GNOME Bugzilla – Bug 335368
Crash when opening large 7z-archive
Last modified: 2009-12-17 17:01:46 UTC
Distribution: Fedora Core release 5 (Bordeaux) Package: file-roller Severity: Normal Version: GNOME2.14.0 2.14.0 Gnome-Distributor: Red Hat, Inc Synopsis: Crash when opening large 7z-archive Bugzilla-Product: file-roller Bugzilla-Component: general Bugzilla-Version: 2.14.0 BugBuddy-GnomeVersion: 2.0 (2.14.0) Description: Description of the crash: file-roller crashes when opening a large 7z-archive (about 2,45Gb). I use p7zip-4.30-3.fc5 to create 7z-archives. Steps to reproduce the crash: 1. Create a large 7z-archive 2. Open it in file-roller Expected Results: file-roller should not crash How often does this happen? everytime file-roller shall open the mentioned archive Additional Information: I thought it would possibly be a umlaut issue, but opening a small archive containing only one file, named "ä", works fine. Debugging Information: Backtrace was generated from '/usr/bin/file-roller' Using host libthread_db library "/lib/libthread_db.so.1". `shared object read from target memory' has disappeared; keeping its symbols. [Thread debugging using libthread_db enabled] [New Thread -1208661120 (LWP 7359)] 0x00882402 in __kernel_vsyscall ()
+ Trace 67103
Thread 1 (Thread -1208661120 (LWP 7359))
------- Bug created by bug-buddy at 2006-03-21 15:44 ------- Unknown version 2.14.0 in product file-roller. Setting version to "2.14.x".
Can't reproduce it
This crash report has not seen any changes or updates for more than 2 years. Does this issue still happen in a recent version (GNOME 2.26 or 2.28)? Can you please update this report by adding a short comment, removing the NEEDINFO state again and updating the "Version" field if this is still an issue? Again thank you for reporting this bug and we are sorry it could not be handled for the version you originally used here.
Closing this bug report as no further information has been provided. Please feel free to reopen this bug if you can provide the information asked for. Thanks!