Select Your Language

Infrastructure and Management

Cloud Computing

Storage

Runtimes

Integration and Automation

  • Comments
  • evolution-2.28.3-24.el6: Process /usr/bin/evolution was killed by signal 11 (SIGSEGV)

    Posted on

    I am getting this a lot once I setup evolution to access our exchange 2010 environment. any ideas?

     

     

    As a primary analysis of the coredump You are getting a segfault in bonobo server in evolution
    segmentation fault can occur under the following circumstances:
     
    1. A bug (software defect) in the program or command is encountered, for example a buffer overflow (an attempt to access memory beyond the end of an array).This can typically can be resolved by applying errata or vendor software updates.
    2. A hardware problem affects the virtual memory subsystem. For example, a RAM DIMM or CPU cache is defective.
    3. An attempt is made to execute a program that was not compiled/built correctly.
     
    From the given coredump we got the following backtrace
    ==================================================
    #23 0x000000362303cd55 in IA__g_main_loop_run (loop=0x109f300) at gmain.c:2799
    #24 0x000000363582d0f6 in bonobo_main () at bonobo-main.c:311
    #25 0x00000000004156aa in main (argc=, argv=) at main.c:732
    (gdb) q
    ===================================================
     
     
    (gdb) list
    306
    307 loop = g_main_loop_new (NULL, TRUE);
    308 bonobo_main_loops = g_slist_prepend (bonobo_main_loops, loop);
    309
    310 if (g_main_loop_is_running (bonobo_main_loops->data))
    311 g_main_loop_run (loop);
    312
    313 bonobo_main_loops = g_slist_remove (bonobo_main_loops, loop);
    314
    315 g_main_loop_unref (loop);
    (gdb) 
     
    Here it activating the Bonobo POA Manager and enters the main event loop. 
     
    I have checked but i didnt get any already reported bugzilla  on this issue.

    by

    points

    Responses

    Red Hat LinkedIn YouTube Facebook X, formerly Twitter

    Quick Links

    Help

    Site Info

    Related Sites

    © 2026 Red Hat