Thank you Vicente,
your tip was the solution.
I deleted all gvSIG-Indexes .shp.qix
After this gvSIG works.
We are working with the UMN-Mapserver too and are using for this an
index called .
Could it be, that this 2 indexes caused the problem.
Un saludo de espana
Rolf
Vicente Caballero Na
Your memory settings are very high. I have never been able
to get Java to find a contiguous chunk of memory that big
in 32-bit mode. The highest I could ever get was ca. 1500 MB
(more like 1000 MB on Windows).
But try Vicente's suggestion first, as I think it sounds more
plausible.
Cheers,
Ben
I have already sent a bug ticket and attached a patch.
Turned out it wasn't that hard to fix. I have tried with
a lot of raster files (including the one your reported the
problem for) and all seems to work well now.
Cheers,
Ben
- Original Message -
> Thanks to all for your assistance. I
Thanks to all for your assistance. I hope you'll be able to find a solution.
Best regards,
Klaus
-Original Message-
From: gvsig_internacional-boun...@listserv.gva.es
[mailto:gvsig_internacional-boun...@listserv.gva.es] On Behalf Of Benjamin Ducke
Sent: Wednesday, July 07, 2010 12:16
To:
Hello Rolf.
I think the problem is in the spatial index created, in the trace of
"gvsig.log", I see a problem wich the file ".qix". You can test to
delete the file "(name_file_shp).qix" found in the same directory of
shape file.
Un saludo.
--
Vicente Caballero Navarro
Grupo desarrollo gvSIG
Hi Benjamin,
thank you for your answer.
I see the problem with the memory too. We are fighting since a few days
with this problem.
As I can sent gvSIG.sh as attachment, see the content below.
Thank you
Cheers
Rolf
*
#!/bin/sh
#
Hi Rolf,
immediately before the heap space error, I see this in your log:
DEBUG AWT-EventQueue-1 com.iver.andami.ui.mdiFrame.MDIFrame - Memory usage
268531 KB
... which indicates that the system runs out of memory far below the
usual limit.
Could you post the file /opt/gvsig-oade-2010-rgu-1.0.
this feature is common in quite every desktop gis, but I don't know if
it's available in Gvsig.
When loading and managing big datasets it's very useful to
enable/disable the canvas rendering. Usually this feature is shown in
a canvas corner (qgis, arcgis, do it this way, in the lower-right
corner).