some forms of damage to the DB file that can result in seg faults or
their equivalent, eg. But I've never seen them with a healthy DB file
and reasonably benign user commands (and you can't really get at the
funky SQLite stuff from Android's Java).
On Aug 3, 2:53 pm, Mark Murphy <mmur...@commonsware.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 3, 2010 at 3:48 PM, Greg Giacovelli <miyamo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > So I have been getting actual segfaults reported on start up of my
> > app. However the segfault is within sqlite while opening a db which
> > hasn't been touched in a while. Is there something I am missing? Here
> > is a sample one that was sent to me recently.
>
> Segfaults are invariably a firmware/OS failure. There's nothing a
> developer can do from SDK code that should result in a segfault, at
> least that I am aware of.
>
> If fadden does not respond to this post (and he has a remarkable gift
> for finding these core dump posts), post it and any other info you can
> supply to an issue on b.android.com. In particular:
>
> -- if you have a project that reproduces the problem, that'd be huge
>
> -- if you are getting these reports from the field, include all
> distinct "Build fingerprint" values, so we can better determine if the
> problem is unique to a handset, manufacturer, OS release, or is
> pervasive
>
> --
> Mark Murphy (a Commons Guy)http://commonsware.com|http://github.com/commonsguyhttp://commonsware.com/blog|http://twitter.com/commonsguy
>
> Android Development Wiki:http://wiki.andmob.org
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