Folks, I recently upgraded to Windows 7. Before that I was running XP with Cygwin 5.1. (I can't give you the exact version because it's now gone). I have scripts running in the background constantly doing things like downloading news, uploading my current dynamic IP to another machine, running a nigthly unison, etc. Immediately after upgrading to Windows 7, I started seeing very infrequent errors like the following:
[... a few minutes of execution without errors ...] /home/wayne/bin/quote: line 8: /usr/bin/date: Bad address [... a few more minutes of execution without errors ... ] /home/wayne/bin/quote: line 74: /usr/bin/tr: Bad address [... a few more minutes of execution without errors ... ] bash: /home/wayne/bin/quote: /bin/sh: bad interpreter: Bad address /home/wayne/bin/quote: fork: Resource temporarily unavailable /home/wayne/bin/quote: fork: Resource temporarily unavailable /home/wayne/bin/quote: fork: Resource temporarily unavailable /home/wayne/bin/quote: fork: Resource temporarily unavailable Note that the error is coming from random executables called from my scripts. Now, the "fork: Resource temporarily unavaible" errors I've seen before, ongoing for years, and they're annoying but not critical because execution would always continue. I would also consider these "Bad address" errors not to be crucial except occasionally they cause my script to just freeze up and stop dead. Not good since I need these scripts to be running continuously. The first thing I did was upgrade from Cygwin 5.1 to 6.1, the most recent stable release. It didn't solve the problem. Then I tried re-compiling all my own personal executables. No luck. Then I found a description of a similar problem back in August on this list, http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2010-08/msg00277.html where Corinna Vinschen suggested getting the most recent developer version. I assumed this means cygwin1.dll. So I went and got the most recent developer version, which is 13 February 2011, and I downloaded and un-tar'd http://cygwin.org/snapshots/cygwin-inst-20110213.tar.bz2 Then I rebooted. No luck. The problem persists. This is what "uname -a" now says: CYGWIN_NT-6.1 pisa 1.7.8s(0.236/5/3) 20110213 16:43:51 i686 Cygwin Has anybody else encountered this problem? Any clue as to what's causing it? -- Wayne Hayes, Assistant Professor, Computer Science Department. 4092 Bren Hall, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697-3435. e-mail: wa...@ics.uci.edu; Office Phone: +1-949-824-1753 "Base 10 sucks. If God had been a decent mathematician, he would've given us 12 fingers instead of 10." - unknown -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple