Mail Archives: cygwin/2002/07/29/21:59:16
On 29 Jul 2002 at 11:37, Christopher Faylor wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 29, 2002 at 08:09:39AM -0500, Keen Wayne A Contr AFRL/MNGG wrote:
> >To add a bit of related trivia to this wonderful thread, I find it
> >interesting that the current relase of Dev-C++ is suffering with a
> >similar problem. If you set Dev up in the "Program Files" directory,
> >it has crash and burn type problems due to the spaces in the directory
> >name as well.
Starts to seem like pathnames with spaces are just something that
*have* to be dealt with sensibly if a system is to work
under/inside/on Win32...
> Hmm. This is reaching urban myth proportions.
>
> AFAIK, gdb works fine with a path with spaces in it. There is no
> indication to the contrary, so far.
AFAIR, this started when I posted a case of gdb mysteriously failing
to run a process and also failing to produce an error message
(graphical version) unless you tried from the console. The error
message in turn indicated (but in a cryptic way that pretty much
forces someone to ask questions on a mailing list, by only giving a
mysterious numeric code instead of an understandable error message)
that a Windows process spawning API found the executable to be
invalid. Whereupon I posted a screen dump showing that the error
message was itself in error, because a test executable worked fine
when launched from the shell and not when run in gdb.
Someone then pointed out a pathname with a space in it in the path to
the executable and asserted that that was the cause of the problem.
If you are now suggesting that it is not, then I guess we're back to
square one. Why is gdb choking on the executable, which runs fine
directly from the command prompt?
I am inclined to think the path *does* have something to do with it,
simply because gdb seems to try to launch using the full path while
gdb doesn't, and the only common factor among the executables that
don't work in gdb is that they are in the same directory tree and the
others are not. That, and they were all made more recently, but I
can't see time affecting anything, since gcc is (still!) the same
version 2.95.something.
> This has been a very strange thread.
Indeed. It has been comforting to note from the Great Ctrl-V Debate
postings that I'm not the only one to take issue with Randy's
condescending attitude from time to time. If I'm partly responsible
for this getting acrimonious at least I'm not wholly responsible. :)
Chalk it up to a clash of personalities, maybe.
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