Difference between revisions of "Einstein - Exit code 10"

From BOINC Wiki
(Saving FAQ 224)
 
(adding breaks)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Exit code 10: It means that the App could not resume from a previously written checkpoint. Again, the output listed in stderr out of the result should give a hint why. Most of the errors we get of this type are apparently due to a broken harddisk sector or even filesystems (e.g. some have the checkpoint file point to what looks like a portion of the client_state.xml). Again there's one error of this type we are trying to understand better in order to do something about it: It's an empty checkpoint file, in which case there will be an "EOF encountered" listed at the bottom of stderr out.
+
Exit code 10: It means that the App could not resume from a previously written checkpoint. <br>
 +
The output listed in stderr out of the result should give a hint why. Most of the errors we get of this type are apparently due to a broken harddisk sector or even filesystems (e.g. some have the checkpoint file point to what looks like a portion of the client_state.xml). Again there's one error of this type we are trying to understand better in order to do something about it: It's an empty checkpoint file, in which case there will be an &quot;EOF encountered&quot; listed at the bottom of stderr out.<br>
 +
 
 +
 
 +
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
 +
! Original writer
 +
! Original FAQ
 +
! Date
 +
|-
 
  | Jorden
 
  | Jorden
  | 5
+
  | [http://boincfaq.mundayweb.com/index.php?language=1&view=224 224]
| 1
+
  | 12-08-2007
| 23:59:53
+
  |-
| 2007-08-12
+
|}
| 91835
 
| 1
 
| 224
 
  | 2007-08-12 23:59:53
 
  | 2007-08-12 23:59:53
 
|-
 

Latest revision as of 00:05, 19 January 2017

Exit code 10: It means that the App could not resume from a previously written checkpoint.
The output listed in stderr out of the result should give a hint why. Most of the errors we get of this type are apparently due to a broken harddisk sector or even filesystems (e.g. some have the checkpoint file point to what looks like a portion of the client_state.xml). Again there's one error of this type we are trying to understand better in order to do something about it: It's an empty checkpoint file, in which case there will be an "EOF encountered" listed at the bottom of stderr out.


Original writer Original FAQ Date
Jorden 224 12-08-2007