On 25/08/14 13:51, Ian Hinder wrote:
>
> My guess is that Cactus is being run with a different version of some library
> than it was compiled with. It is using /usr/lib/libmpich. Can you post the
> optionlist you were using? Do you have more than one version of MPI
> installed, or did Cactus
On 25 Aug 2014, at 13:12, Ian Smith wrote:
> On 25/08/14 11:52, Ian Hinder wrote:
>>
>> The core dump files should be somewhere in the simulation directory. If you
>> do "find path/to/simulation" you should see them.
>>
>
> I'm afraid they aren't; I tried a find (home dir and distribution d
On 25/08/14 11:52, Ian Hinder wrote:
>
> The core dump files should be somewhere in the simulation directory. If you
> do "find path/to/simulation" you should see them.
>
I'm afraid they aren't; I tried a find (home dir and distribution dir)
before posting.
Ian.
__
On 25 Aug 2014, at 12:35, Ian Smith wrote:
> On 21/08/14 15:03, Ian Hinder wrote:
>> Try to get a backtrace to find out where the segfault occurred. You can set
>> "ulimit -c unlimited" in the shell you use to run Cactus, and this should
>> cause core dump files to be generated when the crash
On 21/08/14 15:03, Ian Hinder wrote:
> Try to get a backtrace to find out where the segfault occurred. You can set
> "ulimit -c unlimited" in the shell you use to run Cactus, and this should
> cause core dump files to be generated when the crash happens. You can then
> read these with gdb:
>
>
Thanks. Yes, this list was outdated. In fact, it was outdated by at least
nine years. I've updated it.
-erik
On Thu, Aug 21, 2014 at 10:49 AM, Ian Smith wrote:
> On 21/08/14 15:40, Erik Schnetter wrote:
> > Ian
> >
> > Where did you see this list? It is probably very outdated. Cactus (and
> >
On 21/08/14 15:40, Erik Schnetter wrote:
> Ian
>
> Where did you see this list? It is probably very outdated. Cactus (and
> the Einstein Toolkit) run virtually everywhere. I would not be surprised
> if someone ran it on an Iphone or a Blackberry or on Android, but I
> don't recall reading about thi
Ian
Where did you see this list? It is probably very outdated. Cactus (and the
Einstein Toolkit) run virtually everywhere. I would not be surprised if
someone ran it on an Iphone or a Blackberry or on Android, but I don't
recall reading about this yet.
-erik
On Thu, Aug 21, 2014 at 9:19 AM, Ian
On 21 Aug 2014, at 15:19, Ian Smith wrote:
> On 21/08/14 14:08, Erik Schnetter wrote:
>> Ian
>>
>> We've been running on 64-bit systems since Cactus was designed... I
>> doubt that a 64-bit issue is the problem here.
>>
>> (Historical factoid: This was one of the motivations for introducing
>>
On 21/08/14 14:08, Erik Schnetter wrote:
> Ian
>
> We've been running on 64-bit systems since Cactus was designed... I
> doubt that a 64-bit issue is the problem here.
>
> (Historical factoid: This was one of the motivations for introducing
> CCTK_REAL. The early Cray 64-bit systems defined the "in
Ian
We've been running on 64-bit systems since Cactus was designed... I doubt
that a 64-bit issue is the problem here.
(Historical factoid: This was one of the motivations for introducing
CCTK_REAL. The early Cray 64-bit systems defined the "integer" to be 64
bit, as one would naively expect. The
Hi again list,
I've just done another install onto my 64-bit Ubuntu 14.04 machine (the
32-bit Debian one is running now), and when I submit a job I get this
output:
$ ./simfactory/bin/sim show-output --follow static_tov
Simulation name: static_tov
===
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