Hi,
When I run Roadshow from Workbench using the network-startup script (from a CLI window or project icon), then sometimes it works properly and sometimes it simply crashes. When I let the program start as normal through user-startup it always seems to work fine. Apparently c:addnetinterface somehow doesn't like being started from Workbench.
Note that this also happens when I boot without a startup sequence from the boot menu and a minimal Workbench (assign ENV: RAM:, Loadwb).
Is this a bug, or is the program only supposed to be started during the startup sequence?
Machine: A1200, Blizzard 1230 MK4, 64MB, Easynet PCMCIA netweork card, Kickstart 3.0.
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Roadshow crashes.
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Re: Roadshow crashes.
No, this is not supposed to happen. It should be possible to start the network by double-clicking on the respective network interface configuration file rather than have it set up from S:Network-Startup.Thorham wrote:Hi,
When I run Roadshow from Workbench using the network-startup script (from a CLI window or project icon), then sometimes it works properly and sometimes it simply crashes. When I let the program start as normal through user-startup it always seems to work fine. Apparently c:addnetinterface somehow doesn't like being started from Workbench.
Note that this also happens when I boot without a startup sequence from the boot menu and a minimal Workbench (assign ENV: RAM:, Loadwb).
Is this a bug, or is the program only supposed to be started during the startup sequence?
Do you actually start the original Network-Startup script, as provided with Roadshow? I can't say I have ever done that myself, but right now I couldn't think of a reason why this should not work. Except perhaps if you do not provide enough stack space to the script.
Re: Roadshow crashes.
Yeah, tried that, and it works inconsistently.olsen wrote:It should be possible to start the network by double-clicking on the respective network interface configuration file rather than have it set up from S:Network-Startup.
Yes, but that doesn't work reliably either (it does when executed before Workbench is loaded via user-startup).olsen wrote:Do you actually start the original Network-Startup script, as provided with Roadshow?
I can certainly try that.olsen wrote:Except perhaps if you do not provide enough stack space to the script.
Thanks
Re: Roadshow crashes.
If the network startup succeeds before Workbench is opened, it's possible that something else is interfering with the operations of the network driver, or maybe even Roadshow itself.Thorham wrote:Yeah, tried that, and it works inconsistently.olsen wrote:It should be possible to start the network by double-clicking on the respective network interface configuration file rather than have it set up from S:Network-Startup.
Yes, but that doesn't work reliably either (it does when executed before Workbench is loaded via user-startup).olsen wrote:Do you actually start the original Network-Startup script, as provided with Roadshow?
I can certainly try that.olsen wrote:Except perhaps if you do not provide enough stack space to the script.
Thanks
Here's something fun to try which might shed some light on what is going on: use the shell to rename the "bsdsocket.library" in LIBS: to something else (e.g. "bsdsocket.library.disabled"), then restart your system.
Now reverse the change you made, renaming "bsdsocket.library.disabled" to "bsdsocket.library", and start the network as you would have done before. Does it still crash?
By renaming the library you prevent all other applications from opening "bsdsocket.library" before you actually start the network manually. If the crashes no longer happen with this weird workaround, I'd like to hear about it.
Wow, it's been three months already?
To olsen:
I'm going to try that, but I don't think anything is accessing the bsdsocket library at all.
To olsen:
I'm going to try that, but I don't think anything is accessing the bsdsocket library at all.
If that's the case then that's NOT good. I don't use anything other than a network pcmcia card. Also, the crash happens with the most minimal Workbench possible (assign ENV: RAM:, loadwb with an empty wbstart directory).Thomas wrote:Maybe something loaded by Workbench occupies the PCMCIA port? Some CF card driver perhaps? In this case it's probably not Roadshow which crashes but the PCMCIA network driver.
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