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  • CodePlex Daily Summary for Sunday, May 20, 2012

    CodePlex Daily Summary for Sunday, May 20, 2012Popular ReleasesExtAspNet: ExtAspNet v3.1.6: ExtAspNet - ?? ExtJS ??? ASP.NET 2.0 ???,????? AJAX ?????????? ExtAspNet ????? ExtJS ??? ASP.NET 2.0 ???,????? AJAX ??????????。 ExtAspNet ??????? JavaScript,?? CSS,?? UpdatePanel,?? ViewState,?? WebServices ???????。 ??????: IE 7.0, Firefox 3.6, Chrome 3.0, Opera 10.5, Safari 3.0+ ????:Apache License 2.0 (Apache) ??:http://bbs.extasp.net/ ??:http://demo.extasp.net/ ??:http://doc.extasp.net/ ??:http://extaspnet.codeplex.com/ ??:http://sanshi.cnblogs.com/ ????: +2012-05-20 v3.1.6 -??RowD...totalem: version 2012.05.20.1: Beta version added function to create new empty file added function to create new file from clipboard content (save content of clipboard to file) added feature to direct view file from FTP server added feature to direct edit file from FTP server added feature to direct encrypt and copy files to FTP server added feature to direct copy and decrypt files from FTP servergGrid - Editable jQuery Grid: Initial Version release: The js file is the initial version of gGrid. Below are some of the limitations of the gGrid plugin The grid requires to return a MVC partial view to render the updated grid on screen.WatchersNET CKEditor™ Provider for DotNetNuke®: CKEditor Provider 1.14.05: Whats New Added New Editor Skin "BootstrapCK-Skin" Added New Editor Skin "Slick" Added Dnn Pages Drop Down to the Link Dialog (to quickly link to a portal tab) changes Fixed Issue #6956 Localization issue with some languages Fixed Issue #6930 Folder Tree view was not working in some cases Changed the user folder from User name to User id User Folder is now used when using Upload Function and User Folder is enabled File-Browser Fixed Resizer Preview Image Optimized the oEmbed Pl...PHPExcel: PHPExcel 1.7.7: See Change Log for details of the new features and bugfixes included in this release. BREAKING CHANGE! From PHPExcel 1.7.8 onwards, the 3rd-party tcPDF library will no longer be bundled with PHPExcel for rendering PDF files through the PDF Writer. The PDF Writer is being rewritten to allow a choice of 3rd party PDF libraries (tcPDF, mPDF, and domPDF initially), none of which will be bundled with PHPExcel, but which can be downloaded seperately from the appropriate sites.GhostBuster: GhostBuster Setup (91520): Added WMI based RestorePoint support Removed test code from program.cs Improved counting. Changed color of ghosted but unfiltered devices. Changed HwEntries into an ObservableCollection. Added Properties Form. Added Properties MenuItem to Context Menu. Added Hide Unfiltered Devices to Context Menu. If you like this tool, leave me a note, rate this project or write a review or Donate to Ghostbuster. Donate to GhostbusterC#??????EXCEL??、??、????????:DataPie(??MSSQL 2008、ORACLE、ACCESS 2007): DataPie_V3.2: V3.2, 2012?5?19? ????ORACLE??????。AvalonDock: AvalonDock 2.0.0795: Welcome to the Beta release of AvalonDock 2.0 After 4 months of hard work I'm ready to upload the beta version of AvalonDock 2.0. This new version boosts a lot of new features and now is stable enough to be deployed in production scenarios. For this reason I encourage everyone is using AD 1.3 or earlier to upgrade soon to this new version. The final version is scheduled for the end of June. What is included in Beta: 1) Stability! thanks to all users contribution I’ve corrected a lot of issues...myCollections: Version 2.1.0.0: New in this version : Improved UI New Metro Skin Improved Performance Added Proxy Settings New Music and Books Artist detail Lot of Bug FixingAspxCommerce: AspxCommerce1.1: AspxCommerce - 'Flexible and easy eCommerce platform' offers a complete e-Commerce solution that allows you to build and run your fully functional online store in minutes. You can create your storefront; manage the products through categories and subcategories, accept payments through credit cards and ship the ordered products to the customers. We have everything set up for you, so that you can only focus on building your own online store. Note: To login as a superuser, the username and pass...SiteMap Editor for Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2011: SiteMap Editor (1.1.1616.403): BUG FIX Hide save button when Titles or Descriptions element is selectedMapWindow 6 Desktop GIS: MapWindow 6.1.2: Looking for a .Net GIS Map Application?MapWindow 6 Desktop GIS is an open source desktop GIS for Microsoft Windows that is built upon the DotSpatial Library. This release requires .Net 4 (Client Profile). Are you a software developer?Instead of downloading MapWindow for development purposes, get started with with the DotSpatial template. The extensions you create from the template can be loaded in MapWindow.DotSpatial: DotSpatial 1.2: This is a Minor Release. See the changes in the issue tracker. Minimal -- includes DotSpatial core and essential extensions Extended -- includes debugging symbols and additional extensions Tutorials are available. Just want to run the software? End user (non-programmer) version available branded as MapWindow Want to add your own feature? Develop a plugin, using the template and contribute to the extension feed (you can also write extensions that you distribute in other ways). Components ...Mugen Injection: Mugen Injection 2.2.1 (WinRT supported): Added ManagedScopeLifecycle. Increase performance. Added support for resolve 'params'.Microsoft Ajax Minifier: Microsoft Ajax Minifier 4.52: Make preprocessor comment-statements nestable; add the ///#IFNDEF statement. (Discussion #355785) Don't throw an error for old-school JScript event handlers, and don't rename them if they aren't global functions.DotNetNuke® Events: 06.00.00: This is a serious release of Events. DNN 6 form pattern - We have take the full route towards DNN6: most notably the incorporation of the DNN6 form pattern with streamlined UX/UI. We have also tried to change all formatting to a div based structure. A daunting task, since the Events module contains a lot of forms. Roger has done a splendid job by going through all the forms in great detail, replacing all table style layouts into the new DNN6 div class="dnnForm XXX" type of layout with chang...LogicCircuit: LogicCircuit 2.12.5.15: Logic Circuit - is educational software for designing and simulating logic circuits. Intuitive graphical user interface, allows you to create unrestricted circuit hierarchy with multi bit buses, debug circuits behavior with oscilloscope, and navigate running circuits hierarchy. Changes of this versionThis release is fixing one but nasty bug. Two functions XOR and XNOR when used with 3 or more inputs were incorrectly evaluating their results. If you have a circuit that is using these functions...LINQ to Twitter: LINQ to Twitter Beta v2.0.25: Supports .NET 3.5, .NET 4.0, Silverlight 4.0, Windows Phone 7.1, Client Profile, and Windows 8. 100% Twitter API coverage. Also available via NuGet! Follow @JoeMayo.BlogEngine.NET: BlogEngine.NET 2.6: Get DotNetBlogEngine for 3 Months Free! Click Here for More Info BlogEngine.NET Hosting - 3 months free! Cheap ASP.NET Hosting - $4.95/Month - Click Here!! Click Here for More Info Cheap ASP.NET Hosting - $4.95/Month - Click Here! If you want to set up and start using BlogEngine.NET right away, you should download the Web project. If you want to extend or modify BlogEngine.NET, you should download the source code. If you are upgrading from a previous version of BlogEngine.NET, please take...BlackJumboDog: Ver5.6.2: 2012.05.07 Ver5.6.2 (1) Web???????、????????·????????? (2) Web???????、?????????? COMSPEC PATHEXT WINDIR SERVERADDR SERVERPORT DOCUMENTROOT SERVERADMIN REMOTE_PORT HTTPACCEPTCHRSET HTTPACCEPTLANGUAGE HTTPACCEPTEXCODINGNew ProjectsAkumu Island: Akumu Island is a game being developed by Jared Thomson. At this time, things are still fairly under wraps. The source code is still available though.BasicSocialNetworkingSite: Basic/Simple Social Networking Web Site using C# - ASP.NETCasse Brique: Projet Casse-brique.Cdts.iOS: Cdts iOSCluster2: To be Published...CrowdMOS: CrowdMOS is a set of scripts and tools for performing evaluations of the subjective quality of media such as audio or images using crowdsourcing via Amazon Mechanical Turk. This project is designed to enable low cost, efficient assessments of signal processing algorithms, e.g., compression, denoising, or enhancement, using standard tests such as MOS (Mean Opinion Score) or MUSHRA.Data Frame Loader: A simple C# API for loading tabular dataframes into Microsoft SQL Server database using only a small number of tables to represent any kind of dataframe.Dynamic Segmentation Utility SOE Rest: Dynamic Segmentation Utility SOE Rest for ArcGIS Server 10 (msd)field2012: This is private projectFix soft HyperAero Form: Fix soft Aero Form (HyperAero Edition) works on both xp and Win7 and supports Customizable Animation Effects (On showing and closing form),Gradient Support (Multicolor Gradient Background,Gradient Editor Control),Power Functions (Shutdown,etc with Timer support) ,Aero Glass Support (Extend Margins,Aero Blur,Aero Glow text,Basic Theme Support),Aero Properties (IsWindowsAeroEnabled,AeroColor and opacity),Aero Events,Unlock Hidden Properties (EnableCloseButton, CaptionRenderMode, ActivateOn...Gamer: A program intended to be a PC gamers' companion app by providing features such as: * Customizable system tray menu that lists (favourite/frequent/all) games (as shown in the Windows Games Explorer) for quick launching (and clean desktops). * Ability to edit listings in the Windows Game Explorer * Once these goals are met other handy features can be implemented to increase the value of this app. This program should compliment existing programs used by gamers rather than compete w...gGrid - Editable jQuery Grid: This a jQuery plugin. The plugin will add three buttons Add/Edit/Delete which will need a popup control to add/edit data. Developer using this plugin need to define an HTML table and an HTML DIV which will be used for popup. Also MVC action method to handle the CRUD operation. The plug requires an MVC partial view to be returned from the add edit delete methods to update the table data.HoiChoMuaBan: h?i ch? mua bánmyfirstgit: ???????Nova Code: Nova code is a language to implement processor instructions, states, and other features planned soon for the NEmulation framework. Right now this project will be worked on separately, then integrated into NEmulation.Pocket Book App: Just try it!State Machine .netmf: StateMachineExample for .netmf C# uVersionClientCache: uVersionClientCache is a custom macro to always automatically version (URL querstring parameter) your files based on a MD5 hash of the file contents or file last modified date to prevent issues with client browsers caching an old file after you have changed it.XNA Shader Composer: XNA Shader Composer is a solution for Visual Studio 2010 and XNA 4.0. The goal is to create an environment for learn and create differents HLSL programs.???Disable????: ??????????????errdisable??,????????。

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  • Hard to append a table with many records into another without generating duplicates

    - by Bill Mudry
    I may seem to be a bit wordy at first but for the hope it will be easier for all of you to understand what I am doing in the first place. I have an uncommon but enjoyable activity of collecting as many species of wood from around the world as I can (over 2,900 so far). Ok, that is the real world. Meanwhile I have spent over 8 years compiling over 5.8 meg of text data on all the woods of the world. That got so large that learning some basic PHP and MySQL was most welcome so I could build a new database driven home for all this research. I am still slow at it but getting there. The original premise was to find evidence of as many species of woods in the world I can. The more names identified, the more successful the project. I have named the project TAXA for ease of conversation (short for Taxonomy). You are most welcome to take a look at what I have so far at www.prowebcanada.com/taxa. It is 95% dynamically driven. So far I am reporting about 6,500 botanical wood names and, as said above, the more I can report, the more successful is the project. I have a file of all the woods in the second largest wood collection in the world, the Tervuren wood collection in the Netherlands with over 11,300 wood names even after cleaning out all duplicates. That is almost twice the number I am reporting now so porting all the new wood names from Tervuren to the 'species' table where I keep the reported data would be a major desirable advancement in the project. At one point I was able to add all the Tervuren records to the species table but over 3,000 duplicates also formed. They were not in the Tervuren file in the first place but represent the same wood names common to both files. It is common sense that there would be woods common to both that when merged would create new duplicates. At one point and with the help of others from another forum, I may very well have finally got the proper SQL statement. When I ran it, though, the system said (semi-amusingly at first) ----- that it had gone away! After looking up on the Net what could have have done this, one reason is that the MySQL timeout lapses and probably because of the large size of files I am running. I am running this on a rented account on Godaddy so I cannot go about trying to adjust any config file. For safety, I copied the tervuren.sql file as tervuren_target.sql and the species.sql file as species_master.sql tp use as working files just to make sure I protect the original files from destruction or damage. Later I can name the species_master back to just species.sql once I am happy all worked well. The species file has about 18 columns in it but only 5 columns match the columns in the Tervuren file (name for name and collation also). The rest of the columns are just along for the ride, so to speak. The common key in both is the 'species_name" columns in both. I am not sure it is at all proper to call one a primary key and the other a foreign key since there really is no relational connection to them. One is just more data for the other and can disappear after, never to be referred to the working code in the application. I have been very surprised and flabbergasted on how hard it can be to append records from one large table into another (with same column names plus others) without generating NEW duplicates in the first place. Watch out thinking that a SELECT DISTINCT statement may do the job because absolutely NO records in the species table must get destroyed in the process and there is no way (well, that I know of) to tell the 'DISTINCT" command this. Yes, the original 'species' table has duplicates in it even before all this but, trust me ---- they have to be removed the long hard way manually record by record or I will lose precious information. It is more important to just make sure no NEW duplicates form through bringing in new names in the tervuren_target.species_name into species.species_name. I am hoping and thinking that a straight SQL solution should work --- except for that nasty timeout. How do I get past that? Could it mean that I may have to turn to a PHP plus SQL method?? Or ..... would I have to break up the Tervuren files into a few smaller ones and run them independently (hope not....)" So far, what seems should be easy has proven to be unexpectedly tricky. I appreciate any help you can give but start from the assumption that this may be harder to do right than it may seem on the surface. By the way --- I am running a quad 64 bit system with Windows 7, so at least I have some fairly hefty power on the client end. I have a direct ethernet cable feeding a cable connection to the Internet. Once I get an algorithm and code working for this, I also have many other lists to process that could make the 'species' table grow even more. It could be equivalent to (ahem) lighting a rocket under my project (especially compared to do this record by record manually)! This is my first time in this forum, so I do not know how I can receive any replies. Do I have to to come back here periodically or are replies emailed out also? It would be great if you CC'd copies to me at billmudry at rogers.com :-) Much thanks for your patience and help, Bill Mudry Mississauga, Ontario Canada (next to Toronto).

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  • Login or Register (Ruby on rails)

    - by DanielZ
    Hello stackoverflow, I'm working on an Ruby on Rails application (2.3.x) and i want to make a form that lets the user login or register. I want to do this in the same form. I have a JS function that replaces the form elements like this: Login form: <% form_for @user do |f| %> <div id="form"> <%= f.label :email, "E-mail" %> <%= f.text_field :email %> <%= f.label :password, "Password" %> <%= f.password_field :password %> <%= link_to "I don't have an account, "#", :id => "changeForm"%> <%= f.submit "Login" %> </div> <% end %> The id "changeForm" triggers a JS function that changes the form elements. So if you press the url the html looks like this: <% form_for @user do |f| %> <div id="form"> <%= f.label :name, "Name" %> <%= f.text_field :name %> <%= f.label :email, "E-mail" %> <%= f.text_field :email %> <%= f.label :password, "Password" %> <%= f.password_field :password %> <%= f.label :password_confirmation, "Password confirmation" %> <%= f.password_field :password_confirmation %> <%= link_to "I do have an account, "#", :id => "changeForm"%> <%= f.submit "Register" %> </div> <% end %> I added the neccesary validations to my user model: class User < ActiveRecord::Base attr_reader :password validates_presence_of :name, :email, :password validates_format_of :email, :with => /\A([^@\s]+)@((?:[-a-z0-9]+\.)+[a-z]{2,})\Z/i validates_confirmation_of :password But what happens when you fill in the email / password you get the errors that the name is missing and that the password fields aren't confirmed. So i could do some nasty programming in my user model like this: #if password_conf or the name are present the user has tried to register... if params[:user][:password_confirmation].present? || params[:user][:name].present? #so we'll try to save the user if @user.save #if the user is saved authenticate the user current_session.user = User.authenticate(params[:user]) #if the user is logged in? if current_session.user.present? flash[:notice] = "succesvully logged redirect_to some_routes_path else #not logged in... flash[:notice] = "Not logged in" render :action => "new" end else #user not saved render :action => "new" end else #So if the params[:user][:password_confirmation] or [:user][:name] weren't present we geuss the user wants to login... current_session.user = User.authenticate(params[:user]) #are we logged_in? if current_session.user.present? flash[:notice] = "Succesvully logged in" redirect_to some_routes_path else #errors toevoegen @user.errors.add(:email, "The combination of email/password isn't valid") @user.errors.add(:password," ") render :action => "new" end end end Without validations this (imho dirty code and should not be in the controller) works. But i want to use the validates_presence_of methods and i don't want to slap the "conventions over configurations" in the face. So another thing i have tried is adding a hidden field to the form: #login form <%= f.hidden_field :login, :value => true %> # and ofcourse set it to false if we want to register. And then i wanted to use the method: before_validation before_validation_on_create do |user| if params[:user].login == true #throws an error i know... validates_presence_of :email, :password validates_format_of :email, :with => /\A([^@\s]+)@((?:[-a-z0-9]+\.)+[a-z]{2,})\Z/i else validates_presence_of :name, :email, :password validates_format_of :email, :with => /\A([^@\s]+)@((?:[-a-z0-9]+\.)+[a-z]{2,})\Z/i validates_confirmation_of :password end end But this doesn't work because i can't access the params. And login isn't a attribute for the user object. But i thought that in this way i could validate the email and password params if the user wants to login. And all the other attrs if the user want to register. So all i could think of doesn't work how i want it to work. So my main goal is this: 1 form for login/register with the use of the validation methods in the user model. So if we want to login but don't fill in any information = give validation errors. And if the user wants to login but the email/password combination doens't match give the "@user.errors.add(:email, "the combination wasn't found in the db...")". And the same goes for user register... Thanks in advance!

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  • Rounded Corners and Shadows &ndash; Dialogs with CSS

    - by Rick Strahl
    Well, it looks like we’ve finally arrived at a place where at least all of the latest versions of main stream browsers support rounded corners and box shadows. The two CSS properties that make this possible are box-shadow and box-radius. Both of these CSS Properties now supported in all the major browsers as shown in this chart from QuirksMode: In it’s simplest form you can use box-shadow and border radius like this: .boxshadow { -moz-box-shadow: 3px 3px 5px #535353; -webkit-box-shadow: 3px 3px 5px #535353; box-shadow: 3px 3px 5px #535353; } .roundbox { -moz-border-radius: 6px 6px 6px 6px; -webkit-border-radius: 6px; border-radius: 6px 6px 6px 6px; } box-shadow: horizontal-shadow-pixels vertical-shadow-pixels blur-distance shadow-color box-shadow attributes specify the the horizontal and vertical offset of the shadow, the blur distance (to give the shadow a smooth soft look) and a shadow color. The spec also supports multiple shadows separated by commas using the attributes above but we’re not using that functionality here. box-radius: top-left-radius top-right-radius bottom-right-radius bottom-left-radius border-radius takes a pixel size for the radius for each corner going clockwise. CSS 3 also specifies each of the individual corner elements such as border-top-left-radius, but support for these is much less prevalent so I would recommend not using them for now until support improves. Instead use the single box-radius to specify all corners. Browser specific Support in older Browsers Notice that there are two variations: The actual CSS 3 properties (box-shadow and box-radius) and the browser specific ones (-moz, –webkit prefixes for FireFox and Chrome/Safari respectively) which work in slightly older versions of modern browsers before official CSS 3 support was added. The goal is to spread support as widely as possible and the prefix versions extend the range slightly more to those browsers that provided early support for these features. Notice that box-shadow and border-radius are used after the browser specific versions to ensure that the latter versions get precedence if the browser supports both (last assignment wins). Use the .boxshadow and .roundbox Styles in HTML To use these two styles create a simple rounded box with a shadow you can use HTML like this: <!-- Simple Box with rounded corners and shadow --> <div class="roundbox boxshadow" style="width: 550px; border: solid 2px steelblue"> <div class="boxcontenttext"> Simple Rounded Corner Box. </div> </div> which looks like this in the browser: This works across browsers and it’s pretty sweet and simple. Watch out for nested Elements! There are a couple of things to be aware of however when using rounded corners. Specifically, you need to be careful when you nest other non-transparent content into the rounded box. For example check out what happens when I change the inside <div> to have a colored background: <!-- Simple Box with rounded corners and shadow --> <div class="roundbox boxshadow" style="width: 550px; border: solid 2px steelblue"> <div class="boxcontenttext" style="background: khaki;"> Simple Rounded Corner Box. </div> </div> which renders like this:   If you look closely you’ll find that the inside <div>’s corners are not rounded and so ‘poke out’ slightly over the rounded corners. It looks like the rounded corners are ‘broken’ up instead of a solid rounded line around the corner, which his pretty ugly. The bigger the radius the more drastic this effect becomes . To fix this issue the inner <div> also has have rounded corners at the same or slightly smaller radius than the outer <div>. The simple fix for this is to simply also apply the roundbox style to the inner <div> in addition to the boxcontenttext style already applied: <div class="boxcontenttext roundbox" style="background: khaki;"> The fixed display now looks proper: Separate Top and Bottom Elements This gets even a little more tricky if you have an element at the top or bottom only of the rounded box. What if you need to add something like a header or footer <div> that have non-transparent backgrounds which is a pretty common scenario? In those cases you want only the top or bottom corners rounded and not both. To make this work a couple of additional styles to round only the top and bottom corners can be created: .roundbox-top { -moz-border-radius: 4px 4px 0 0; -webkit-border-radius: 4px 4px 0 0; border-radius: 4px 4px 0 0; } .roundbox-bottom { -moz-border-radius: 0 0 4px 4px; -webkit-border-radius: 0 0 4px 4px; border-radius: 0 0 4px 4px; } Notice that radius used for the ‘inside’ rounding is smaller (4px) than the outside radius (6px). This is so the inner radius fills into the outer border – if you use the same size you may have some white space showing between inner and out rounded corners. Experiment with values to see what works – in my experimenting the behavior across browsers here is consistent (thankfully). These styles can be applied in addition to other styles to make only the top or bottom portions of an element rounded. For example imagine I have styles like this: .gridheader, .gridheaderbig, .gridheaderleft, .gridheaderright { padding: 4px 4px 4px 4px; background: #003399 url(images/vertgradient.png) repeat-x; text-align: center; font-weight: bold; text-decoration: none; color: khaki; } .gridheaderleft { text-align: left; } .gridheaderright { text-align: right; } .gridheaderbig { font-size: 135%; } If I just apply say gridheader by itself in HTML like this: <div class="roundbox boxshadow" style="width: 550px; border: solid 2px steelblue"> <div class="gridheaderleft">Box with a Header</div> <div class="boxcontenttext" style="background: khaki;"> Simple Rounded Corner Box. </div> </div> This results in a pretty funky display – again due to the fact that the inner elements render square rather than rounded corners: If you look close again you can see that both the header and the main content have square edges which jumps out at the eye. To fix this you can now apply the roundbox-top and roundbox-bottom to the header and content respectively: <div class="roundbox boxshadow" style="width: 550px; border: solid 2px steelblue"> <div class="gridheaderleft roundbox-top">Box with a Header</div> <div class="boxcontenttext roundbox-bottom" style="background: khaki;"> Simple Rounded Corner Box. </div> </div> Which now gives the proper display with rounded corners both on the top and bottom: All of this is sweet to be supported – at least by the newest browser – without having to resort to images and nasty JavaScripts solutions. While this is still not a mainstream feature yet for the majority of actually installed browsers, the majority of browser users are very likely to have this support as most browsers other than IE are actively pushing users to upgrade to newer versions. Since this is a ‘visual display only feature it degrades reasonably well in non-supporting browsers: You get an uninteresting square and non-shadowed browser box, but the display is still overall functional. The main sticking point – as always is Internet Explorer versions 8.0 and down as well as older versions of other browsers. With those browsers you get a functional view that is a little less interesting to look at obviously: but at least it’s still functional. Maybe that’s just one more incentive for people using older browsers to upgrade to a  more modern browser :-) Creating Dialog Related Styles In a lot of my AJAX based applications I use pop up windows which effectively work like dialogs. Using the simple CSS behaviors above, it’s really easy to create some fairly nice looking overlaid windows with nothing but CSS. Here’s what a typical ‘dialog’ I use looks like: The beauty of this is that it’s plain CSS – no plug-ins or images (other than the gradients which are optional) required. Add jQuery-ui draggable (or ww.jquery.js as shown below) and you have a nice simple inline implementation of a dialog represented by a simple <div> tag. Here’s the HTML for this dialog: <div id="divDialog" class="dialog boxshadow" style="width: 450px;"> <div class="dialog-header"> <div class="closebox"></div> User Sign-in </div> <div class="dialog-content"> <label>Username:</label> <input type="text" name="txtUsername" value=" " /> <label>Password</label> <input type="text" name="txtPassword" value=" " /> <hr /> <input type="button" id="btnLogin" value="Login" /> </div> <div class="dialog-statusbar">Ready</div> </div> Most of this behavior is driven by the ‘dialog’ styles which are fairly basic and easy to understand. They do use a few support images for the gradients which are provided in the sample I’ve provided. Here’s what the CSS looks like: .dialog { background: White; overflow: hidden; border: solid 1px steelblue; -moz-border-radius: 6px 6px 4px 4px; -webkit-border-radius: 6px 6px 4px 4px; border-radius: 6px 6px 3px 3px; } .dialog-header { background-image: url(images/dialogheader.png); background-repeat: repeat-x; text-align: left; color: cornsilk; padding: 5px; padding-left: 10px; font-size: 1.02em; font-weight: bold; position: relative; -moz-border-radius: 4px 4px 0px 0px; -webkit-border-radius: 4px 4px 0px 0px; border-radius: 4px 4px 0px 0px; } .dialog-top { -moz-border-radius: 4px 4px 0px 0px; -webkit-border-radius: 4px 4px 0px 0px; border-radius: 4px 4px 0px 0px; } .dialog-bottom { -moz-border-radius: 0 0 3px 3px; -webkit-border-radius: 0 0 3px 3px; border-radius: 0 0 3px 3px; } .dialog-content { padding: 15px; } .dialog-statusbar, .dialog-toolbar { background: #eeeeee; background-image: url(images/dialogstrip.png); background-repeat: repeat-x; padding: 5px; padding-left: 10px; border-top: solid 1px silver; border-bottom: solid 1px silver; font-size: 0.8em; } .dialog-statusbar { -moz-border-radius: 0 0 3px 3px; -webkit-border-radius: 0 0 3px 3px; border-radius: 0 0 3px 3px; padding-right: 10px; } .closebox { position: absolute; right: 2px; top: 2px; background-image: url(images/close.gif); background-repeat: no-repeat; width: 14px; height: 14px; cursor: pointer; opacity: 0.60; filter: alpha(opacity="80"); } .closebox:hover { opacity: 1; filter: alpha(opacity="100"); } The main style is the dialog class which is the outer box. It has the rounded border that serves as the outline. Note that I didn’t add the box-shadow to this style because in some situations I just want the rounded box in an inline display that doesn’t have a shadow so it’s still applied separately. dialog-header, then has the rounded top corners and displays a typical dialog heading format. dialog-bottom and dialog-top then provide the same functionality as roundbox-top and roundbox-bottom described earlier but are provided mainly in the stylesheet for consistency to match the dialog’s round edges and making it easier to  remember and find in Intellisense as it shows up in the same dialog- group. dialog-statusbar and dialog-toolbar are two elements I use a lot for floating windows – the toolbar serves for buttons and options and filters typically, while the status bar provides information specific to the floating window. Since the the status bar is always on the bottom of the dialog it automatically handles the rounding of the bottom corners. Finally there’s  closebox style which is to be applied to an empty <div> tag in the header typically. What this does is render a close image that is by default low-lighted with a low opacity value, and then highlights when hovered over. All you’d have to do handle the close operation is handle the onclick of the <div>. Note that the <div> right aligns so typically you should specify it before any other content in the header. Speaking of closable – some time ago I created a closable jQuery plug-in that basically automates this process and can be applied against ANY element in a page, automatically removing or closing the element with some simple script code. Using this you can leave out the <div> tag for closable and just do the following: To make the above dialog closable (and draggable) which makes it effectively and overlay window, you’d add jQuery.js and ww.jquery.js to the page: <script type="text/javascript" src="../../scripts/jquery.min.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="../../scripts/ww.jquery.min.js"></script> and then simply call: <script type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function () { $("#divDialog") .draggable({ handle: ".dialog-header" }) .closable({ handle: ".dialog-header", closeHandler: function () { alert("Window about to be closed."); return true; // true closes - false leaves open } }); }); </script> * ww.jquery.js emulates base features in jQuery-ui’s draggable. If jQuery-ui is loaded its draggable version will be used instead and voila you have now have a draggable and closable window – here in mid-drag:   The dragging and closable behaviors are of course optional, but it’s the final touch that provides dialog like window behavior. Relief for older Internet Explorer Versions with CSS Pie If you want to get these features to work with older versions of Internet Explorer all the way back to version 6 you can check out CSS Pie. CSS Pie provides an Internet Explorer behavior file that attaches to specific CSS rules and simulates these behavior using script code in IE (mostly by implementing filters). You can simply add the behavior to each CSS style that uses box-shadow and border-radius like this: .boxshadow {     -moz-box-shadow: 3px 3px 5px #535353;     -webkit-box-shadow: 3px 3px 5px #535353;           box-shadow: 3px 3px 5px #535353;     behavior: url(scripts/PIE.htc);           } .roundbox {      -moz-border-radius: 6px 6px 6px 6px;     -webkit-border-radius: 6px;      border-radius: 6px 6px 6px 6px;     behavior: url(scripts/PIE.htc); } CSS Pie requires the PIE.htc on your server and referenced from each CSS style that needs it. Note that the url() for IE behaviors is NOT CSS file relative as other CSS resources, but rather PAGE relative , so if you have more than one folder you probably need to reference the HTC file with a fixed path like this: behavior: url(/MyApp/scripts/PIE.htc); in the style. Small price to pay, but a royal pain if you have a common CSS file you use in many applications. Once the PIE.htc file has been copied and you have applied the behavior to each style that uses these new features Internet Explorer will render rounded corners and box shadows! Yay! Hurray for box-shadow and border-radius All of this functionality is very welcome natively in the browser. If you think this is all frivolous visual candy, you might be right :-), but if you take a look on the Web and search for rounded corner solutions that predate these CSS attributes you’ll find a boatload of stuff from image files, to custom drawn content to Javascript solutions that play tricks with a few images. It’s sooooo much easier to have this functionality built in and I for one am glad to see that’s it’s finally becoming standard in the box. Still remember that when you use these new CSS features, they are not universal, and are not going to be really soon. Legacy browsers, especially old versions of Internet Explorer that can’t be updated will continue to be around and won’t work with this shiny new stuff. I say screw ‘em: Let them get a decent recent browser or see a degraded and ugly UI. We have the luxury with this functionality in that it doesn’t typically affect usability – it just doesn’t look as nice. Resources Download the Sample The sample includes the styles and images and sample page as well as ww.jquery.js for the draggable/closable example. Online Sample Check out the sample described in this post online. Closable and Draggable Documentation Documentation for the closeable and draggable plug-ins in ww.jquery.js. You can also check out the full documentation for all the plug-ins contained in ww.jquery.js here. © Rick Strahl, West Wind Technologies, 2005-2011Posted in HTML  CSS  

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  • Advanced TSQL Tuning: Why Internals Knowledge Matters

    - by Paul White
    There is much more to query tuning than reducing logical reads and adding covering nonclustered indexes.  Query tuning is not complete as soon as the query returns results quickly in the development or test environments.  In production, your query will compete for memory, CPU, locks, I/O and other resources on the server.  Today’s entry looks at some tuning considerations that are often overlooked, and shows how deep internals knowledge can help you write better TSQL. As always, we’ll need some example data.  In fact, we are going to use three tables today, each of which is structured like this: Each table has 50,000 rows made up of an INTEGER id column and a padding column containing 3,999 characters in every row.  The only difference between the three tables is in the type of the padding column: the first table uses CHAR(3999), the second uses VARCHAR(MAX), and the third uses the deprecated TEXT type.  A script to create a database with the three tables and load the sample data follows: USE master; GO IF DB_ID('SortTest') IS NOT NULL DROP DATABASE SortTest; GO CREATE DATABASE SortTest COLLATE LATIN1_GENERAL_BIN; GO ALTER DATABASE SortTest MODIFY FILE ( NAME = 'SortTest', SIZE = 3GB, MAXSIZE = 3GB ); GO ALTER DATABASE SortTest MODIFY FILE ( NAME = 'SortTest_log', SIZE = 256MB, MAXSIZE = 1GB, FILEGROWTH = 128MB ); GO ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET ALLOW_SNAPSHOT_ISOLATION OFF ; ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET AUTO_CLOSE OFF ; ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET AUTO_CREATE_STATISTICS ON ; ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET AUTO_SHRINK OFF ; ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET AUTO_UPDATE_STATISTICS ON ; ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET AUTO_UPDATE_STATISTICS_ASYNC ON ; ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET PARAMETERIZATION SIMPLE ; ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET READ_COMMITTED_SNAPSHOT OFF ; ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET MULTI_USER ; ALTER DATABASE SortTest SET RECOVERY SIMPLE ; USE SortTest; GO CREATE TABLE dbo.TestCHAR ( id INTEGER IDENTITY (1,1) NOT NULL, padding CHAR(3999) NOT NULL,   CONSTRAINT [PK dbo.TestCHAR (id)] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED (id), ) ; CREATE TABLE dbo.TestMAX ( id INTEGER IDENTITY (1,1) NOT NULL, padding VARCHAR(MAX) NOT NULL,   CONSTRAINT [PK dbo.TestMAX (id)] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED (id), ) ; CREATE TABLE dbo.TestTEXT ( id INTEGER IDENTITY (1,1) NOT NULL, padding TEXT NOT NULL,   CONSTRAINT [PK dbo.TestTEXT (id)] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED (id), ) ; -- ============= -- Load TestCHAR (about 3s) -- ============= INSERT INTO dbo.TestCHAR WITH (TABLOCKX) ( padding ) SELECT padding = REPLICATE(CHAR(65 + (Data.n % 26)), 3999) FROM ( SELECT TOP (50000) n = ROW_NUMBER() OVER (ORDER BY (SELECT 0)) - 1 FROM master.sys.columns C1, master.sys.columns C2, master.sys.columns C3 ORDER BY n ASC ) AS Data ORDER BY Data.n ASC ; -- ============ -- Load TestMAX (about 3s) -- ============ INSERT INTO dbo.TestMAX WITH (TABLOCKX) ( padding ) SELECT CONVERT(VARCHAR(MAX), padding) FROM dbo.TestCHAR ORDER BY id ; -- ============= -- Load TestTEXT (about 5s) -- ============= INSERT INTO dbo.TestTEXT WITH (TABLOCKX) ( padding ) SELECT CONVERT(TEXT, padding) FROM dbo.TestCHAR ORDER BY id ; -- ========== -- Space used -- ========== -- EXECUTE sys.sp_spaceused @objname = 'dbo.TestCHAR'; EXECUTE sys.sp_spaceused @objname = 'dbo.TestMAX'; EXECUTE sys.sp_spaceused @objname = 'dbo.TestTEXT'; ; CHECKPOINT ; That takes around 15 seconds to run, and shows the space allocated to each table in its output: To illustrate the points I want to make today, the example task we are going to set ourselves is to return a random set of 150 rows from each table.  The basic shape of the test query is the same for each of the three test tables: SELECT TOP (150) T.id, T.padding FROM dbo.Test AS T ORDER BY NEWID() OPTION (MAXDOP 1) ; Test 1 – CHAR(3999) Running the template query shown above using the TestCHAR table as the target, we find that the query takes around 5 seconds to return its results.  This seems slow, considering that the table only has 50,000 rows.  Working on the assumption that generating a GUID for each row is a CPU-intensive operation, we might try enabling parallelism to see if that speeds up the response time.  Running the query again (but without the MAXDOP 1 hint) on a machine with eight logical processors, the query now takes 10 seconds to execute – twice as long as when run serially. Rather than attempting further guesses at the cause of the slowness, let’s go back to serial execution and add some monitoring.  The script below monitors STATISTICS IO output and the amount of tempdb used by the test query.  We will also run a Profiler trace to capture any warnings generated during query execution. DECLARE @read BIGINT, @write BIGINT ; SELECT @read = SUM(num_of_bytes_read), @write = SUM(num_of_bytes_written) FROM tempdb.sys.database_files AS DBF JOIN sys.dm_io_virtual_file_stats(2, NULL) AS FS ON FS.file_id = DBF.file_id WHERE DBF.type_desc = 'ROWS' ; SET STATISTICS IO ON ; SELECT TOP (150) TC.id, TC.padding FROM dbo.TestCHAR AS TC ORDER BY NEWID() OPTION (MAXDOP 1) ; SET STATISTICS IO OFF ; SELECT tempdb_read_MB = (SUM(num_of_bytes_read) - @read) / 1024. / 1024., tempdb_write_MB = (SUM(num_of_bytes_written) - @write) / 1024. / 1024., internal_use_MB = ( SELECT internal_objects_alloc_page_count / 128.0 FROM sys.dm_db_task_space_usage WHERE session_id = @@SPID ) FROM tempdb.sys.database_files AS DBF JOIN sys.dm_io_virtual_file_stats(2, NULL) AS FS ON FS.file_id = DBF.file_id WHERE DBF.type_desc = 'ROWS' ; Let’s take a closer look at the statistics and query plan generated from this: Following the flow of the data from right to left, we see the expected 50,000 rows emerging from the Clustered Index Scan, with a total estimated size of around 191MB.  The Compute Scalar adds a column containing a random GUID (generated from the NEWID() function call) for each row.  With this extra column in place, the size of the data arriving at the Sort operator is estimated to be 192MB. Sort is a blocking operator – it has to examine all of the rows on its input before it can produce its first row of output (the last row received might sort first).  This characteristic means that Sort requires a memory grant – memory allocated for the query’s use by SQL Server just before execution starts.  In this case, the Sort is the only memory-consuming operator in the plan, so it has access to the full 243MB (248,696KB) of memory reserved by SQL Server for this query execution. Notice that the memory grant is significantly larger than the expected size of the data to be sorted.  SQL Server uses a number of techniques to speed up sorting, some of which sacrifice size for comparison speed.  Sorts typically require a very large number of comparisons, so this is usually a very effective optimization.  One of the drawbacks is that it is not possible to exactly predict the sort space needed, as it depends on the data itself.  SQL Server takes an educated guess based on data types, sizes, and the number of rows expected, but the algorithm is not perfect. In spite of the large memory grant, the Profiler trace shows a Sort Warning event (indicating that the sort ran out of memory), and the tempdb usage monitor shows that 195MB of tempdb space was used – all of that for system use.  The 195MB represents physical write activity on tempdb, because SQL Server strictly enforces memory grants – a query cannot ‘cheat’ and effectively gain extra memory by spilling to tempdb pages that reside in memory.  Anyway, the key point here is that it takes a while to write 195MB to disk, and this is the main reason that the query takes 5 seconds overall. If you are wondering why using parallelism made the problem worse, consider that eight threads of execution result in eight concurrent partial sorts, each receiving one eighth of the memory grant.  The eight sorts all spilled to tempdb, resulting in inefficiencies as the spilled sorts competed for disk resources.  More importantly, there are specific problems at the point where the eight partial results are combined, but I’ll cover that in a future post. CHAR(3999) Performance Summary: 5 seconds elapsed time 243MB memory grant 195MB tempdb usage 192MB estimated sort set 25,043 logical reads Sort Warning Test 2 – VARCHAR(MAX) We’ll now run exactly the same test (with the additional monitoring) on the table using a VARCHAR(MAX) padding column: DECLARE @read BIGINT, @write BIGINT ; SELECT @read = SUM(num_of_bytes_read), @write = SUM(num_of_bytes_written) FROM tempdb.sys.database_files AS DBF JOIN sys.dm_io_virtual_file_stats(2, NULL) AS FS ON FS.file_id = DBF.file_id WHERE DBF.type_desc = 'ROWS' ; SET STATISTICS IO ON ; SELECT TOP (150) TM.id, TM.padding FROM dbo.TestMAX AS TM ORDER BY NEWID() OPTION (MAXDOP 1) ; SET STATISTICS IO OFF ; SELECT tempdb_read_MB = (SUM(num_of_bytes_read) - @read) / 1024. / 1024., tempdb_write_MB = (SUM(num_of_bytes_written) - @write) / 1024. / 1024., internal_use_MB = ( SELECT internal_objects_alloc_page_count / 128.0 FROM sys.dm_db_task_space_usage WHERE session_id = @@SPID ) FROM tempdb.sys.database_files AS DBF JOIN sys.dm_io_virtual_file_stats(2, NULL) AS FS ON FS.file_id = DBF.file_id WHERE DBF.type_desc = 'ROWS' ; This time the query takes around 8 seconds to complete (3 seconds longer than Test 1).  Notice that the estimated row and data sizes are very slightly larger, and the overall memory grant has also increased very slightly to 245MB.  The most marked difference is in the amount of tempdb space used – this query wrote almost 391MB of sort run data to the physical tempdb file.  Don’t draw any general conclusions about VARCHAR(MAX) versus CHAR from this – I chose the length of the data specifically to expose this edge case.  In most cases, VARCHAR(MAX) performs very similarly to CHAR – I just wanted to make test 2 a bit more exciting. MAX Performance Summary: 8 seconds elapsed time 245MB memory grant 391MB tempdb usage 193MB estimated sort set 25,043 logical reads Sort warning Test 3 – TEXT The same test again, but using the deprecated TEXT data type for the padding column: DECLARE @read BIGINT, @write BIGINT ; SELECT @read = SUM(num_of_bytes_read), @write = SUM(num_of_bytes_written) FROM tempdb.sys.database_files AS DBF JOIN sys.dm_io_virtual_file_stats(2, NULL) AS FS ON FS.file_id = DBF.file_id WHERE DBF.type_desc = 'ROWS' ; SET STATISTICS IO ON ; SELECT TOP (150) TT.id, TT.padding FROM dbo.TestTEXT AS TT ORDER BY NEWID() OPTION (MAXDOP 1, RECOMPILE) ; SET STATISTICS IO OFF ; SELECT tempdb_read_MB = (SUM(num_of_bytes_read) - @read) / 1024. / 1024., tempdb_write_MB = (SUM(num_of_bytes_written) - @write) / 1024. / 1024., internal_use_MB = ( SELECT internal_objects_alloc_page_count / 128.0 FROM sys.dm_db_task_space_usage WHERE session_id = @@SPID ) FROM tempdb.sys.database_files AS DBF JOIN sys.dm_io_virtual_file_stats(2, NULL) AS FS ON FS.file_id = DBF.file_id WHERE DBF.type_desc = 'ROWS' ; This time the query runs in 500ms.  If you look at the metrics we have been checking so far, it’s not hard to understand why: TEXT Performance Summary: 0.5 seconds elapsed time 9MB memory grant 5MB tempdb usage 5MB estimated sort set 207 logical reads 596 LOB logical reads Sort warning SQL Server’s memory grant algorithm still underestimates the memory needed to perform the sorting operation, but the size of the data to sort is so much smaller (5MB versus 193MB previously) that the spilled sort doesn’t matter very much.  Why is the data size so much smaller?  The query still produces the correct results – including the large amount of data held in the padding column – so what magic is being performed here? TEXT versus MAX Storage The answer lies in how columns of the TEXT data type are stored.  By default, TEXT data is stored off-row in separate LOB pages – which explains why this is the first query we have seen that records LOB logical reads in its STATISTICS IO output.  You may recall from my last post that LOB data leaves an in-row pointer to the separate storage structure holding the LOB data. SQL Server can see that the full LOB value is not required by the query plan until results are returned, so instead of passing the full LOB value down the plan from the Clustered Index Scan, it passes the small in-row structure instead.  SQL Server estimates that each row coming from the scan will be 79 bytes long – 11 bytes for row overhead, 4 bytes for the integer id column, and 64 bytes for the LOB pointer (in fact the pointer is rather smaller – usually 16 bytes – but the details of that don’t really matter right now). OK, so this query is much more efficient because it is sorting a very much smaller data set – SQL Server delays retrieving the LOB data itself until after the Sort starts producing its 150 rows.  The question that normally arises at this point is: Why doesn’t SQL Server use the same trick when the padding column is defined as VARCHAR(MAX)? The answer is connected with the fact that if the actual size of the VARCHAR(MAX) data is 8000 bytes or less, it is usually stored in-row in exactly the same way as for a VARCHAR(8000) column – MAX data only moves off-row into LOB storage when it exceeds 8000 bytes.  The default behaviour of the TEXT type is to be stored off-row by default, unless the ‘text in row’ table option is set suitably and there is room on the page.  There is an analogous (but opposite) setting to control the storage of MAX data – the ‘large value types out of row’ table option.  By enabling this option for a table, MAX data will be stored off-row (in a LOB structure) instead of in-row.  SQL Server Books Online has good coverage of both options in the topic In Row Data. The MAXOOR Table The essential difference, then, is that MAX defaults to in-row storage, and TEXT defaults to off-row (LOB) storage.  You might be thinking that we could get the same benefits seen for the TEXT data type by storing the VARCHAR(MAX) values off row – so let’s look at that option now.  This script creates a fourth table, with the VARCHAR(MAX) data stored off-row in LOB pages: CREATE TABLE dbo.TestMAXOOR ( id INTEGER IDENTITY (1,1) NOT NULL, padding VARCHAR(MAX) NOT NULL,   CONSTRAINT [PK dbo.TestMAXOOR (id)] PRIMARY KEY CLUSTERED (id), ) ; EXECUTE sys.sp_tableoption @TableNamePattern = N'dbo.TestMAXOOR', @OptionName = 'large value types out of row', @OptionValue = 'true' ; SELECT large_value_types_out_of_row FROM sys.tables WHERE [schema_id] = SCHEMA_ID(N'dbo') AND name = N'TestMAXOOR' ; INSERT INTO dbo.TestMAXOOR WITH (TABLOCKX) ( padding ) SELECT SPACE(0) FROM dbo.TestCHAR ORDER BY id ; UPDATE TM WITH (TABLOCK) SET padding.WRITE (TC.padding, NULL, NULL) FROM dbo.TestMAXOOR AS TM JOIN dbo.TestCHAR AS TC ON TC.id = TM.id ; EXECUTE sys.sp_spaceused @objname = 'dbo.TestMAXOOR' ; CHECKPOINT ; Test 4 – MAXOOR We can now re-run our test on the MAXOOR (MAX out of row) table: DECLARE @read BIGINT, @write BIGINT ; SELECT @read = SUM(num_of_bytes_read), @write = SUM(num_of_bytes_written) FROM tempdb.sys.database_files AS DBF JOIN sys.dm_io_virtual_file_stats(2, NULL) AS FS ON FS.file_id = DBF.file_id WHERE DBF.type_desc = 'ROWS' ; SET STATISTICS IO ON ; SELECT TOP (150) MO.id, MO.padding FROM dbo.TestMAXOOR AS MO ORDER BY NEWID() OPTION (MAXDOP 1, RECOMPILE) ; SET STATISTICS IO OFF ; SELECT tempdb_read_MB = (SUM(num_of_bytes_read) - @read) / 1024. / 1024., tempdb_write_MB = (SUM(num_of_bytes_written) - @write) / 1024. / 1024., internal_use_MB = ( SELECT internal_objects_alloc_page_count / 128.0 FROM sys.dm_db_task_space_usage WHERE session_id = @@SPID ) FROM tempdb.sys.database_files AS DBF JOIN sys.dm_io_virtual_file_stats(2, NULL) AS FS ON FS.file_id = DBF.file_id WHERE DBF.type_desc = 'ROWS' ; TEXT Performance Summary: 0.3 seconds elapsed time 245MB memory grant 0MB tempdb usage 193MB estimated sort set 207 logical reads 446 LOB logical reads No sort warning The query runs very quickly – slightly faster than Test 3, and without spilling the sort to tempdb (there is no sort warning in the trace, and the monitoring query shows zero tempdb usage by this query).  SQL Server is passing the in-row pointer structure down the plan and only looking up the LOB value on the output side of the sort. The Hidden Problem There is still a huge problem with this query though – it requires a 245MB memory grant.  No wonder the sort doesn’t spill to tempdb now – 245MB is about 20 times more memory than this query actually requires to sort 50,000 records containing LOB data pointers.  Notice that the estimated row and data sizes in the plan are the same as in test 2 (where the MAX data was stored in-row). The optimizer assumes that MAX data is stored in-row, regardless of the sp_tableoption setting ‘large value types out of row’.  Why?  Because this option is dynamic – changing it does not immediately force all MAX data in the table in-row or off-row, only when data is added or actually changed.  SQL Server does not keep statistics to show how much MAX or TEXT data is currently in-row, and how much is stored in LOB pages.  This is an annoying limitation, and one which I hope will be addressed in a future version of the product. So why should we worry about this?  Excessive memory grants reduce concurrency and may result in queries waiting on the RESOURCE_SEMAPHORE wait type while they wait for memory they do not need.  245MB is an awful lot of memory, especially on 32-bit versions where memory grants cannot use AWE-mapped memory.  Even on a 64-bit server with plenty of memory, do you really want a single query to consume 0.25GB of memory unnecessarily?  That’s 32,000 8KB pages that might be put to much better use. The Solution The answer is not to use the TEXT data type for the padding column.  That solution happens to have better performance characteristics for this specific query, but it still results in a spilled sort, and it is hard to recommend the use of a data type which is scheduled for removal.  I hope it is clear to you that the fundamental problem here is that SQL Server sorts the whole set arriving at a Sort operator.  Clearly, it is not efficient to sort the whole table in memory just to return 150 rows in a random order. The TEXT example was more efficient because it dramatically reduced the size of the set that needed to be sorted.  We can do the same thing by selecting 150 unique keys from the table at random (sorting by NEWID() for example) and only then retrieving the large padding column values for just the 150 rows we need.  The following script implements that idea for all four tables: SET STATISTICS IO ON ; WITH TestTable AS ( SELECT * FROM dbo.TestCHAR ), TopKeys AS ( SELECT TOP (150) id FROM TestTable ORDER BY NEWID() ) SELECT T1.id, T1.padding FROM TestTable AS T1 WHERE T1.id = ANY (SELECT id FROM TopKeys) OPTION (MAXDOP 1) ; WITH TestTable AS ( SELECT * FROM dbo.TestMAX ), TopKeys AS ( SELECT TOP (150) id FROM TestTable ORDER BY NEWID() ) SELECT T1.id, T1.padding FROM TestTable AS T1 WHERE T1.id IN (SELECT id FROM TopKeys) OPTION (MAXDOP 1) ; WITH TestTable AS ( SELECT * FROM dbo.TestTEXT ), TopKeys AS ( SELECT TOP (150) id FROM TestTable ORDER BY NEWID() ) SELECT T1.id, T1.padding FROM TestTable AS T1 WHERE T1.id IN (SELECT id FROM TopKeys) OPTION (MAXDOP 1) ; WITH TestTable AS ( SELECT * FROM dbo.TestMAXOOR ), TopKeys AS ( SELECT TOP (150) id FROM TestTable ORDER BY NEWID() ) SELECT T1.id, T1.padding FROM TestTable AS T1 WHERE T1.id IN (SELECT id FROM TopKeys) OPTION (MAXDOP 1) ; SET STATISTICS IO OFF ; All four queries now return results in much less than a second, with memory grants between 6 and 12MB, and without spilling to tempdb.  The small remaining inefficiency is in reading the id column values from the clustered primary key index.  As a clustered index, it contains all the in-row data at its leaf.  The CHAR and VARCHAR(MAX) tables store the padding column in-row, so id values are separated by a 3999-character column, plus row overhead.  The TEXT and MAXOOR tables store the padding values off-row, so id values in the clustered index leaf are separated by the much-smaller off-row pointer structure.  This difference is reflected in the number of logical page reads performed by the four queries: Table 'TestCHAR' logical reads 25511 lob logical reads 000 Table 'TestMAX'. logical reads 25511 lob logical reads 000 Table 'TestTEXT' logical reads 00412 lob logical reads 597 Table 'TestMAXOOR' logical reads 00413 lob logical reads 446 We can increase the density of the id values by creating a separate nonclustered index on the id column only.  This is the same key as the clustered index, of course, but the nonclustered index will not include the rest of the in-row column data. CREATE UNIQUE NONCLUSTERED INDEX uq1 ON dbo.TestCHAR (id); CREATE UNIQUE NONCLUSTERED INDEX uq1 ON dbo.TestMAX (id); CREATE UNIQUE NONCLUSTERED INDEX uq1 ON dbo.TestTEXT (id); CREATE UNIQUE NONCLUSTERED INDEX uq1 ON dbo.TestMAXOOR (id); The four queries can now use the very dense nonclustered index to quickly scan the id values, sort them by NEWID(), select the 150 ids we want, and then look up the padding data.  The logical reads with the new indexes in place are: Table 'TestCHAR' logical reads 835 lob logical reads 0 Table 'TestMAX' logical reads 835 lob logical reads 0 Table 'TestTEXT' logical reads 686 lob logical reads 597 Table 'TestMAXOOR' logical reads 686 lob logical reads 448 With the new index, all four queries use the same query plan (click to enlarge): Performance Summary: 0.3 seconds elapsed time 6MB memory grant 0MB tempdb usage 1MB sort set 835 logical reads (CHAR, MAX) 686 logical reads (TEXT, MAXOOR) 597 LOB logical reads (TEXT) 448 LOB logical reads (MAXOOR) No sort warning I’ll leave it as an exercise for the reader to work out why trying to eliminate the Key Lookup by adding the padding column to the new nonclustered indexes would be a daft idea Conclusion This post is not about tuning queries that access columns containing big strings.  It isn’t about the internal differences between TEXT and MAX data types either.  It isn’t even about the cool use of UPDATE .WRITE used in the MAXOOR table load.  No, this post is about something else: Many developers might not have tuned our starting example query at all – 5 seconds isn’t that bad, and the original query plan looks reasonable at first glance.  Perhaps the NEWID() function would have been blamed for ‘just being slow’ – who knows.  5 seconds isn’t awful – unless your users expect sub-second responses – but using 250MB of memory and writing 200MB to tempdb certainly is!  If ten sessions ran that query at the same time in production that’s 2.5GB of memory usage and 2GB hitting tempdb.  Of course, not all queries can be rewritten to avoid large memory grants and sort spills using the key-lookup technique in this post, but that’s not the point either. The point of this post is that a basic understanding of execution plans is not enough.  Tuning for logical reads and adding covering indexes is not enough.  If you want to produce high-quality, scalable TSQL that won’t get you paged as soon as it hits production, you need a deep understanding of execution plans, and as much accurate, deep knowledge about SQL Server as you can lay your hands on.  The advanced database developer has a wide range of tools to use in writing queries that perform well in a range of circumstances. By the way, the examples in this post were written for SQL Server 2008.  They will run on 2005 and demonstrate the same principles, but you won’t get the same figures I did because 2005 had a rather nasty bug in the Top N Sort operator.  Fair warning: if you do decide to run the scripts on a 2005 instance (particularly the parallel query) do it before you head out for lunch… This post is dedicated to the people of Christchurch, New Zealand. © 2011 Paul White email: @[email protected] twitter: @SQL_Kiwi

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  • Red Gate Coder interviews: Alex Davies

    - by Michael Williamson
    Alex Davies has been a software engineer at Red Gate since graduating from university, and is currently busy working on .NET Demon. We talked about tackling parallel programming with his actors framework, a scientific approach to debugging, and how JavaScript is going to affect the programming languages we use in years to come. So, if we start at the start, how did you get started in programming? When I was seven or eight, I was given a BBC Micro for Christmas. I had asked for a Game Boy, but my dad thought it would be better to give me a proper computer. For a year or so, I only played games on it, but then I found the user guide for writing programs in it. I gradually started doing more stuff on it and found it fun. I liked creating. As I went into senior school I continued to write stuff on there, trying to write games that weren’t very good. I got a real computer when I was fourteen and found ways to write BASIC on it. Visual Basic to start with, and then something more interesting than that. How did you learn to program? Was there someone helping you out? Absolutely not! I learnt out of a book, or by experimenting. I remember the first time I found a loop, I was like “Oh my God! I don’t have to write out the same line over and over and over again any more. It’s amazing!” When did you think this might be something that you actually wanted to do as a career? For a long time, I thought it wasn’t something that you would do as a career, because it was too much fun to be a career. I thought I’d do chemistry at university and some kind of career based on chemical engineering. And then I went to a careers fair at school when I was seventeen or eighteen, and it just didn’t interest me whatsoever. I thought “I could be a programmer, and there’s loads of money there, and I’m good at it, and it’s fun”, but also that I shouldn’t spoil my hobby. Now I don’t really program in my spare time any more, which is a bit of a shame, but I program all the rest of the time, so I can live with it. Do you think you learnt much about programming at university? Yes, definitely! I went into university knowing how to make computers do anything I wanted them to do. However, I didn’t have the language to talk about algorithms, so the algorithms course in my first year was massively important. Learning other language paradigms like functional programming was really good for breadth of understanding. Functional programming influences normal programming through design rather than actually using it all the time. I draw inspiration from it to write imperative programs which I think is actually becoming really fashionable now, but I’ve been doing it for ages. I did it first! There were also some courses on really odd programming languages, a bit of Prolog, a little bit of C. Having a little bit of each of those is something that I would have never done on my own, so it was important. And then there are knowledge-based courses which are about not programming itself but things that have been programmed like TCP. Those are really important for examples for how to approach things. Did you do any internships while you were at university? Yeah, I spent both of my summers at the same company. I thought I could code well before I went there. Looking back at the crap that I produced, it was only surpassed in its crappiness by all of the other code already in that company. I’m so much better at writing nice code now than I used to be back then. Was there just not a culture of looking after your code? There was, they just didn’t hire people for their abilities in that area. They hired people for raw IQ. The first indicator of it going wrong was that they didn’t have any computer scientists, which is a bit odd in a programming company. But even beyond that they didn’t have people who learnt architecture from anyone else. Most of them had started straight out of university, so never really had experience or mentors to learn from. There wasn’t the experience to draw from to teach each other. In the second half of my second internship, I was being given tasks like looking at new technologies and teaching people stuff. Interns shouldn’t be teaching people how to do their jobs! All interns are going to have little nuggets of things that you don’t know about, but they shouldn’t consistently be the ones who know the most. It’s not a good environment to learn. I was going to ask how you found working with people who were more experienced than you… When I reached Red Gate, I found some people who were more experienced programmers than me, and that was difficult. I’ve been coding since I was tiny. At university there were people who were cleverer than me, but there weren’t very many who were more experienced programmers than me. During my internship, I didn’t find anyone who I classed as being a noticeably more experienced programmer than me. So, it was a shock to the system to have valid criticisms rather than just formatting criticisms. However, Red Gate’s not so big on the actual code review, at least it wasn’t when I started. We did an entire product release and then somebody looked over all of the UI of that product which I’d written and say what they didn’t like. By that point, it was way too late and I’d disagree with them. Do you think the lack of code reviews was a bad thing? I think if there’s going to be any oversight of new people, then it should be continuous rather than chunky. For me I don’t mind too much, I could go out and get oversight if I wanted it, and in those situations I felt comfortable without it. If I was managing the new person, then maybe I’d be keener on oversight and then the right way to do it is continuously and in very, very small chunks. Have you had any significant projects you’ve worked on outside of a job? When I was a teenager I wrote all sorts of stuff. I used to write games, I derived how to do isomorphic projections myself once. I didn’t know what the word was so I couldn’t Google for it, so I worked it out myself. It was horrifically complicated. But it sort of tailed off when I started at university, and is now basically zero. If I do side-projects now, they tend to be work-related side projects like my actors framework, NAct, which I started in a down tools week. Could you explain a little more about NAct? It is a little C# framework for writing parallel code more easily. Parallel programming is difficult when you need to write to shared data. Sometimes parallel programming is easy because you don’t need to write to shared data. When you do need to access shared data, you could just have your threads pile in and do their work, but then you would screw up the data because the threads would trample on each other’s toes. You could lock, but locks are really dangerous if you’re using more than one of them. You get interactions like deadlocks, and that’s just nasty. Actors instead allows you to say this piece of data belongs to this thread of execution, and nobody else can read it. If you want to read it, then ask that thread of execution for a piece of it by sending a message, and it will send the data back by a message. And that avoids deadlocks as long as you follow some obvious rules about not making your actors sit around waiting for other actors to do something. There are lots of ways to write actors, NAct allows you to do it as if it was method calls on other objects, which means you get all the strong type-safety that C# programmers like. Do you think that this is suitable for the majority of parallel programming, or do you think it’s only suitable for specific cases? It’s suitable for most difficult parallel programming. If you’ve just got a hundred web requests which are all independent of each other, then I wouldn’t bother because it’s easier to just spin them up in separate threads and they can proceed independently of each other. But where you’ve got difficult parallel programming, where you’ve got multiple threads accessing multiple bits of data in multiple ways at different times, then actors is at least as good as all other ways, and is, I reckon, easier to think about. When you’re using actors, you presumably still have to write your code in a different way from you would otherwise using single-threaded code. You can’t use actors with any methods that have return types, because you’re not allowed to call into another actor and wait for it. If you want to get a piece of data out of another actor, then you’ve got to use tasks so that you can use “async” and “await” to await asynchronously for it. But other than that, you can still stick things in classes so it’s not too different really. Rather than having thousands of objects with mutable state, you can use component-orientated design, where there are only a few mutable classes which each have a small number of instances. Then there can be thousands of immutable objects. If you tend to do that anyway, then actors isn’t much of a jump. If I’ve already built my system without any parallelism, how hard is it to add actors to exploit all eight cores on my desktop? Usually pretty easy. If you can identify even one boundary where things look like messages and you have components where some objects live on one side and these other objects live on the other side, then you can have a granddaddy object on one side be an actor and it will parallelise as it goes across that boundary. Not too difficult. If we do get 1000-core desktop PCs, do you think actors will scale up? It’s hard. There are always in the order of twenty to fifty actors in my whole program because I tend to write each component as actors, and I tend to have one instance of each component. So this won’t scale to a thousand cores. What you can do is write data structures out of actors. I use dictionaries all over the place, and if you need a dictionary that is going to be accessed concurrently, then you could build one of those out of actors in no time. You can use queuing to marshal requests between different slices of the dictionary which are living on different threads. So it’s like a distributed hash table but all of the chunks of it are on the same machine. That means that each of these thousand processors has cached one small piece of the dictionary. I reckon it wouldn’t be too big a leap to start doing proper parallelism. Do you think it helps if actors get baked into the language, similarly to Erlang? Erlang is excellent in that it has thread-local garbage collection. C# doesn’t, so there’s a limit to how well C# actors can possibly scale because there’s a single garbage collected heap shared between all of them. When you do a global garbage collection, you’ve got to stop all of the actors, which is seriously expensive, whereas in Erlang garbage collections happen per-actor, so they’re insanely cheap. However, Erlang deviated from all the sensible language design that people have used recently and has just come up with crazy stuff. You can definitely retrofit thread-local garbage collection to .NET, and then it’s quite well-suited to support actors, even if it’s not baked into the language. Speaking of language design, do you have a favourite programming language? I’ll choose a language which I’ve never written before. I like the idea of Scala. It sounds like C#, only with some of the niggles gone. I enjoy writing static types. It means you don’t have to writing tests so much. When you say it doesn’t have some of the niggles? C# doesn’t allow the use of a property as a method group. It doesn’t have Scala case classes, or sum types, where you can do a switch statement and the compiler checks that you’ve checked all the cases, which is really useful in functional-style programming. Pattern-matching, in other words. That’s actually the major niggle. C# is pretty good, and I’m quite happy with C#. And what about going even further with the type system to remove the need for tests to something like Haskell? Or is that a step too far? I’m quite a pragmatist, I don’t think I could deal with trying to write big systems in languages with too few other users, especially when learning how to structure things. I just don’t know anyone who can teach me, and the Internet won’t teach me. That’s the main reason I wouldn’t use it. If I turned up at a company that writes big systems in Haskell, I would have no objection to that, but I wouldn’t instigate it. What about things in C#? For instance, there’s contracts in C#, so you can try to statically verify a bit more about your code. Do you think that’s useful, or just not worthwhile? I’ve not really tried it. My hunch is that it needs to be built into the language and be quite mathematical for it to work in real life, and that doesn’t seem to have ended up true for C# contracts. I don’t think anyone who’s tried them thinks they’re any good. I might be wrong. On a slightly different note, how do you like to debug code? I think I’m quite an odd debugger. I use guesswork extremely rarely, especially if something seems quite difficult to debug. I’ve been bitten spending hours and hours on guesswork and not being scientific about debugging in the past, so now I’m scientific to a fault. What I want is to see the bug happening in the debugger, to step through the bug happening. To watch the program going from a valid state to an invalid state. When there’s a bug and I can’t work out why it’s happening, I try to find some piece of evidence which places the bug in one section of the code. From that experiment, I binary chop on the possible causes of the bug. I suppose that means binary chopping on places in the code, or binary chopping on a stage through a processing cycle. Basically, I’m very stupid about how I debug. I won’t make any guesses, I won’t use any intuition, I will only identify the experiment that’s going to binary chop most effectively and repeat rather than trying to guess anything. I suppose it’s quite top-down. Is most of the time then spent in the debugger? Absolutely, if at all possible I will never debug using print statements or logs. I don’t really hold much stock in outputting logs. If there’s any bug which can be reproduced locally, I’d rather do it in the debugger than outputting logs. And with SmartAssembly error reporting, there’s not a lot that can’t be either observed in an error report and just fixed, or reproduced locally. And in those other situations, maybe I’ll use logs. But I hate using logs. You stare at the log, trying to guess what’s going on, and that’s exactly what I don’t like doing. You have to just look at it and see does this look right or wrong. We’ve covered how you get to grip with bugs. How do you get to grips with an entire codebase? I watch it in the debugger. I find little bugs and then try to fix them, and mostly do it by watching them in the debugger and gradually getting an understanding of how the code works using my process of binary chopping. I have to do a lot of reading and watching code to choose where my slicing-in-half experiment is going to be. The last time I did it was SmartAssembly. The old code was a complete mess, but at least it did things top to bottom. There wasn’t too much of some of the big abstractions where flow of control goes all over the place, into a base class and back again. Code’s really hard to understand when that happens. So I like to choose a little bug and try to fix it, and choose a bigger bug and try to fix it. Definitely learn by doing. I want to always have an aim so that I get a little achievement after every few hours of debugging. Once I’ve learnt the codebase I might be able to fix all the bugs in an hour, but I’d rather be using them as an aim while I’m learning the codebase. If I was a maintainer of a codebase, what should I do to make it as easy as possible for you to understand? Keep distinct concepts in different places. And name your stuff so that it’s obvious which concepts live there. You shouldn’t have some variable that gets set miles up the top of somewhere, and then is read miles down to choose some later behaviour. I’m talking from a very much SmartAssembly point of view because the old SmartAssembly codebase had tons and tons of these things, where it would read some property of the code and then deal with it later. Just thousands of variables in scope. Loads of things to think about. If you can keep concepts separate, then it aids me in my process of fixing bugs one at a time, because each bug is going to more or less be understandable in the one place where it is. And what about tests? Do you think they help at all? I’ve never had the opportunity to learn a codebase which has had tests, I don’t know what it’s like! What about when you’re actually developing? How useful do you find tests in finding bugs or regressions? Finding regressions, absolutely. Running bits of code that would be quite hard to run otherwise, definitely. It doesn’t happen very often that a test finds a bug in the first place. I don’t really buy nebulous promises like tests being a good way to think about the spec of the code. My thinking goes something like “This code works at the moment, great, ship it! Ah, there’s a way that this code doesn’t work. Okay, write a test, demonstrate that it doesn’t work, fix it, use the test to demonstrate that it’s now fixed, and keep the test for future regressions.” The most valuable tests are for bugs that have actually happened at some point, because bugs that have actually happened at some point, despite the fact that you think you’ve fixed them, are way more likely to appear again than new bugs are. Does that mean that when you write your code the first time, there are no tests? Often. The chance of there being a bug in a new feature is relatively unaffected by whether I’ve written a test for that new feature because I’m not good enough at writing tests to think of bugs that I would have written into the code. So not writing regression tests for all of your code hasn’t affected you too badly? There are different kinds of features. Some of them just always work, and are just not flaky, they just continue working whatever you throw at them. Maybe because the type-checker is particularly effective around them. Writing tests for those features which just tend to always work is a waste of time. And because it’s a waste of time I’ll tend to wait until a feature has demonstrated its flakiness by having bugs in it before I start trying to test it. You can get a feel for whether it’s going to be flaky code as you’re writing it. I try to write it to make it not flaky, but there are some things that are just inherently flaky. And very occasionally, I’ll think “this is going to be flaky” as I’m writing, and then maybe do a test, but not most of the time. How do you think your programming style has changed over time? I’ve got clearer about what the right way of doing things is. I used to flip-flop a lot between different ideas. Five years ago I came up with some really good ideas and some really terrible ideas. All of them seemed great when I thought of them, but they were quite diverse ideas, whereas now I have a smaller set of reliable ideas that are actually good for structuring code. So my code is probably more similar to itself than it used to be back in the day, when I was trying stuff out. I’ve got more disciplined about encapsulation, I think. There are operational things like I use actors more now than I used to, and that forces me to use immutability more than I used to. The first code that I wrote in Red Gate was the memory profiler UI, and that was an actor, I just didn’t know the name of it at the time. I don’t really use object-orientation. By object-orientation, I mean having n objects of the same type which are mutable. I want a constant number of objects that are mutable, and they should be different types. I stick stuff in dictionaries and then have one thing that owns the dictionary and puts stuff in and out of it. That’s definitely a pattern that I’ve seen recently. I think maybe I’m doing functional programming. Possibly. It’s plausible. If you had to summarise the essence of programming in a pithy sentence, how would you do it? Programming is the form of art that, without losing any of the beauty of architecture or fine art, allows you to produce things that people love and you make money from. So you think it’s an art rather than a science? It’s a little bit of engineering, a smidgeon of maths, but it’s not science. Like architecture, programming is on that boundary between art and engineering. If you want to do it really nicely, it’s mostly art. You can get away with doing architecture and programming entirely by having a good engineering mind, but you’re not going to produce anything nice. You’re not going to have joy doing it if you’re an engineering mind. Architects who are just engineering minds are not going to enjoy their job. I suppose engineering is the foundation on which you build the art. Exactly. How do you think programming is going to change over the next ten years? There will be an unfortunate shift towards dynamically-typed languages, because of JavaScript. JavaScript has an unfair advantage. JavaScript’s unfair advantage will cause more people to be exposed to dynamically-typed languages, which means other dynamically-typed languages crop up and the best features go into dynamically-typed languages. Then people conflate the good features with the fact that it’s dynamically-typed, and more investment goes into dynamically-typed languages. They end up better, so people use them. What about the idea of compiling other languages, possibly statically-typed, to JavaScript? It’s a reasonable idea. I would like to do it, but I don’t think enough people in the world are going to do it to make it pick up. The hordes of beginners are the lifeblood of a language community. They are what makes there be good tools and what makes there be vibrant community websites. And any particular thing which is the same as JavaScript only with extra stuff added to it, although it might be technically great, is not going to have the hordes of beginners. JavaScript is always to be quickest and easiest way for a beginner to start programming in the browser. And dynamically-typed languages are great for beginners. Compilers are pretty scary and beginners don’t write big code. And having your errors come up in the same place, whether they’re statically checkable errors or not, is quite nice for a beginner. If someone asked me to teach them some programming, I’d teach them JavaScript. If dynamically-typed languages are great for beginners, when do you think the benefits of static typing start to kick in? The value of having a statically typed program is in the tools that rely on the static types to produce a smooth IDE experience rather than actually telling me my compile errors. And only once you’re experienced enough a programmer that having a really smooth IDE experience makes a blind bit of difference, does static typing make a blind bit of difference. So it’s not really about size of codebase. If I go and write up a tiny program, I’m still going to get value out of writing it in C# using ReSharper because I’m experienced with C# and ReSharper enough to be able to write code five times faster if I have that help. Any other visions of the future? Nobody’s going to use actors. Because everyone’s going to be running on single-core VMs connected over network-ready protocols like JSON over HTTP. So, parallelism within one operating system is going to die. But until then, you should use actors. More Red Gater Coder interviews

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  • Dealing with external processes

    - by Jesse Aldridge
    I've been working on a gui app that needs to manage external processes. Working with external processes leads to a lot of issues that can make a programmer's life difficult. I feel like maintenence on this app is taking an unacceptably long time. I've been trying to list the things that make working with external processes difficult so that I can come up with ways of mitigating the pain. This kind of turned into a rant which I thought I'd post here in order to get some feedback and to provide some guidance to anybody thinking about sailing into these very murky waters. Here's what I've got so far: Output from the child can get mixed up with output from the parent. This can make both outputs misleading and hard to read. It can be hard to tell what came from where. It becomes harder to figure out what's going on when things are asynchronous. Here's a contrived example: import textwrap, os, time from subprocess import Popen test_path = 'test_file.py' with open(test_path, 'w') as file: file.write(textwrap.dedent(''' import time for i in range(3): print 'Hello %i' % i time.sleep(1)''')) proc = Popen('python -B "%s"' % test_path) for i in range(3): print 'Hello %i' % i time.sleep(1) os.remove(test_path) I guess I could have the child process write its output to a file. But it can be annoying to have to open up a file every time I want to see the result of a print statement. If I have code for the child process I could add a label, something like print 'child: Hello %i', but it can be annoying to do that for every print. And it adds some noise to the output. And of course I can't do it if I don't have access to the code. I could manually manage the process output. But then you open up a huge can of worms with threads and polling and stuff like that. A simple solution is to treat processes like synchronous functions, that is, no further code executes until the process completes. In other words, make the process block. But that doesn't work if you're building a gui app. Which brings me to the next problem... Blocking processes cause the gui to become unresponsive. import textwrap, sys, os from subprocess import Popen from PyQt4.QtGui import * from PyQt4.QtCore import * test_path = 'test_file.py' with open(test_path, 'w') as file: file.write(textwrap.dedent(''' import time for i in range(3): print 'Hello %i' % i time.sleep(1)''')) app = QApplication(sys.argv) button = QPushButton('Launch process') def launch_proc(): # Can't move the window until process completes proc = Popen('python -B "%s"' % test_path) proc.communicate() button.connect(button, SIGNAL('clicked()'), launch_proc) button.show() app.exec_() os.remove(test_path) Qt provides a process wrapper of its own called QProcess which can help with this. You can connect functions to signals to capture output relatively easily. This is what I'm currently using. But I'm finding that all these signals behave suspiciously like goto statements and can lead to spaghetti code. I think I want to get sort-of blocking behavior by having the 'finished' signal from QProcess call a function containing all the code that comes after the process call. I think that should work but I'm still a bit fuzzy on the details... Stack traces get interrupted when you go from the child process back to the parent process. If a normal function screws up, you get a nice complete stack trace with filenames and line numbers. If a subprocess screws up, you'll be lucky if you get any output at all. You end up having to do a lot more detective work everytime something goes wrong. Speaking of which, output has a way of disappearing when dealing external processes. Like if you run something via the windows 'cmd' command, the console will pop up, execute the code, and then disappear before you have a chance to see the output. You have to pass the /k flag to make it stick around. Similar issues seem to crop up all the time. I suppose both problems 3 and 4 have the same root cause: no exception handling. Exception handling is meant to be used with functions, it doesn't work with processes. Maybe there's some way to get something like exception handling for processes? I guess that's what stderr is for? But dealing with two different streams can be annoying in itself. Maybe I should look into this more... Processes can hang and stick around in the background without you realizing it. So you end up yelling at your computer cuz it's going so slow until you finally bring up your task manager and see 30 instances of the same process hanging out in the background. Also, hanging background processes can interefere with other instances of the process in various fun ways, such as causing permissions errors by holding a handle to a file or someting like that. It seems like an easy solution to this would be to have the parent process kill the child process on exit if the child process didn't close itself. But if the parent process crashes, cleanup code might not get called and the child can be left hanging. Also, if the parent waits for the child to complete, and the child is in an infinite loop or something, you can end up with two hanging processes. This problem can tie in to problem 2 for extra fun, causing your gui to stop responding entirely and force you to kill everything with the task manager. F***ing quotes Parameters often need to be passed to processes. This is a headache in itself. Especially if you're dealing with file paths. Say... 'C:/My Documents/whatever/'. If you don't have quotes, the string will often be split at the space and interpreted as two arguments. If you need nested quotes you can use ' and ". But if you need to use more than two layers of quotes, you have to do some nasty escaping, for example: "cmd /k 'python \'path 1\' \'path 2\''". A good solution to this problem is passing parameters as a list rather than as a single string. Subprocess allows you to do this. Can't easily return data from a subprocess. You can use stdout of course. But what if you want to throw a print in there for debugging purposes? That's gonna screw up the parent if it's expecting output formatted a certain way. In functions you can print one string and return another and everything works just fine. Obscure command-line flags and a crappy terminal based help system. These are problems I often run into when using os level apps. Like the /k flag I mentioned, for holding a cmd window open, who's idea was that? Unix apps don't tend to be much friendlier in this regard. Hopefully you can use google or StackOverflow to find the answer you need. But if not, you've got a lot of boring reading and frusterating trial and error to do. External factors. This one's kind of fuzzy. But when you leave the relatively sheltered harbor of your own scripts to deal with external processes you find yourself having to deal with the "outside world" to a much greater extent. And that's a scary place. All sorts of things can go wrong. Just to give a random example: the cwd in which a process is run can modify it's behavior. There are probably other issues, but those are the ones I've written down so far. Any other snags you'd like to add? Any suggestions for dealing with these problems?

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  • Why does operator<< not work with something returned by operator-?

    - by Felix
    Here's a small test program I wrote: #include <iostream> using namespace std; class A { public: int val; A(int _val=0):val(_val) { } A operator+(A &a) { return A(val + a.val); } A operator-(A &a) { return A(val - a.val); } friend ostream& operator<<(ostream &, A &); }; ostream& operator<<(ostream &out, A &a) { out<<a.val; return out; } int main() { A a(3), b(4), c = b - a; cout<<c<<endl; // this works cout<<(b-a)<<endl; // this doesn't return 0; } I can't seem to get why the line marked "this works" works and the one marked "this doesn't" doesn't. When I try to compile the program with the cout<<(b-a); line, here's what I get: [felix@the-machine C]$ g++ test.cpp test.cpp: In function ‘int main()’: test.cpp:26:13: error: no match for ‘operator<<’ in ‘std::cout << b.A::operator-(((A&)(& a)))’ /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:108:7: note: candidates are: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& (*)(std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type&)) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:117:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ios_type& (*)(std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ios_type&)) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ios_type = std::basic_ios<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:127:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(std::ios_base& (*)(std::ios_base&)) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:165:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(long int) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:169:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(long unsigned int) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:173:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(bool) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/bits/ostream.tcc:91:5: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(short int) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:180:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(short unsigned int) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/bits/ostream.tcc:105:5: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(int) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:191:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(unsigned int) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:200:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(long long int) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:204:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(long long unsigned int) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:209:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(double) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:213:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(float) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:221:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(long double) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/ostream:225:7: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(const void*) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__ostream_type = std::basic_ostream<char>] /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/4.5.0/../../../../include/c++/4.5.0/bits/ostream.tcc:119:5: note: std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>& std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::operator<<(std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__streambuf_type*) [with _CharT = char, _Traits = std::char_traits<char>, std::basic_ostream<_CharT, _Traits>::__streambuf_type = std::basic_streambuf<char>] test.cpp:18:11: note: std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream&, A&) [felix@the-machine C]$ Quite nasty.

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  • JNI String Corruption

    - by Chris Dennett
    Hi everyone, I'm getting weird string corruption across JNI calls which is causing problems on the the Java side. Every so often, I'll get a corrupted string in the passed array, which sometimes has existing parts of the original non-corrupted string. The C++ code is supposed to set the first index of the array to the address, it's a nasty hack to get around method call limitations. Additionally, the application is multi-threaded. remoteaddress[0]: 10.1.1.2:49153 remoteaddress[0]: 10.1.4.2:49153 remoteaddress[0]: 10.1.6.2:49153 remoteaddress[0]: 10.1.2.2:49153 remoteaddress[0]: 10.1.9.2:49153 remoteaddress[0]: {garbage here} java.lang.NullPointerException at kokuks.KKSAddress.<init>(KKSAddress.java:139) at kokuks.KKSAddress.createAddress(KKSAddress.java:48) at kokuks.KKSSocket._recvFrom(KKSSocket.java:963) at kokuks.scheduler.RecvOperation$1.execute(RecvOperation.java:144) at kokuks.scheduler.RecvOperation$1.execute(RecvOperation.java:1) at kokuks.KKSEvent.run(KKSEvent.java:58) at kokuks.KokuKS.handleJNIEventExpiry(KokuKS.java:872) at kokuks.KokuKS.handleJNIEventExpiry_fjni(KokuKS.java:880) at kokuks.KokuKS.runSimulator_jni(Native Method) at kokuks.KokuKS$1.run(KokuKS.java:773) at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:717) remoteaddress[0]: 10.1.7.2:49153 The null pointer exception comes from trying to use the corrupt string. In C++, the address prints to standard out normally, but doing this reduces the rate of errors, from what I can see. The C++ code (if it helps): /* * Class: kokuks_KKSSocket * Method: recvFrom_jni * Signature: (Ljava/lang/String;[Ljava/lang/String;Ljava/nio/ByteBuffer;IIJ)I */ JNIEXPORT jint JNICALL Java_kokuks_KKSSocket_recvFrom_1jni (JNIEnv *env, jobject obj, jstring sockpath, jobjectArray addrarr, jobject buf, jint position, jint limit, jlong flags) { if (addrarr && env->GetArrayLength(addrarr) > 0) { env->SetObjectArrayElement(addrarr, 0, NULL); } jboolean iscopy; const char* cstr = env->GetStringUTFChars(sockpath, &iscopy); std::string spath = std::string(cstr); env->ReleaseStringUTFChars(sockpath, cstr); // release me! if (KKS_DEBUG) { std::cout << "[kks-c~" << spath << "] " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << std::endl; } ns3::Ptr<ns3::Socket> socket = ns3::Names::Find<ns3::Socket>(spath); if (!socket) { std::cout << "[kks-c~" << spath << "] " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << " socket not found for path!!" << std::endl; return -1; // not found } if (!addrarr) { std::cout << "[kks-c~" << spath << "] " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << " array to set sender is null" << std::endl; return -1; } jsize arrsize = env->GetArrayLength(addrarr); if (arrsize < 1) { std::cout << "[kks-c~" << spath << "] " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << " array too small to set sender!" << std::endl; return -1; } uint8_t* bufaddr = (uint8_t*)env->GetDirectBufferAddress(buf); long bufcap = env->GetDirectBufferCapacity(buf); uint8_t* realbufaddr = bufaddr + position; uint32_t remaining = limit - position; if (KKS_DEBUG) { std::cout << "[kks-c~" << spath << "] " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << " bufaddr: " << bufaddr << ", cap: " << bufcap << std::endl; } ns3::Address aaddr; uint32_t mflags = flags; int ret = socket->RecvFrom(realbufaddr, remaining, mflags, aaddr); if (ret > 0) { if (KKS_DEBUG) std::cout << "[kks-c~" << spath << "] " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << " addr: " << aaddr << std::endl; ns3::InetSocketAddress insa = ns3::InetSocketAddress::ConvertFrom(aaddr); std::stringstream ss; insa.GetIpv4().Print(ss); ss << ":" << insa.GetPort() << std::ends; if (KKS_DEBUG) std::cout << "[kks-c~" << spath << "] " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << " addr: " << ss.str() << std::endl; jsize index = 0; const char *cstr = ss.str().c_str(); jstring jaddr = env->NewStringUTF(cstr); if (jaddr == NULL) std::cout << "[kks-c~" << spath << "] " << __PRETTY_FUNCTION__ << " jaddr is null!!" << std::endl; //jaddr = (jstring)env->NewGlobalRef(jaddr); env->SetObjectArrayElement(addrarr, index, jaddr); //if (env->ExceptionOccurred()) { // env->ExceptionDescribe(); //} } jint jret = ret; return jret; } The Java code (if it helps): /** * Pass an array of size 1 into remote address, and this will be set with * the sender of the packet (hax). This emulates C++ references. * * @param remoteaddress * @param buf * @param flags * @return */ public int _recvFrom(final KKSAddress remoteaddress[], ByteBuffer buf, long flags) { if (!kks.isCurrentlyThreadSafe()) throw new RuntimeException( "Not currently thread safe for ns-3 functions!" ); //lock.lock(); try { if (!buf.isDirect()) return -6; // not direct!! final String[] remoteAddrStr = new String[1]; int ret = 0; ret = recvFrom_jni( path.toPortableString(), remoteAddrStr, buf, buf.position(), buf.limit(), flags ); if (ret > 0) { System.out.println("remoteaddress[0]: " + remoteAddrStr[0]); remoteaddress[0] = KKSAddress.createAddress(remoteAddrStr[0]); buf.position(buf.position() + ret); } return ret; } finally { errNo = _getErrNo(); //lock.unlock(); } } public int recvFrom(KKSAddress[] fromaddress, final ByteBuffer bytes, long flags, long timeoutMS) { if (KokuKS.DEBUG_MODE) printMessage("public synchronized int recvFrom(KKSAddress[] fromaddress, final ByteBuffer bytes, long flags, long timeoutMS)"); if (kks.isCurrentlyThreadSafe()) { return _recvFrom(fromaddress, bytes, flags); // avoid event } fromaddress[0] = null; RecvOperation ro = new RecvOperation( kks, this, flags, true, bytes, timeoutMS ); ro.start(); fromaddress[0] = ro.getFrom(); return ro.getRetCode(); }

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  • Macbook OSX applications crashing on startup

    - by Ryan Doom
    Closed my computer last night, went home. Opened it and it had restarted. Now when I open a couple programs such as Adobe Fireworks or Appcelerator Titanium they throw up a nasty error like below. Other programs (Chrome, Firefox, Textmate, Versions) works fine. Any thoughts on this? I haven't owned my Macbook long so I'm not even aware of the right tools or places to look to track this down. Any help would be most appreciated. It's making it hard to get my work done :] If it helps at all both those programs were probably open when it restarted. From the look of it I'm not sure if it's a permissions error or something? I completely re-installed on of the applications Titanium. Didn't seem to help. Process: Adobe Fireworks CS5 [1044] Path: /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/Adobe Fireworks CS5 Identifier: com.macromedia.fireworks Version: Adobe Fireworks CS5 version 11.0.0.484 (11.0.0) Code Type: X86 (Native) Parent Process: launchd [87] Date/Time: 2011-02-18 09:45:47.689 -0500 OS Version: Mac OS X 10.6.6 (10J567) Report Version: 6 Interval Since Last Report: 12983 sec Crashes Since Last Report: 6 Per-App Interval Since Last Report: 325365 sec Per-App Crashes Since Last Report: 4 Anonymous UUID: D16EAFE7-2F04-44D4-A984-5902A6EF8943 Exception Type: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGBUS) Exception Codes: KERN_PROTECTION_FAILURE at 0x00000000b0327ff8 Crashed Thread: 7 Thread 0: Dispatch queue: com.apple.main-thread 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd0142 semaphore_wait_signal_trap + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd5c46 pthread_mutex_lock + 490 2 libstdc++.6.dylib 0x91887559 __gnu_cxx::__recursive_mutex::lock() + 17 3 libstdc++.6.dylib 0x918874e6 __cxa_guard_acquire + 68 4 libTrueTypeScaler.dylib 0x91c92ab3 TTScalerInfo() + 50 5 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979a5f1 TTrueTypeScaler::CreateTrueTypeScaler() + 43 6 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dee900 pthread_once + 82 7 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979a575 TTrueTypeScaler::GetTrueTypeScaler() + 47 8 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979a520 TTrueTypeScaler::TTrueTypeScaler(TScalerStrike const&) + 26 9 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979a4be TFontScaler::CreateFontScaler(TScalerStrike const&) + 52 10 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979bd93 FPFontGetGlyphsForUnichars + 344 11 com.apple.CoreText 0x98255cfe TBaseFont::CalculateFontMetrics(bool) const + 342 12 com.apple.CoreText 0x98255b55 TBaseFont::InitFontMetrics() const + 51 13 com.apple.CoreText 0x98255959 TBaseFont::GetStrikeMetrics(float, CGAffineTransform const*, bool) const + 81 14 com.apple.CoreText 0x982558cd TFont::InitStrikeMetrics() const + 55 15 com.apple.CoreText 0x982592cf CTFontGetAscent + 49 16 com.apple.AppKit 0x989f5d08 _NSFontInstanceInfoInitializeMetricsInfo + 48 17 com.apple.AppKit 0x989f5cbc -[_NSSharedFontInstanceInfo _defaultLineHeight:] + 40 18 com.apple.AppKit 0x98f3c5e8 +[NSStringDrawingTextStorage _fastDrawString:attributes:length:inRect:graphicsContext:baselineRendering:usesFontLeading:usesScreenFont:typesetterBehavior:paragraphStyle:lineBreakMode:boundingRect:padding:scrollable:] + 2041 19 com.apple.AppKit 0x98abd2d9 _NSStringDrawingCore + 1555 20 com.apple.AppKit 0x98abca8b _NSDrawTextCell + 3465 21 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ac6185 -[NSTextFieldCell drawInteriorWithFrame:inView:] + 764 22 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ac5d26 -[NSTextFieldCell drawWithFrame:inView:] + 816 23 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ac03de -[NSControl drawRect:] + 589 24 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab882a -[NSView _drawRect:clip:] + 3510 25 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab74c8 -[NSView _recursiveDisplayAllDirtyWithLockFocus:visRect:] + 1600 26 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab77fd -[NSView _recursiveDisplayAllDirtyWithLockFocus:visRect:] + 2421 27 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab77fd -[NSView _recursiveDisplayAllDirtyWithLockFocus:visRect:] + 2421 28 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab59e7 -[NSView _recursiveDisplayRectIfNeededIgnoringOpacity:isVisibleRect:rectIsVisibleRectForView:topView:] + 711 29 com.apple.AppKit 0x98b54aa3 -[NSNextStepFrame _recursiveDisplayRectIfNeededIgnoringOpacity:isVisibleRect:rectIsVisibleRectForView:topView:] + 311 30 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab1ea2 -[NSView _displayRectIgnoringOpacity:isVisibleRect:rectIsVisibleRectForView:] + 3309 31 com.apple.AppKit 0x98a12a57 -[NSView displayIfNeeded] + 818 32 com.apple.AppKit 0x989c6661 -[NSNextStepFrame displayIfNeeded] + 98 33 com.apple.AppKit 0x98b55390 -[NSWindow display] + 75 34 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x00bade98 0x1000 + 12242584 35 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x0089f778 0x1000 + 9037688 36 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x08109722 FW_PowerPlant::LCarbonApp::Run() + 54 37 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x008a138c 0x1000 + 9044876 38 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x00003596 0x1000 + 9622 Thread 1: Dispatch queue: com.apple.libdispatch-manager 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df6982 kevent + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df709c _dispatch_mgr_invoke + 215 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df6559 _dispatch_queue_invoke + 163 3 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df62fe _dispatch_worker_thread2 + 240 4 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5d81 _pthread_wqthread + 390 5 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5bc6 start_wqthread + 30 Thread 2: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5a12 __workq_kernreturn + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5fa8 _pthread_wqthread + 941 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5bc6 start_wqthread + 30 Thread 3: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd015a semaphore_timedwait_signal_trap + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfdce5 _pthread_cond_wait + 1066 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97e2cac8 pthread_cond_timedwait_relative_np + 47 3 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97af4ecd TSWaitOnConditionTimedRelative + 242 4 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97af4c0b TSWaitOnSemaphoreCommon + 511 5 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b18e33 TimerThread + 97 6 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 7 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 4: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd00fa mach_msg_trap + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd0867 mach_msg + 68 2 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b9e0d0 YieldToThread + 446 3 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b9e1d3 SetThreadState + 134 4 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b9e28e SetThreadStateEndCritical + 111 5 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x0811ab51 FW_PowerPlant::LThread::SemWait(FW_PowerPlant::LSemaphore*, long, QHdr&, unsigned char&) + 119 6 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x08119b07 FW_PowerPlant::LSemaphore::BlockThread(long) + 61 7 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x08119b6d FW_PowerPlant::LSemaphore::Wait(long) + 71 8 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x0811af70 FW_PowerPlant::LThread::Cleanup::Run() + 32 9 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x0811b94e FW_PowerPlant::LThread::DoEntry(void*) + 30 10 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b9e85f CooperativeThread + 309 11 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 12 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 5: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd0142 semaphore_wait_signal_trap + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfdcfc _pthread_cond_wait + 1089 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97e4646f pthread_cond_wait + 48 3 com.adobe.amt.services 0x1dd73126 AMTConditionLock::LockWhenCondition(int) + 46 4 com.adobe.amt.services 0x1dd6bdb0 _AMTThreadedPCDService::PCDThreadWorker(_AMTThreadedPCDService*) + 116 5 com.adobe.amt.services 0x1dd7318c AMTThread::Worker(void*) + 24 6 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 7 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 6: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfe0a6 __semwait_signal + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfdd62 _pthread_cond_wait + 1191 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dff9f8 pthread_cond_wait$UNIX2003 + 73 3 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b0951e TSWaitOnCondition + 126 4 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97af4ea5 TSWaitOnConditionTimedRelative + 202 5 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97af0873 MPWaitOnQueue + 250 6 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x00ae43cf 0x1000 + 11416527 7 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97ad485a PrivateMPEntryPoint + 68 8 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 9 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 7 Crashed: 0 libstdc++.6.dylib 0x9184e00c std::basic_ofstream ::open(char const*, std::_Ios_Openmode) + 16 1 libstdc++.6.dylib 0x9184fe9b std::basic_ifstream ::basic_ifstream(char const*, std::_Ios_Openmode) + 211 2 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e824779 ESDifstream::ESDifstream(std::string const&, char const*, std::_Ios_Openmode) + 73 3 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e821b6a esd::ExpatDOMBuilder::ParseFile(std::string const&, bool) + 96 4 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e822da4 esd::PrefsWriter::SetPrefsPath(std::string const&) + 206 5 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e8449b3 AdobeUpdaterPrefs::AdobeUpdaterPrefs() + 8609 6 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e8459f4 AdobeUpdaterPrefs::GetAdobeUpdaterPrefs() + 68 7 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e820728 UpdaterNotificationsImpl::InitLogFile() + 48 8 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e820d49 UpdaterNotificationsImpl::Instance() + 53 9 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e823638 UpdaterNotificationsIsUpdaterEnabled + 22 10 com.adobe.amt.services 0x1dd69d15 _AMTAUMService::IsUpdaterEnabled(T_CSUStatusMajor*, int*) + 359 11 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f5501c AMTAUMServiceIsUpdaterEnabled + 290 12 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f1f789 AMTImpl::CallMenuEnablers() + 71 13 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f260fa AMTImpl::DoLaunchWorkflow(AMTImpl::LaunchSequence) + 1664 14 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f26a5d AMTImpl::DoValidateWorkflow(AMTImpl::LaunchSequence) + 293 15 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f26cf5 AMTImpl::DoPreValidateWorkflow() + 119 16 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f26e71 AMTImpl::ServiceLoaderThread(void*) + 45 17 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f54c48 AMTThread::Worker(void*) + 24 18 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 19 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 7 crashed with X86 Thread State (32-bit): eax: 0x00000016 ebx: 0x098c9a00 ecx: 0xa013dfc0 edx: 0x00000003 edi: 0x098c9a08 esi: 0x098c9c0c ebp: 0xb03a7448 esp: 0xb0327ff0 ss: 0x0000001f efl: 0x00010202 eip: 0x9184e00c cs: 0x00000017 ds: 0x0000001f es: 0x0000001f fs: 0x0000001f gs: 0x00000037 cr2: 0xb0327ff8 Binary Images: 0x1000 - 0x1448ff1 +com.macromedia.fireworks Adobe Fireworks CS5 version 11.0.0.484 (11.0.0) <38213EBD-FDB0-FC20-40E8-87935A5386BB /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/Adobe Fireworks CS5 0x1e76000 - 0x1ec9ffb +com.adobe.headlights.LogSessionFramework ??? (2.0.1.011) <4F2BFF03-01D2-A07D-E5E2-7F88D4C2DEC4 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/LogSession.framework/Versions/A/LogSession 0x1f11000 - 0x1f77ffb +com.adobe.amtlib amtlib 3.0.0.64 (3.0.0.64) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/amtlib.framework/Versions/A/amtlib 0x1fa7000 - 0x2146fe7 +com.adobe.owl AdobeOwl version 3.0.81 (3.0.81) <9C261D9E-9BD7-5DE6-5676-AEEF4828D17B /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeOwl.framework/Versions/A/AdobeOwl 0x21af000 - 0x22e7fe7 +WRServices ??? (???) <52CE5B97-1E6A-92A2-EA70-93511AB7EA2E /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/WRServices.framework/Versions/A/WRServices 0x232d000 - 0x239afef +FileInfo ??? (???) <4A4C74F9-CA83-B174-F56D-F7671DC61389 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/FileInfo.framework/Versions/A/FileInfo 0x23b5000 - 0x23dbff6 +AdobeAXE8SharedExpat ??? (???) <5848BBCE-3A3E-66EE-5527-97A96F0CA4CC /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeAXE8SharedExpat.framework/Versions/A/AdobeAXE8SharedExpat 0x23ec000 - 0x2407fff +AdobeBIB ??? (???) <3B3092DC-A296-9D1C-1922-D20E6A5A7D7E /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeBIB.framework/Versions/A/AdobeBIB 0x2411000 - 0x2469ff7 +AdobeXMP ??? (???) <73329999-C364-2451-6574-4D0277057D19 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeXMP.framework/Versions/A/AdobeXMP 0x2478000 - 0x2aa6fe7 +AdobeAGM ??? (???) <91D37E54-E985-47E1-2696-0BD7E4183132 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeAGM.framework/Versions/A/AdobeAGM 0x2c04000 - 0x2d18fff +AdobeACE ??? (???) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeACE.framework/Versions/A/AdobeACE 0x2d3b000 - 0x302dff7 +AdobeCoolType ??? (???) <9FDD596D-9824-2BB9-5DA2-25DACAB6A324 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeCoolType.framework/Versions/A/AdobeCoolType 0x30b5000 - 0x30d6ff7 +AdobeBIBUtils ??? (???) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeBIBUtils.framework/Versions/A/AdobeBIBUtils 0x30e2000 - 0x311efff +AdobeARE ??? (???) <76851E91-2381-5D05-742C-BB24E4BAD276 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeARE.framework/Versions/A/AdobeARE 0x3127000 - 0x34ffff7 +AdobeMPS ??? (???) <13614867-4D80-EB74-FA7F-6136492478BA /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeMPS.framework/Versions/A/AdobeMPS 0x362e000 - 0x3c62feb +AdobePDFL ??? (???) <49D6D58A-1EBB-424A-4CB0-8F9691E0991D /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobePDFL.framework/Versions/A/AdobePDFL 0x3d8e000 - 0x4ad1fff +com.adobe.psl AdobePSL 12.0.0.7524 (12.0.0.7524) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobePSL.framework/Versions/A/AdobePSL 0x4e10000 - 0x4e9aff7 +com.adobe.AdobeScCore ScCore 4.1.7 (4.1.7.5522) <053A109E-3E3E-D3EE-7186-4920D927D2AD /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeScCore.framework/Versions/A/AdobeScCore 0x4edd000 - 0x4fc0fef +AdobePDFPort ??? (???) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobePDFPort.framework/Versions/A/AdobePDFPort 0x4ff5000 - 0x4ff8ff8 +com.adobe.ape.shim adbeape version 3.1.65.7508 (3.1.65.7508) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/adbeape.framework/Versions/A/adbeape 0x4ffe000 - 0x508fff7 +libicucnv.dylib.36.0 36.0.0 (compatibility 36.0.0) <581475CC-C039-1B42-49BA-71811D8B4E15 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ICUConverter.framework/Versions/3.6/libicucnv.dylib.36.0 0x50ae000 - 0x5a5efff +libicudata.dylib.36.0 36.0.0 (compatibility 36.0.0) <02108DEA-3DD2-14BE-DAEB-BE522B619C1D /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ICUData.framework/Versions/3.6/libicudata.dylib.36.0 0x5a61000 - 0x5b2eff3 +libicui18n.dylib.36.0 36.0.0 (compatibility 36.0.0) <08F15219-7F35-574E-7725-1ACAA1B18A00 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ICUInternationalization.framework/Versions/3.6/libicui18n.dylib.36.0 0x5b91000 - 0x5c6bfef +libicuuc.dylib.36.0 36.0.0 (compatibility 36.0.0) <5EE72009-40B3-7FB7-3A49-576AEDE0D400 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ICUUnicode.framework/Versions/3.6/libicuuc.dylib.36.0 0x5cab000 - 0x6a36fe7 +com.adobe.illustrator 382 (15.0.0) <64F68532-0311-6BBA-1F50-246CAF917549 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AILib.framework/Versions/A/AILib 0x781b000 - 0x785ffff +com.adobe.illustrator.aiport AIPort version 1.0 (1.0) <69EDC44E-D7BB-A259-282D-C42725AE0E26 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AIPort.framework/Versions/A/AIPort 0x78c2000 - 0x7908fff +FilterPort ??? (???) <23FAE9D1-9376-1E71-21F7-D3EB2BFD50EE /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/FilterPort.framework/Versions/A/FilterPort 0x797d000 - 0x797dfff +SPBasic ??? (???) <5D1760D8-C910-C641-0BC9-CF74A1A5190D /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/SPBasic.framework/Versions/A/SPBasic 0x7981000 - 0x7b67ff7 +com.adobe.linguistic.LinguisticManager 5.0.0 (11309) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeLinguistic.framework/Versions/3/AdobeLinguistic 0x7bf5000 - 0x7cc2fe7 +AdobeAXEDOMCore ??? (???) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeAXEDOMCore.framework/Versions/A/AdobeAXEDOMCore 0x7d31000 - 0x7ea9ffb +com.adobe.PlugPlug 2.0.0.746 (2.0.0.746) <08AD22E3-34C0-6749-E497-616C66A246AD /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/PlugPlug.framework/Versions/A/PlugPlug 0x7f4d000 - 0x7f6afef +libCurl.dylib ??? (???) <1BA6E2DE-EF14-D50A-4697-035AE07875D7 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/libCurl.dylib 0x7f72000 - 0x7f88ff4 +libChar16.dylib ??? (???) <19B0479C-72B1-EE14-6385-7F655DEC0F02 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/libChar16.dylib 0x7f90000 - 0x7fb3fe0 +libCoreTypes.dylib ??? (???) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/libCoreTypes.dylib 0x7fc3000 - 0x7fcaffc com.apple.carbonframeworktemplate 1.0 (1.0) <0D270CC7-B715-943E-2B4F-5C9B5775505A /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/NetIO.framework/Versions/A/NetIO 0x7fd6000 - 0x7fd9fff +Dioxide.dylib ??? (???) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/Dioxide.dylib 0x7fe1000 - 0x7fe7ffc +libfwutility.dylib ??? (???) <6A723D9E-A60B-56EE-2B8D-B91991793749 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/libfwutility.dylib 0x7fee000 - 0x803efff +com.macromedia.javascript Javascript version 1.0 (1.0) <540CB029-3946-8E41-BD91-AED6F73C86B7 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/Javascript.framework/Versions/A/Javascript 0x8053000 - 0x8060fff +com.macromedia.moa Moa version 1.0 (1.0) <3C4B7F42-5A5D-78E7-B1DC-DAA06A99CCB2 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/Moa.framework/Versions/A/Moa 0x8069000 - 0x8070fff +com.macromedia.morefiles MoreFiles version 1.0 (1.0) <36115C66-79A3-5DB9-B36B-8D655B46FC76 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/MoreFiles.framework/Versions/A/MoreFiles 0x8077000 - 0x815bfe3 +libPowerPlant2.dylib ??? (???) <964FB3D7-B7EE-94EB-FD95-4AE90C657A4A /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x828e000 - 0x8294ffb +com.macromedia.testframework 1.0 (1.0) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/uwchar.framework/Versions/A/uwchar 0x8298000 - 0x829cffc +com.adobe.AdobeCrashReporter 3.0 (3.0.20100302) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeCrashReporter.framework/Versions/A/AdobeCrashReporter 0x82a3000 - 0x82bbfef +libgiff.dylib ??? (???) <8F90552B-3D11-2B1E-D1BA-A109FEB99969 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/libgiff.dylib 0x82c3000 - 0x82e1fe7 +com.macromedia.png LibPNG version 1.0 (1.0) <2DBA0A3F-4F01-7474-0FED-3021382D635F /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/LibPNG.framework/Versions/A/LibPNG 0x82e9000 - 0x82f7feb +com.macromedia.zlib ZLib version 1.0 (1.0) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ZLib.framework/Versions/A/ZLib 0x82fc000 - 0x8300ffd +com.yourcompany.yourcocoaframework ??? (1.0) <7EF7A82E-0AAE-0022-3B15-7C50F1C550C1 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ASEFramework.framework/Versions/A/ASEFramework 0x8305000 - 0x830cff2 +com.adobe.boost_threads.framework boost_threads version 5.0.0 (5.0.0.0) /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/boost_threads.framework/Versions/A/boost_threads 0x831c000 - 0x8322fef +com.adobe.boost_date_time.framework boost_date_time version 5.0.0 (5.0.0.0) <8837A972-1EBE-CAA9-473A-CD157F17163D /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/boost_date_time.framework/Versions/A/boost_date_time 0x8333000 - 0x83b0fff +AdobeOwlCanvas ??? (???) <65B2E680-4F43-BE46-2290-3500758D1BF7 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeOwlCanvas.framework/Versions/A/AdobeOwlCanvas 0x83cc000 - 0x83d7ff3 +com.adobe.boost_filesystem.framework boost_filesystem version 5.0.0 (5.0.0.0) <90B8B4E3-6C44-D110-1545-1A34EB14B22D /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/boost_filesystem.framework/Versions/A/boost_filesystem 0x83eb000 - 0x83edffb +com.adobe.boost_system.framework boost_system version 5.0.0 (5.0.0.0) <0C4D56E8-9593-4C4A-4A7E-BEAEDE1CA131 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/boost_system.framework/Versions/A/boost_system ... E86745B94A4B /System/Library/Frameworks/ApplicationServices.framework/Versions/A/Frameworks/ATS.framework/Versions/A/Resources/libFontParser.dylib 0x9984a000 - 0x9989aff7 com.apple.framework.familycontrols 2.0.2 (2020) /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/FamilyControls.framework/Versions/A/FamilyControls 0x99a6e000 - 0x99a6fff7 com.apple.audio.units.AudioUnit 1.6.5 (1.6.5) /System/Library/Frameworks/AudioUnit.framework/Versions/A/AudioUnit 0x99a72000 - 0x99a86ffb com.apple.speech.synthesis.framework 3.10.35 (3.10.35) <9F5CE4F7-D05C-8C14-4B76-E43D07A8A680 /System/Library/Frameworks/ApplicationServices.framework/Versions/A/Frameworks/SpeechSynthesis.framework/Versions/A/SpeechSynthesis 0xb0000000 - 0xb000fff8 +com.adobe.ahclientframework 1.5.0.30 (1.5.0.30) <24B39C2F-79B0-BDE3-C6D0-1F0E943070C7 /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ahclient.framework/Versions/A/ahclient 0xffff0000 - 0xffff1fff libSystem.B.dylib ??? (???) <62291026-D016-705D-DC1E-FC2B09D47DE5 /usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib

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  • MacBook OS X applications crashing on startup

    - by Ryan Doom
    Closed my computer last night, went home. Opened it and it had restarted. Now when I open a couple programs such as Adobe Fireworks or Appcelerator Titanium they throw up a nasty error like below. Other programs (Chrome, Firefox, Textmate, Versions) work fine. Any thoughts on this? I haven't owned my MacBook long so I'm not even aware of the right tools or places to look to track this down. Any help would be most appreciated. It's making it hard to get my work done :] If it helps at all both those programs were probably open when it restarted. From the look of it I'm not sure if it's a permissions error or something? I completely re-installed one of the applications (Appcelerator Titanium). Didn't seem to help. Process: Adobe Fireworks CS5 [1044] Path: /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/Adobe Fireworks CS5 Identifier: com.macromedia.fireworks Version: Adobe Fireworks CS5 version 11.0.0.484 (11.0.0) Code Type: X86 (Native) Parent Process: launchd [87] Date/Time: 2011-02-18 09:45:47.689 -0500 OS Version: Mac OS X 10.6.6 (10J567) Report Version: 6 Interval Since Last Report: 12983 sec Crashes Since Last Report: 6 Per-App Interval Since Last Report: 325365 sec Per-App Crashes Since Last Report: 4 Anonymous UUID: D16EAFE7-2F04-44D4-A984-5902A6EF8943 Exception Type: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGBUS) Exception Codes: KERN_PROTECTION_FAILURE at 0x00000000b0327ff8 Crashed Thread: 7 Thread 0: Dispatch queue: com.apple.main-thread 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd0142 semaphore_wait_signal_trap + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd5c46 pthread_mutex_lock + 490 2 libstdc++.6.dylib 0x91887559 __gnu_cxx::__recursive_mutex::lock() + 17 3 libstdc++.6.dylib 0x918874e6 __cxa_guard_acquire + 68 4 libTrueTypeScaler.dylib 0x91c92ab3 TTScalerInfo() + 50 5 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979a5f1 TTrueTypeScaler::CreateTrueTypeScaler() + 43 6 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dee900 pthread_once + 82 7 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979a575 TTrueTypeScaler::GetTrueTypeScaler() + 47 8 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979a520 TTrueTypeScaler::TTrueTypeScaler(TScalerStrike const&) + 26 9 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979a4be TFontScaler::CreateFontScaler(TScalerStrike const&) + 52 10 libFontParser.dylib 0x9979bd93 FPFontGetGlyphsForUnichars + 344 11 com.apple.CoreText 0x98255cfe TBaseFont::CalculateFontMetrics(bool) const + 342 12 com.apple.CoreText 0x98255b55 TBaseFont::InitFontMetrics() const + 51 13 com.apple.CoreText 0x98255959 TBaseFont::GetStrikeMetrics(float, CGAffineTransform const*, bool) const + 81 14 com.apple.CoreText 0x982558cd TFont::InitStrikeMetrics() const + 55 15 com.apple.CoreText 0x982592cf CTFontGetAscent + 49 16 com.apple.AppKit 0x989f5d08 __NSFontInstanceInfoInitializeMetricsInfo + 48 17 com.apple.AppKit 0x989f5cbc -[__NSSharedFontInstanceInfo _defaultLineHeight:] + 40 18 com.apple.AppKit 0x98f3c5e8 +[NSStringDrawingTextStorage _fastDrawString:attributes:length:inRect:graphicsContext:baselineRendering:usesFontLeading:usesScreenFont:typesetterBehavior:paragraphStyle:lineBreakMode:boundingRect:padding:scrollable:] + 2041 19 com.apple.AppKit 0x98abd2d9 _NSStringDrawingCore + 1555 20 com.apple.AppKit 0x98abca8b _NSDrawTextCell + 3465 21 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ac6185 -[NSTextFieldCell drawInteriorWithFrame:inView:] + 764 22 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ac5d26 -[NSTextFieldCell drawWithFrame:inView:] + 816 23 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ac03de -[NSControl drawRect:] + 589 24 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab882a -[NSView _drawRect:clip:] + 3510 25 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab74c8 -[NSView _recursiveDisplayAllDirtyWithLockFocus:visRect:] + 1600 26 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab77fd -[NSView _recursiveDisplayAllDirtyWithLockFocus:visRect:] + 2421 27 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab77fd -[NSView _recursiveDisplayAllDirtyWithLockFocus:visRect:] + 2421 28 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab59e7 -[NSView _recursiveDisplayRectIfNeededIgnoringOpacity:isVisibleRect:rectIsVisibleRectForView:topView:] + 711 29 com.apple.AppKit 0x98b54aa3 -[NSNextStepFrame _recursiveDisplayRectIfNeededIgnoringOpacity:isVisibleRect:rectIsVisibleRectForView:topView:] + 311 30 com.apple.AppKit 0x98ab1ea2 -[NSView _displayRectIgnoringOpacity:isVisibleRect:rectIsVisibleRectForView:] + 3309 31 com.apple.AppKit 0x98a12a57 -[NSView displayIfNeeded] + 818 32 com.apple.AppKit 0x989c6661 -[NSNextStepFrame displayIfNeeded] + 98 33 com.apple.AppKit 0x98b55390 -[NSWindow display] + 75 34 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x00bade98 0x1000 + 12242584 35 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x0089f778 0x1000 + 9037688 36 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x08109722 FW_PowerPlant::LCarbonApp::Run() + 54 37 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x008a138c 0x1000 + 9044876 38 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x00003596 0x1000 + 9622 Thread 1: Dispatch queue: com.apple.libdispatch-manager 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df6982 kevent + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df709c _dispatch_mgr_invoke + 215 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df6559 _dispatch_queue_invoke + 163 3 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df62fe _dispatch_worker_thread2 + 240 4 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5d81 _pthread_wqthread + 390 5 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5bc6 start_wqthread + 30 Thread 2: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5a12 __workq_kernreturn + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5fa8 _pthread_wqthread + 941 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97df5bc6 start_wqthread + 30 Thread 3: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd015a semaphore_timedwait_signal_trap + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfdce5 _pthread_cond_wait + 1066 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97e2cac8 pthread_cond_timedwait_relative_np + 47 3 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97af4ecd TSWaitOnConditionTimedRelative + 242 4 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97af4c0b TSWaitOnSemaphoreCommon + 511 5 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b18e33 TimerThread + 97 6 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 7 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 4: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd00fa mach_msg_trap + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd0867 mach_msg + 68 2 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b9e0d0 YieldToThread + 446 3 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b9e1d3 SetThreadState + 134 4 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b9e28e SetThreadStateEndCritical + 111 5 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x0811ab51 FW_PowerPlant::LThread::SemWait(FW_PowerPlant::LSemaphore*, long, QHdr&, unsigned char&) + 119 6 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x08119b07 FW_PowerPlant::LSemaphore::BlockThread(long) + 61 7 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x08119b6d FW_PowerPlant::LSemaphore::Wait(long) + 71 8 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x0811af70 FW_PowerPlant::LThread::Cleanup::Run() + 32 9 libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x0811b94e FW_PowerPlant::LThread::DoEntry(void*) + 30 10 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b9e85f CooperativeThread + 309 11 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 12 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 5: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dd0142 semaphore_wait_signal_trap + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfdcfc _pthread_cond_wait + 1089 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97e4646f pthread_cond_wait + 48 3 com.adobe.amt.services 0x1dd73126 AMTConditionLock::LockWhenCondition(int) + 46 4 com.adobe.amt.services 0x1dd6bdb0 _AMTThreadedPCDService::PCDThreadWorker(_AMTThreadedPCDService*) + 116 5 com.adobe.amt.services 0x1dd7318c AMTThread::Worker(void*) + 24 6 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 7 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 6: 0 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfe0a6 __semwait_signal + 10 1 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfdd62 _pthread_cond_wait + 1191 2 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dff9f8 pthread_cond_wait$UNIX2003 + 73 3 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97b0951e TSWaitOnCondition + 126 4 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97af4ea5 TSWaitOnConditionTimedRelative + 202 5 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97af0873 MPWaitOnQueue + 250 6 com.macromedia.fireworks 0x00ae43cf 0x1000 + 11416527 7 ...ple.CoreServices.CarbonCore 0x97ad485a PrivateMPEntryPoint + 68 8 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 9 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 7 Crashed: 0 libstdc++.6.dylib 0x9184e00c std::basic_ofstream<char, std::char_traits<char> >::open(char const*, std::_Ios_Openmode) + 16 1 libstdc++.6.dylib 0x9184fe9b std::basic_ifstream<char, std::char_traits<char> >::basic_ifstream(char const*, std::_Ios_Openmode) + 211 2 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e824779 ESDifstream::ESDifstream(std::string const&, char const*, std::_Ios_Openmode) + 73 3 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e821b6a esd::ExpatDOMBuilder<esd::XMLDocumentNode>::ParseFile(std::string const&, bool) + 96 4 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e822da4 esd::PrefsWriter::SetPrefsPath(std::string const&) + 206 5 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e8449b3 AdobeUpdaterPrefs::AdobeUpdaterPrefs() + 8609 6 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e8459f4 AdobeUpdaterPrefs::GetAdobeUpdaterPrefs() + 68 7 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e820728 UpdaterNotificationsImpl::InitLogFile() + 48 8 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e820d49 UpdaterNotificationsImpl::Instance() + 53 9 ...pdaterNotificationFramework 0x1e823638 UpdaterNotificationsIsUpdaterEnabled + 22 10 com.adobe.amt.services 0x1dd69d15 _AMTAUMService::IsUpdaterEnabled(T_CSUStatusMajor*, int*) + 359 11 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f5501c AMTAUMServiceIsUpdaterEnabled + 290 12 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f1f789 AMTImpl::CallMenuEnablers() + 71 13 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f260fa AMTImpl::DoLaunchWorkflow(AMTImpl::LaunchSequence) + 1664 14 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f26a5d AMTImpl::DoValidateWorkflow(AMTImpl::LaunchSequence) + 293 15 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f26cf5 AMTImpl::DoPreValidateWorkflow() + 119 16 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f26e71 AMTImpl::ServiceLoaderThread(void*) + 45 17 com.adobe.amtlib 0x01f54c48 AMTThread::Worker(void*) + 24 18 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd85d _pthread_start + 345 19 libSystem.B.dylib 0x97dfd6e2 thread_start + 34 Thread 7 crashed with X86 Thread State (32-bit): eax: 0x00000016 ebx: 0x098c9a00 ecx: 0xa013dfc0 edx: 0x00000003 edi: 0x098c9a08 esi: 0x098c9c0c ebp: 0xb03a7448 esp: 0xb0327ff0 ss: 0x0000001f efl: 0x00010202 eip: 0x9184e00c cs: 0x00000017 ds: 0x0000001f es: 0x0000001f fs: 0x0000001f gs: 0x00000037 cr2: 0xb0327ff8 Binary Images: 0x1000 - 0x1448ff1 +com.macromedia.fireworks Adobe Fireworks CS5 version 11.0.0.484 (11.0.0) <38213EBD-FDB0-FC20-40E8-87935A5386BB> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/Adobe Fireworks CS5 0x1e76000 - 0x1ec9ffb +com.adobe.headlights.LogSessionFramework ??? (2.0.1.011) <4F2BFF03-01D2-A07D-E5E2-7F88D4C2DEC4> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/LogSession.framework/Versions/A/LogSession 0x1f11000 - 0x1f77ffb +com.adobe.amtlib amtlib 3.0.0.64 (3.0.0.64) <DD471011-9120-1BC2-F1B5-D6FF09D0859F> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/amtlib.framework/Versions/A/amtlib 0x1fa7000 - 0x2146fe7 +com.adobe.owl AdobeOwl version 3.0.81 (3.0.81) <9C261D9E-9BD7-5DE6-5676-AEEF4828D17B> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeOwl.framework/Versions/A/AdobeOwl 0x21af000 - 0x22e7fe7 +WRServices ??? (???) <52CE5B97-1E6A-92A2-EA70-93511AB7EA2E> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/WRServices.framework/Versions/A/WRServices 0x232d000 - 0x239afef +FileInfo ??? (???) <4A4C74F9-CA83-B174-F56D-F7671DC61389> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/FileInfo.framework/Versions/A/FileInfo 0x23b5000 - 0x23dbff6 +AdobeAXE8SharedExpat ??? (???) <5848BBCE-3A3E-66EE-5527-97A96F0CA4CC> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeAXE8SharedExpat.framework/Versions/A/AdobeAXE8SharedExpat 0x23ec000 - 0x2407fff +AdobeBIB ??? (???) <3B3092DC-A296-9D1C-1922-D20E6A5A7D7E> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeBIB.framework/Versions/A/AdobeBIB 0x2411000 - 0x2469ff7 +AdobeXMP ??? (???) <73329999-C364-2451-6574-4D0277057D19> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeXMP.framework/Versions/A/AdobeXMP 0x2478000 - 0x2aa6fe7 +AdobeAGM ??? (???) <91D37E54-E985-47E1-2696-0BD7E4183132> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeAGM.framework/Versions/A/AdobeAGM 0x2c04000 - 0x2d18fff +AdobeACE ??? (???) <DD291A17-ECF4-FE20-5837-AC1F5BC76940> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeACE.framework/Versions/A/AdobeACE 0x2d3b000 - 0x302dff7 +AdobeCoolType ??? (???) <9FDD596D-9824-2BB9-5DA2-25DACAB6A324> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeCoolType.framework/Versions/A/AdobeCoolType 0x30b5000 - 0x30d6ff7 +AdobeBIBUtils ??? (???) <E1FAA7A3-E807-DE5A-1F68-7A53780E8202> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeBIBUtils.framework/Versions/A/AdobeBIBUtils 0x30e2000 - 0x311efff +AdobeARE ??? (???) <76851E91-2381-5D05-742C-BB24E4BAD276> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeARE.framework/Versions/A/AdobeARE 0x3127000 - 0x34ffff7 +AdobeMPS ??? (???) <13614867-4D80-EB74-FA7F-6136492478BA> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeMPS.framework/Versions/A/AdobeMPS 0x362e000 - 0x3c62feb +AdobePDFL ??? (???) <49D6D58A-1EBB-424A-4CB0-8F9691E0991D> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobePDFL.framework/Versions/A/AdobePDFL 0x3d8e000 - 0x4ad1fff +com.adobe.psl AdobePSL 12.0.0.7524 (12.0.0.7524) <CFBCB19A-03F7-D095-1F48-8D68F05A25C5> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobePSL.framework/Versions/A/AdobePSL 0x4e10000 - 0x4e9aff7 +com.adobe.AdobeScCore ScCore 4.1.7 (4.1.7.5522) <053A109E-3E3E-D3EE-7186-4920D927D2AD> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeScCore.framework/Versions/A/AdobeScCore 0x4edd000 - 0x4fc0fef +AdobePDFPort ??? (???) <A2E6DCF7-283F-09E9-53AE-D5D84D020469> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobePDFPort.framework/Versions/A/AdobePDFPort 0x4ff5000 - 0x4ff8ff8 +com.adobe.ape.shim adbeape version 3.1.65.7508 (3.1.65.7508) <FFDDAB7A-220F-7344-F12B-010CA0C41DAB> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/adbeape.framework/Versions/A/adbeape 0x4ffe000 - 0x508fff7 +libicucnv.dylib.36.0 36.0.0 (compatibility 36.0.0) <581475CC-C039-1B42-49BA-71811D8B4E15> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ICUConverter.framework/Versions/3.6/libicucnv.dylib.36.0 0x50ae000 - 0x5a5efff +libicudata.dylib.36.0 36.0.0 (compatibility 36.0.0) <02108DEA-3DD2-14BE-DAEB-BE522B619C1D> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ICUData.framework/Versions/3.6/libicudata.dylib.36.0 0x5a61000 - 0x5b2eff3 +libicui18n.dylib.36.0 36.0.0 (compatibility 36.0.0) <08F15219-7F35-574E-7725-1ACAA1B18A00> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ICUInternationalization.framework/Versions/3.6/libicui18n.dylib.36.0 0x5b91000 - 0x5c6bfef +libicuuc.dylib.36.0 36.0.0 (compatibility 36.0.0) <5EE72009-40B3-7FB7-3A49-576AEDE0D400> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ICUUnicode.framework/Versions/3.6/libicuuc.dylib.36.0 0x5cab000 - 0x6a36fe7 +com.adobe.illustrator 382 (15.0.0) <64F68532-0311-6BBA-1F50-246CAF917549> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AILib.framework/Versions/A/AILib 0x781b000 - 0x785ffff +com.adobe.illustrator.aiport AIPort version 1.0 (1.0) <69EDC44E-D7BB-A259-282D-C42725AE0E26> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AIPort.framework/Versions/A/AIPort 0x78c2000 - 0x7908fff +FilterPort ??? (???) <23FAE9D1-9376-1E71-21F7-D3EB2BFD50EE> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/FilterPort.framework/Versions/A/FilterPort 0x797d000 - 0x797dfff +SPBasic ??? (???) <5D1760D8-C910-C641-0BC9-CF74A1A5190D> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/SPBasic.framework/Versions/A/SPBasic 0x7981000 - 0x7b67ff7 +com.adobe.linguistic.LinguisticManager 5.0.0 (11309) <CA1D50A3-F965-F8B2-76B9-007F290C5791> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeLinguistic.framework/Versions/3/AdobeLinguistic 0x7bf5000 - 0x7cc2fe7 +AdobeAXEDOMCore ??? (???) <F76D74DC-FD5A-9783-C447-2E58773DA7E1> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeAXEDOMCore.framework/Versions/A/AdobeAXEDOMCore 0x7d31000 - 0x7ea9ffb +com.adobe.PlugPlug 2.0.0.746 (2.0.0.746) <08AD22E3-34C0-6749-E497-616C66A246AD> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/PlugPlug.framework/Versions/A/PlugPlug 0x7f4d000 - 0x7f6afef +libCurl.dylib ??? (???) <1BA6E2DE-EF14-D50A-4697-035AE07875D7> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/libCurl.dylib 0x7f72000 - 0x7f88ff4 +libChar16.dylib ??? (???) <19B0479C-72B1-EE14-6385-7F655DEC0F02> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/libChar16.dylib 0x7f90000 - 0x7fb3fe0 +libCoreTypes.dylib ??? (???) <F5306147-FFBD-2826-D356-B26258DBFA09> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/MacOS/libCoreTypes.dylib 0x7fc3000 - 0x7fcaffc com.apple.carbonframeworktemplate 1.0 (1.0) <0D270CC7-B715-943E-2B4F-5C9B5775505A> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/NetIO.framework/Versions/A/NetIO 0x7fd6000 - 0x7fd9fff +Dioxide.dylib ??? (???) <BCE94F23-4CCA-20FB-79A8-DE7925879DCD> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/Dioxide.dylib 0x7fe1000 - 0x7fe7ffc +libfwutility.dylib ??? (???) <6A723D9E-A60B-56EE-2B8D-B91991793749> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/libfwutility.dylib 0x7fee000 - 0x803efff +com.macromedia.javascript Javascript version 1.0 (1.0) <540CB029-3946-8E41-BD91-AED6F73C86B7> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/Javascript.framework/Versions/A/Javascript 0x8053000 - 0x8060fff +com.macromedia.moa Moa version 1.0 (1.0) <3C4B7F42-5A5D-78E7-B1DC-DAA06A99CCB2> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/Moa.framework/Versions/A/Moa 0x8069000 - 0x8070fff +com.macromedia.morefiles MoreFiles version 1.0 (1.0) <36115C66-79A3-5DB9-B36B-8D655B46FC76> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/MoreFiles.framework/Versions/A/MoreFiles 0x8077000 - 0x815bfe3 +libPowerPlant2.dylib ??? (???) <964FB3D7-B7EE-94EB-FD95-4AE90C657A4A> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/libPowerPlant2.dylib 0x828e000 - 0x8294ffb +com.macromedia.testframework 1.0 (1.0) <ED14FA00-1C6F-D433-1EEB-833BB4402B2B> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/uwchar.framework/Versions/A/uwchar 0x8298000 - 0x829cffc +com.adobe.AdobeCrashReporter 3.0 (3.0.20100302) <E6437929-0E69-8A56-E69F-F64305E82DD9> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeCrashReporter.framework/Versions/A/AdobeCrashReporter 0x82a3000 - 0x82bbfef +libgiff.dylib ??? (???) <8F90552B-3D11-2B1E-D1BA-A109FEB99969> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/libgiff.dylib 0x82c3000 - 0x82e1fe7 +com.macromedia.png LibPNG version 1.0 (1.0) <2DBA0A3F-4F01-7474-0FED-3021382D635F> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/LibPNG.framework/Versions/A/LibPNG 0x82e9000 - 0x82f7feb +com.macromedia.zlib ZLib version 1.0 (1.0) <EEA4CFAF-A748-FA72-91F0-ADE7A1BE9FA7> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ZLib.framework/Versions/A/ZLib 0x82fc000 - 0x8300ffd +com.yourcompany.yourcocoaframework ??? (1.0) <7EF7A82E-0AAE-0022-3B15-7C50F1C550C1> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ASEFramework.framework/Versions/A/ASEFramework 0x8305000 - 0x830cff2 +com.adobe.boost_threads.framework boost_threads version 5.0.0 (5.0.0.0) <F966C78A-3CC1-8678-B3B7-B0A2B118343A> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/boost_threads.framework/Versions/A/boost_threads 0x831c000 - 0x8322fef +com.adobe.boost_date_time.framework boost_date_time version 5.0.0 (5.0.0.0) <8837A972-1EBE-CAA9-473A-CD157F17163D> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/boost_date_time.framework/Versions/A/boost_date_time 0x8333000 - 0x83b0fff +AdobeOwlCanvas ??? (???) <65B2E680-4F43-BE46-2290-3500758D1BF7> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/AdobeOwlCanvas.framework/Versions/A/AdobeOwlCanvas 0x83cc000 - 0x83d7ff3 +com.adobe.boost_filesystem.framework boost_filesystem version 5.0.0 (5.0.0.0) <90B8B4E3-6C44-D110-1545-1A34EB14B22D> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/boost_filesystem.framework/Versions/A/boost_filesystem 0x83eb000 - 0x83edffb +com.adobe.boost_system.framework boost_system version 5.0.0 (5.0.0.0) <0C4D56E8-9593-4C4A-4A7E-BEAEDE1CA131> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/boost_system.framework/Versions/A/boost_system ... E86745B94A4B> /System/Library/Frameworks/ApplicationServices.framework/Versions/A/Frameworks/ATS.framework/Versions/A/Resources/libFontParser.dylib 0x9984a000 - 0x9989aff7 com.apple.framework.familycontrols 2.0.2 (2020) <AF7F86F1-F7BF-CBA8-7A4A-D8F7A19F9601> /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/FamilyControls.framework/Versions/A/FamilyControls 0x99a6e000 - 0x99a6fff7 com.apple.audio.units.AudioUnit 1.6.5 (1.6.5) <BE4C2495-B758-AD22-DCC0-56A6791E948E> /System/Library/Frameworks/AudioUnit.framework/Versions/A/AudioUnit 0x99a72000 - 0x99a86ffb com.apple.speech.synthesis.framework 3.10.35 (3.10.35) <9F5CE4F7-D05C-8C14-4B76-E43D07A8A680> /System/Library/Frameworks/ApplicationServices.framework/Versions/A/Frameworks/SpeechSynthesis.framework/Versions/A/SpeechSynthesis 0xb0000000 - 0xb000fff8 +com.adobe.ahclientframework 1.5.0.30 (1.5.0.30) <24B39C2F-79B0-BDE3-C6D0-1F0E943070C7> /Applications/Adobe Fireworks CS5/Adobe Fireworks CS5.app/Contents/Frameworks/ahclient.framework/Versions/A/ahclient 0xffff0000 - 0xffff1fff libSystem.B.dylib ??? (???) <62291026-D016-705D-DC1E-FC2B09D47DE5> /usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib If you prefer, Here are the crashes on Pastebin: Crash 1 (Fireworks) Crash 2 (Appcelerator Titanium)

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  • A classic StackOverflow : Java Swing

    - by ModernTalking
    Greetings everyone! I programmed GUI Application using Java Swing under Windows. Under windows everything works well. Now I am trying it under Linux (using distribution Linux Mint 7). I am getting and nasty StackOverflowException, when I call frame's dispose method! The problematic frame is JDialog component. Here is some output : edited, full output run: Exception in thread "AWT-EventQueue-0" java.lang.StackOverflowError at sun.reflect.GeneratedMethodAccessor1.invoke(Unknown Source) at sun.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:43) at java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:616) at sun.reflect.misc.MethodUtil.invoke(MethodUtil.java:261) at java.beans.Statement.invoke(Statement.java:231) at java.beans.Expression.getValue(Expression.java:115) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:227) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.PersistenceDelegate.writeObject(PersistenceDelegate.java:116) at java.beans.Encoder.writeObject(Encoder.java:74) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeObject(XMLEncoder.java:274) at java.beans.Encoder.writeExpression(Encoder.java:304) at java.beans.XMLEncoder.writeExpression(XMLEncoder.java:389) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.doProperty(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:229) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initBean(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:264) at java.beans.DefaultPersistenceDelegate.initialize(DefaultPersistenceDelegate.java:408) at java.beans.Persistenc

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