From owner-freebsd-questions Mon Mar 13 21:00:46 1995 Return-Path: questions-owner Received: (from majordom@localhost) by freefall.cdrom.com (8.6.10/8.6.6) id VAA00316 for questions-outgoing; Mon, 13 Mar 1995 21:00:46 -0800 Received: from haven.uniserve.com (haven.uniserve.com [198.53.215.121]) by freefall.cdrom.com (8.6.10/8.6.6) with ESMTP id VAA00308 for ; Mon, 13 Mar 1995 21:00:36 -0800 Received: by haven.uniserve.com id <213>; Mon, 13 Mar 1995 21:10:35 -0800 Date: Mon, 13 Mar 1995 21:09:30 -0800 (PST) From: Tom Samplonius To: LAJOIE@yalph2.physics.yale.edu cc: questions@FreeBSD.org Subject: Re: Memory fault - core dumped In-Reply-To: <01HO2XM2TUTUA732XO@yalph2.physics.yale.edu> Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Sender: questions-owner@FreeBSD.org Precedence: bulk On Mon, 13 Mar 1995 LAJOIE@yalph2.physics.yale.edu wrote: > I am running on a 486DX-33 with 8MB of RAM, and I am also running X. Do I just not > have enough physical memory? The Linux version claimed to run in 8MB with X. How > would I go about debugging this further, and is there any way to read and understand > the core dump? A memory fault likely indicates a segmentation fault. If you want to poke around with the core you can used gdb with the first param being the executable, and second being the core. Tom