.java:4637)
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$GroupTail.match(Pattern.java:4637)
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$Single.match(Pattern.java:3314)
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$Branch.match(Pattern.java:4538)
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$GroupHead.match(Pattern.java:4578)
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$Curly.match1(Pattern.java:4258)
> ...
> at java.util.regex.Pattern$Single.match(Pattern.java:3314)
On Sun, Apr 13, 2008 at 1:27 PM, Eddie Epstein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> *StackOverflowError *is "thrown when a stack overflow occurs because an
> application recurses too deeply." Maybe the exception catcher is looping.
Well, it's clearly recursing on java.util.regex.Pattern. But I don't
know who is using Pattern or where.
> Check in uima.log file for the run. If there is none, make sure UIMA_HOME is
> defined, and if still no log, modify $UIMA_HOME/config/Logger.properties to
> get more logging; try Fine or Finest.
I don't see any uima.log file generated anywhere. I'm running this
through Eclipse, and I tried setting the UIMA_HOME variable, supplying
-Djava.util.logging.config.file=myfile as a VM argument, and a few
other things, but I've never seen any logging output except that
printed to the console (as I showed in my last email). Is there
something else I have to do in Eclipse to get a log file?
Steve
--
I'm not *in*-sane. Indeed, I am so far *out* of sane that you appear a
tiny blip on the distant coast of sanity.
--- Bucky Katt, Get Fuzzy