> Not sure if it's still important, but this is how it looks for me:
Thank you, Nikolaus. Your disassembly proves that our guess was correct.
Pavel
On Fri, May 14, 2010 at 9:45 AM, Nikolaus Rath wrote:
> Pavel Ivanov writes:
Yeah, I'm around. I don't know what an "exact disassembly" is o
Pavel Ivanov writes:
>>> Yeah, I'm around. I don't know what an "exact disassembly" is or how to
>>> provide one, but if someone tells me what to do then I'm most likely
>>> willing to do it.
>
> Nikolaus, you can do it like this:
>> gdb your_application
> (gdb) disassemble pthreadMutexEnter
>
> I
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On 05/13/2010 12:22 PM, Nikolaus Rath wrote:
> Where can I find the corresponding ticket? The sqlite homepage seems to
> have lost all references to the bug tracker... I know that bug reporting is
> no longer open to the public, but I hope there is sti
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On 05/13/2010 12:56 PM, Pavel Ivanov wrote:
> Roger, '-g' flag doesn't necessarily mean SQLITE_DEBUG turned on and
> doesn't mean all debugging stuff turned on. This flag (if we're
> talking about gcc)
We aren't talking about gcc, but rather Python's
>> Correct. Also, it only happens when apsw is compiled with -g.
>
> The amalgamation is being used when you compiled APSW. When you compile
> APSW with debug and the amalgamation, two things happen. Firstly assertions
> are turned on in both APSW and SQLite.
> ...
> Secondly it enables SQLITE_DE
Roger Binns writes:
> On 05/13/2010 06:43 AM, Nikolaus Rath wrote:
>> Yeah, I'm around. I don't know what an "exact disassembly" is or how to
>> provide one, but if someone tells me what to do then I'm most likely
>> willing to do it.
>
> We can test the hypothesis very easily. Find line 15472 in
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On 05/13/2010 06:43 AM, Nikolaus Rath wrote:
> Yeah, I'm around. I don't know what an "exact disassembly" is or how to
> provide one, but if someone tells me what to do then I'm most likely
> willing to do it.
We can test the hypothesis very easily.
Roger Binns writes:
>> Although I see that it can return false in this case if another thread
>> is inside pthreadMutexEnter and optimizer has switched order of
>> assignment of the values to owner and nRef inside pthreadMutexEnter
>> (it is allowed to do so because variables are not volatile). Is
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On 05/12/2010 03:23 PM, Pavel Ivanov wrote:
> pthreadMutexNotheld() checks that mutex is not held by current thread
> - if mutex is held by another thread it will return true.
Ooops, I got this completely wrong!
> Although I see that it can return fa
> The mutex is not recursive. However if another thread had acquired the
> mutex during the call to sqlite3Malloc above then the mutex would indeed be
> held by that other thread causing the assertion to fail.
pthreadMutexNotheld() checks that mutex is not held by current thread
- if mutex is hel
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- From a user backtrace when SQLite is compiled with assertions on, it looks
like an assertion is incorrect. The raw backtrace is later.
pcache1Alloc() contains this code:
pcache1LeaveMutex();
p = sqlite3Malloc(nByte);
pcache1EnterMutex(
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