On Wed, 2009-08-05 at 15:26 +1000, Brendan Hill wrote: > I copied a few of the stack traces (at the end of this email), it kept > changing each time I looked. Yep, that's to be expected. If the process is busy, unless it's in a _REALLY_ simple infinite loop, it'll be looping through some non-trivial sequence of function calls. Thus, most stack traces will be different. Unfortunately, you don't appear to have set up your debugging environment, so your stack traces aren't annotated with any sort of symbolic information that might tell the reader what's actually happening. The numeric offsets can be converted to symbolic names if you know the _EXACT_ version of the module (eg "hal.dll") in question, but you haven't provided that, and even if you did it's a pain to do. If you did set your symbol path, might you have an overzealous software firewall that's interfering with requests to the symbol server. Make sure that HTTP (port 80) access to msdl.microsoft.com for windbg.exe and procexp.exe is unimpeded, or download the symbol bundle for your OS (warning: huge download) from http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/devtools/debugging/symbolpkg.mspx . Because your symbol path doesn't appear to be configured there's no guarantee the symbols for postgres.exe are right either, and more importantly there's no "depth" to the trace; it doesn't show the call path within postgres / libeay32 / etc . Take this trace, for example. ntkrnlpa.exe+0x8dafe ntkrnlpa.exe+0x29a82 ntkrnlpa.exe+0x33198 hal.dll+0x6199 hal.dll+0x63d9 hal.dll+0x6577 hal.dll+0x3902 postgres.exe!process_implied_equality+0x18d50e process_implied_equality(...) from backend/optimizer/plan/initsplan.c is deep in the query planner, and is "currently used only when an EquivalenceClass is found to contain pseudoconstants". It's not going to be calling into hal.dll - not, at least, without a fairly long call chain between it and hal.dll . So we can't trust that postgres was even in the "process_implied_equality" function when it called into hal.dll and if it was we don't have any idea how it got there. The call trace is basically useless. (New section added to wiki article for this: http://wiki.postgresql.org/wiki/Getting_a_stack_trace_of_a_running_PostgreSQL_backend_on_Windows#How_to_make_sure_a_stack_trace_is_useful ) A stack trace that includes symbols for the kernel / HAL calls should look something like this: ntkrnlpa.exe!KiSwapContext+0x2f ntkrnlpa.exe!KiSwapThread+0x8a ntkrnlpa.exe!KeWaitForSingleObject+0x1c2 ntkrnlpa.exe!KiSuspendThread+0x18 ntkrnlpa.exe!KiDeliverApc+0x124 ntkrnlpa.exe!KiSwapThread+0xa8 ntkrnlpa.exe!KeWaitForMultipleObjects+0x284 ntkrnlpa.exe!NtWaitForMultipleObjects+0x297 ntkrnlpa.exe!KiFastCallEntry+0xfc ntdll.dll!KiFastSystemCallRet ntdll.dll!ZwWaitForMultipleObjects+0xc kernel32.dll!WaitForMultipleObjectsEx+0x12c postgres.exe!pgwin32_waitforsinglesocket+0x1f0 postgres.exe!pgwin32_recv+0x90 postgres.exe!secure_read+0x17d postgres.exe!pq_recvbuf+0x71 postgres.exe!pq_getbyte+0x15 postgres.exe!SocketBackend+0x6 postgres.exe!PostgresMain+0xbe8 postgres.exe!BackendRun+0x204 postgres.exe!SubPostmasterMain+0x224 postgres.exe!main+0x177 postgres.exe!__tmainCRTStartup+0x10f kernel32.dll!BaseProcessStart+0x23 See how it has "ModuleNames!SymbolicNames+offsets" instead of just "ModuleNames+offsets" ? -- Craig Ringer -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general