ld-2.17.so crashed with SIGSEGV in <unavailable> in <unavailable> in ??()
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
eglibc (Ubuntu) |
Confirmed
|
Medium
|
Unassigned | ||
initramfs-tools (Ubuntu) |
Fix Released
|
Undecided
|
Unassigned |
Bug Description
More crashes from libc6-x32, which shouldn't be getting invoked at all. This seems to have happened at boot time, not at initramfs generation time, so I really don't know what's going on here.
ProblemType: Crash
DistroRelease: Ubuntu 13.04
Package: libc6-x32 2.17-0ubuntu1
ProcVersionSign
Uname: Linux 3.8.0-4-generic x86_64
ApportVersion: 2.8-0ubuntu4
Architecture: amd64
Date: Wed Jan 30 09:20:02 2013
Disassembly: value is not available
ExecutablePath: /libx32/ld-2.17.so
InstallationDate: Installed on 2010-09-24 (864 days ago)
InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 10.04.1 LTS "Lucid Lynx" - Release amd64 (20100816.1)
MarkForUpload: True
ProcCmdline: /libx32/
ProcEnviron:
TERM=linux
PATH=(custom, no user)
LANG=en_US.UTF-8
ProcMaps:
f7701000-f7702000 r-xp 00000000 00:00 0 [vdso]
f7702000-f7723000 r-xp 00000000 fc:0f 527923 /libx32/ld-2.17.so
f7922000-f7924000 rw-p 00020000 fc:0f 527923 /libx32/ld-2.17.so
ffeeb000-fff0c000 rw-p 00000000 00:00 0 [stack]
SegvAnalysis: Failure: invalid literal for int() with base 16: '*value'
Signal: 11
SourcePackage: eglibc
Stacktrace:
#0 <unavailable> in ?? ()
PC unavailable, cannot determine locals.
Backtrace stopped: not enough registers or memory available to unwind further
StacktraceTop: <unavailable> in ?? ()
ThreadStacktrace:
.
Thread 1 (LWP 793):
#0 <unavailable> in ?? ()
PC unavailable, cannot determine locals.
Backtrace stopped: not enough registers or memory available to unwind further
Title: ld-2.17.so crashed with SIGSEGV in <unavailable> in ??()
UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to raring on 2013-01-25 (10 days ago)
UserGroups:
correction: although the crash file's timestamp was updated, the Date in the crash report corresponds to an upgrade when update-initramfs was run. So this seems to be the same bug.