On Sat, Dec 07, 2002 at 10:56:57AM +0100, Matthias Klose wrote: > Kenneth Pronovici writes: > > Please let me know if there is any other information I can get you. > > I'd be happy to help in any way that I can. > > you may want to recheck with gij from the gcc-snapshot package.
Results were similar, but the specific exception returned from gij changed: agamemnon> /usr/lib/gcc-snapshot/bin/gij NBIOSelectServer NBIO server starting... Exception in thread "main" java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError: NBIO: Cannot resolve field buf ([B) in nbio_init_fids() -- this is a bug, please contact <[EMAIL PROTECTED] at _Jv_CallAnyMethodA(java.lang.Object, java.lang.Class, _Jv_Method, boolean, java.lang.Class[], jvalue, jvalue) (/usr/lib/gcc-snapshot/lib/libgcj.so.3.0.0) at _Jv_CallAnyMethodA(java.lang.Object, java.lang.Class, _Jv_Method, boolean, java.lang.Class[], java.lang.Object[]) (/usr/lib/gcc-snapshot/lib/libgcj.so.3.0.0) at java.lang.reflect.Constructor.newInstance(java.lang.Object[]) (/usr/lib/gcc-snapshot/lib/libgcj.so.3.0.0) at Java_seda_nbio_NonblockingSocketImpl_nbSocketCreate (/usr/lib/java/jni-1.2/libNBIO2.so.2.0) at _Jv_JNIMethod.call(ffi_cif, void, ffi_raw, void) (/usr/lib/gcc-snapshot/lib/libgcj.so.3.0.0) at seda.nbio.NonblockingSocketImpl.create(boolean) (Unknown Source) at seda.nbio.NonblockingServerSocket.NonblockingServerSocket(int, int, java.net.InetAddress) (Unknown Source) at seda.nbio.NonblockingServerSocket.NonblockingServerSocket(int) (Unknown Source) at NBIOSelectServer.main(java.lang.String[]) (Unknown Source) I can provide typescript output for my entire test session, if someone wants it. I also tried the same test after rebuilding the libnbio2-java using tools from gcc-snapshot in instead of gcc-3.2/gcj-3.2, thinking that some changes there might contribute to a fix. It did not make a difference. KEN -- Kenneth J. Pronovici <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Personal Homepage: http://www.skyjammer.com/~pronovic/ "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin, Historical Review of Pennsylvania, 1759