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    icon1.gif   Re: runtime error under Mac OS X 10.2, posted by Recai Oktas on Mon Jun 30 02:41:33 2003 
Seems a stack problem.  I don't have an OS X box to validate my guess.  I've
made a Google search with the keywords: EXC_BAD_ACCESS stack "os x"

Perhaps the following reply [1] might help...

  How big are they? You're probably running into the default stack size 
  limit, which is 512 KB. Try `unlimit stacksize` in your shell before 
  running, which will give you 65536 KB per stack.

[1] http://zerowing.idsoftware.com/archives/gtkrad-macos/2003-January/000453.html
    icon14.gif   Re: runtime error under Mac OS X 10.2, posted by Joseph Giaime on Mon Jun 30 05:15:14 2003 
Sridhar & Recai,

Thanks to both of you for the rapid and effective advice.  Fixing the limit corrected my problem.  
I think I last got tripped up this way 10 years ago...

I suppose that the advice to increase Mac OS X's default stacksize limit might make a fine entry 
in the FAQ or README file.

Thanks again,
Joe 
    icon2.gif   Re: runtime error under Mac OS X 10.2, posted by Stefan Ritt on Mon Jun 30 17:16:56 2003 
> I suppose that the advice to increase Mac OS X's default stacksize limit
> might make a fine entry in the FAQ or README file.

I added a note in the installation instructions. 
(http://midas.psi.ch/elog/adminguide.html)

- Stefan
icon4.gif   Strange timezone in email sent with Postfix, posted by Joseph Giaime on Thu Jan 29 00:24:44 2004 
Hi all,
I'm having trouble getting a sensible timezone to be attached to e-mail that gets sent out when messages are posted. I'm using Postfix, not sendmail (Mac OS X Server uses this beginning with version 10.3). In this set-up, the 'sendmail' program is a front-end for Postfix, not the real thing. I suspect that there are subtle differences that cause this problem.
Instead of something like "Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2004 14:46:16 -0600", the "-0600" is replaced by a large number that doesn't correspond with anything I can figure out. This is the sort of thing that does no real harm, but the notebook users keep complaining
Any thoughts or suggestions would be appreciated. -Joe
Here is what gets mailed when a messages is posted:
Return-Path: 
Received: from ligo.phys.lsu.edu ([unix socket])
	by ligo.phys.lsu.edu (Cyrus v2.1.13) with LMTP; Wed, 28 Jan 2004 16:27:03 -0600
X-Sieve: CMU Sieve 2.2
Received: from ligo.phys.lsu.edu (ligo.phys.lsu.edu [130.39.181.231])
	by ligo.phys.lsu.edu (Postfix) with SMTP
	id 5E12A788D1; Wed, 28 Jan 2004 16:27:03 -0600 (CST)
To: ELOG@ligo.phys.lsu.edu, user@ligo.phys.lsu.edu
From: elog@ligo.phys.lsu.edu
Subject: New playground elog entry
X-Mailer: Elog, Version 2.3.9
X-Elog-URL: http://ligo.phys.lsu.edu:8080/playground/13
X-Elog-submit-type: web|elog
Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2004 22:27:03 +52182819
Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
Message-Id: <20040128222703.5E12A788D1@ligo.phys.lsu.edu>

A new entry has been submitted on ligo.phys.lsu.edu

Logbook             : playground
Author              : Joseph Giaime
Type                : Other
Category            : Other
Subject             : yet another test

Logbook URL         : http://ligo.phys.lsu.edu:8080/playground/13
    icon2.gif   Re: Strange timezone in email sent with Postfix, posted by Stefan Ritt on Thu Jan 29 09:25:45 2004 
> Instead of something like "Date: Wed, 28 Jan 2004 14:46:16 -0600", the
> "-0600" is replaced by a large number that doesn't correspond with anything
> I can figure out.  This is the sort of thing that does no real harm, but the
> notebook users keep complaining. 

This is caused by the elogd program itself. To produce the "-0600", it uses the 
variable "timezone", which is defined as difference in seconds between local time 
and coordinated universl time. This works find under Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, but 
apparently not under MacOSX. Although this variable is defined, it's unassigned. 

The code where this is used is in sendmail(), at the lines

   time(&now);
   ts = localtime(&now);
   strftime(buf, sizeof(buf), "%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S", ts);
   offset = (-(int) timezone);
   if (ts->tm_isdst)
      offset += 3600;

The current localtime gets written into "buf", then the timzone offset gets 
corrected by the daylight savings time, then the offset is used to produce the 
"-0600".

So if anybody being familiar with MacOSX has some idea, please let me know.

- Stefan
icon4.gif   Install error on MacOS X, posted by Exaos Lee on Mon Oct 10 19:22:51 2005 makefile_modified.tgz
Executing "make" on MacOS X is OK, but "make install" failed due to the following error:
/usr/bin/install -m 0755 -d /usr/local/bin /usr/local/sbin /usr/local/man/man1/ /usr/local/man/man8/
/usr/bin/install -m 0755 -o bin -g bin elog elconv /usr/local/bin
install: bin: Invalid argument
make: *** [install] Error 67

The reason is that the account "bin" and group "bin" are missing on MacOS X. I also found that the following lines in "Makefile" doesn't work:
ifeq ($(OSTYPE),darwin)
CC = cc
endif

I have fixed this problem. The diff of Makefile as following:
diff Makefile.darwin Makefile.origin
====================================
24,25d23
< BINOWNER = bin
< BINGROUP = bin
30,31d27
< OSTYPE = $(shell uname)
<
40,43d35
< ifeq ($(OSTYPE),Darwin)
< OSTYPE=darwin
< endif
<
46,47d37
< BINOWNER = root
< BINGROUP = admin
89,90c79,80
<       $(INSTALL) -m 0755 -o ${BINOWNER} -g ${BINGROUP} elog elconv $(DESTDIR)
<       $(INSTALL) -m 0755 -o ${BINOWNER} -g ${BINGROUP} elogd $(SDESTDIR)
---
>       $(INSTALL) -m 0755 -o bin -g bin elog elconv $(DESTDIR)
>       $(INSTALL) -m 0755 -o bin -g bin elogd $(SDESTDIR)


The modified Makefiles have been attached.
icon1.gif   Makefile patch for OS X 10.4, posted by Alexandre Gauthier on Fri Mar 3 16:48:01 2006 makefile-osx-tiger.patch
Hello,

I had trouble compiling elog on Mac OS X 10.4, and so, I hacked the makefile around...

I had to remove the -lutil flag that was passed to ld, for some reason. My guess is that it is not needed anymore with OS X 10.4... Also, the current install section of the makefile crapped out when using /usr/bin/install, I had to use install from gnu fileutils, which I installed through fink, which took precedence in my path... (/sw/bin/install), since bsd fileutil doesn't like the -D option.

For some reason, the paths to "install" in the makefile are either defined by the $(INSTALL) variable, or called directly. This seems not to be very consistent... In any case, I just changed it to use "install", no matter where it was in my path.

I'm currently hacking up something more elegant soon enough...

Also, I noticed that the binary produced was inconsistent and sluggish with the default wild CFLAGs, so I brought them back to something a bit more casual for Darwin. I used -Os because that's what Apple uses to build most OS X software. I also use -Os in my blackdog builds (which is an embedded PowerPC device) since space and memory *does* matters.

Well, here's the patch. I doubt it will be useful to anyone except for those who have gnu fileutils installed through fink, in their paths, and find themselves unable to build elog on OS X.
icon5.gif   Canīt run command "make" in OSX, posted by Mats McLund on Fri Jun 30 13:35:03 2006 
Hello.

I think to test Elog in Mac G5 with OSX 10.4.6.

In the manual is following installationtext:

"Installation from the tarball:
Download the latest elog-x.x.x.tar.gz package.
Expand the compressed TAR file with tar -xzvf elog-x.x.x.tar.gz. This creates a subdirectory elog-x.x.x where x.x.x is the version number. In that directory execute make, which creates the executables elogd, elog and elconv."

The problem is when i try to run the command "make" in ~/elog-2.6.1 subdirectory. I get following message:
-bash: make: command not found

Now, Im not an "UNIX-hacker" so I will be glad if anyone maybe can help me?



Best regardīs
Mats McLund
ELOG V3.1.5-3fb85fa6