Hi
jls@box:~$ enlightenment_start -display :1.0 -valgrind
E - PID=14834, valgrind=1 valgrind-command='/usr/bin/valgrind'
==14835== Memcheck, a memory error detector
==14835== Copyright (C) 2002-2013, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward et al.
==14835== Using Valgrind-3.10.0.SVN and LibVEX; rerun with -h for copyright info
==14835== Command: /tmp/tcloop/e20-terminology/usr/bin/enlightenment -display :1
.0 -valgrind
==14835==
valgrind: Fatal error at startup: a function redirection
valgrind: which is mandatory for this platform-tool combination
valgrind: cannot be set up. Details of the redirection are:
valgrind:
valgrind: A must-be-redirected function
valgrind: whose name matches the pattern: strlen
valgrind: in an object with soname matching: ld-linux.so.2
valgrind: was not found whilst processing
valgrind: symbols from the object with soname: ld-linux.so.2
valgrind:
valgrind: Possible fixes: (1, short term): install glibc's debuginfo
valgrind: package on this machine. (2, longer term): ask the packagers
valgrind: for your Linux distribution to please in future ship a non-
valgrind: stripped ld.so (or whatever the dynamic linker .so is called)
valgrind: that exports the above-named function using the standard
valgrind: calling conventions for this platform. The package you need
valgrind: to install for fix (1) is called
valgrind:
valgrind: On Debian, Ubuntu: libc6-dbg
valgrind: On SuSE, openSuSE, Fedora, RHEL: glibc-debuginfo
valgrind:
valgrind: Cannot continue -- exiting now. Sorry.
jls@box:~$ grep libc6-dbg /tmp/.debinstalled
libc6-dbg:
jls@box:~$
An e devel wrote me this:
You can get a valgrind trace by running enlightenment under Xephyr. In a first console do :
$ Xephyr :1.0
In a second console do :
enlightenment_start -display :1.0 -valgrind
Then navigate to where it does trigger the crash and it should give you in the second console a better backtrace.