Since some time ago I loose all of my 3 pinned tabs every morning while
my ~20 "normal" tabs never have disappeared.
Btw: My workaround at the moment is the add-on "session buddy". It auto
saves my tab session in the evening and I manually restore them every
morning.
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You received this bug no
Haven't seen this problem for a while and just tested on 14.04: Seems it
has been fixed somewhere in the last two years.
So I guess this bug report could be closed.
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https://bugs.launchpa
This bug or a similar is still present in 13.10 (and has been in 12.10
and 13.04):
I believe this is essentially the same as a bug report over at Novell:
https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=819524
Seems strlen is being called on NULL pointers. As the bug report at
Novell has been fixed ve
Dmitrijs:
I don't see how this bug is related to any of the points mentioned in that
security notice.
On a closer look at the openSuse bug report comment #2 just mentions those
security fixes without directly claiming that they fix the bug itself. In
Comment #3 the bug was declared fixed, perhap
gcc-4.8 4.8.1-10ubuntu9 in saucy-proposed fixes the issue for me.
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1246802
Title:
STL std::nth_element bug (fixed upstream)
To manage notifications abou
Public bug reported:
$ lsb_release -rd
Description:Ubuntu 13.10
Release:13.10
$ uname -a
Linux mhassert 3.11.0-13-generic #20-Ubuntu SMP Wed Oct 23 07:38:26 UTC 2013
x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
$gcc -dumpversion
4.8
$ ld -v
GNU ld (GNU Binutils for Ubuntu) 2.23.52.20130913
$ LC
** Description changed:
+ EDIT: adapted description according to SRU Bug Template
+
+ [IMPACT]
+
+ * impact on users:
+ Profiling an application with callgrind produces false results: The
application silently changes behavior because of false strstr() results in
certain cases.
+
+ * justifi
Hi Julian,
nice to see the patch made it into upcoming quatal/12.10.
Any chance to get it also into precise/12.04? After all it's a LTS
release and lot's of machines (especially development machines) won't
make the switch to 12.10 and so would be stuck with the bug for years.
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You received th
Setting to confirmed because it is confirmed and fixed upstream
** Changed in: valgrind (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Confirmed
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1027977
Title:
strstr(
The attached patch is taken from the fix of the upstream bug report. I modified
it slightly to fit version 3.7.0 in the debian/ubuntu package:
- removed the second part as that function does not yet exist in 3.7.0
- Corrected line numbers of chunks to avoid warning when patch is applied.
** Patch
I built a patched version of the current valgrind package using
fix-VEX-PCMPxSTRx.patch
Attached is the output of debdiff.
I'v been using this patched version for a day now and it works fine for me.
** Patch added: "Output of debdiff including my previous patch"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubu
Hi Josef and Julian. Thanks for fixing the bug so fast!
As far as I understand the patches are for now only in cvs head? I'd really
love to get this fixed in the debian/ubuntu package as fast as possible. Do you
plan on releasing a patched version of valgrind-3.7.0 in the near future? Or
should
Yes, compiling myself was of course the quick solution. I patched and
built the valgrind package from Ubuntu locally and it works like a
charm. Thanks again! Saves me lots of trouble.
There's no particular reason to care about other Ubuntu users. It's not
really an security issue or anything like
Public bug reported:
$valgrind --version
valgrind-3.7.0
When an application that uses the strstr() function from the C standard library
is profiled with valgrind --tool=callgrind, the strstr() function produces
false results (at least) under the following conditions:
* the string s1 to search i
** Attachment added: "minimal test case"
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1027977/+attachment/3232950/+files/strstrtest.c
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1027977
Title:
strstr() fun
Also created an upstream bug report:
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=303963
** Bug watch added: KDE Bug Tracking System #303963
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=303963
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https:
Hi, I'm affected too and would like to provide some additional
information:
I suspect this bug is not caused by _how often_ pam_mount is called but rather
a mixup of the user it is run under.
When running sudoedit, before the editor component is started, pam_mount always
tries to mount the parti
Just checked sudo's behavior regarding the login count. It consistently
uses the user "root" before and after the given command:
[BEGIN OF LOG]
[sudo] password for USER:
pam_mount(pam_mount.c:364): pam_mount 2.10: entering auth stage
pam_mount(pam_mount.c:553): pam_mount 2.10: entering session st
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