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RE: [Summary-Talk] (None)



One thing I did was to copy the config file from a 2.67 install directly
into a 2.68 install.  Any possibility that's a problem?



-----Original Message-----
From: owner-summary-talk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:owner-summary-talk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Jason Linhart
Sent: Friday, June 23, 2006 12:52 PM
To: summary-talk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [Summary-Talk] (None)

Given the situation you describe, it seems very unlikely that both the
configuration and log files are the same on both machines. There are a
number of configuration settings, particularly on the Memory
configuration page, which could cause this problem if they were set
differently.

String table full errors are usually caused by unique IDs getting read
into some field that they shouldn't be. This can happen if Summary
misunderstands your log format or if you have turned on a report that
there isn't enough memory for.

The out of memory FAQ entry,
<http://summary.net/manual/faq.html#memorylack>, is a good place to look
for suggestions on figuring out what to do to solve the problem.

Jason


David R. Cooper wrote:
> 
> I recently moved Summary to a new server by installing the app from a 
> new download and moving the config file over.  Since I tranferred over

> our log files Summary has started crashing frequently with 
> "Assertion!String Table is full!)Failed in "StrTable.cpp" in line
785".
> The server is a dual proc Xeon 2.8Gh Dell with 2GB RAM running Windows
> 2003 R2.  Summary doesn't appear to be taking all of the memory 
> available to it, there's always plenty left when it crashes.  The 
> crashes are always during a processing run.  Right now it's looking at

> about a years worth of log files.  On our old server it was looking at

> two years worth and we never had a problem with it.  Any suggestions 
> are appreciated.

--
Jason@xxxxxxxxxxx
--
Dr. Seuss books . . . can be read and enjoyed on several levels. For
example, 'One Fish Two Fish, Red Fish Blue Fish' can be deconstructed as
a searing indictment of the narrow-minded binary counting system.
    -- Peter van der Linden, Expert C Programming, Deep C Secrets
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