[Dovecot] Error: dict: Leaked a t_pop() call
I'm running dovecot 1.0.7 on CentOS 5.5, and I've configured it to work with PostfixAdmin (http://sourceforge.net/projects/postfixadmin/). Everything seems to work great, except for one problem. Any time a user logs in, I get errors like the following
Jun 19 02:21:59 ve dovecot: dict: Leaked a t_pop() call in I/O handler (nil) Jun 19 02:21:59 ve dovecot: dict: Raw backtrace: dict [0x40e85e] -> dict [0x40e5cc] -> dict(io_loop_handler_run+0x1c9) [0x411279] -> dict(io_loop_run+0x18) [0x4106b8] -> dict(main+0x139) [0x408509] -> /lib64/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0xf4) [0x2ab19ec13994] -> dict[0x407589]
The only information I could find online was from this mailing list a few years back: http://copilotco.com/mail-archives/dovecot.2007/msg08975.html
The response seems to be "nobody keeps their quota in MySQL", but the setup I'm using is what's recommended by the authors of PostfixAdmin: http://postfixadmin.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/postfixadmin/trunk/DOCUMENTS/DOVECOT.txt?revision=808&view=markup
So, I guess my questions are these:
Is this error at all serious? Will it impact performance, or can it be safely ignored?
If it is something that should be addressed, do you think I would be better off trying to patch and recompile the 1.0.7 version, or just upgrading to a newer version of Dovecot (keeping in mind that 1.0.7 seems to be the latest available in CentOS repositories)
Thank you for your time, and your outstanding software.
-Brendan
On Sat, 2010-06-19 at 03:31 -0700, Brendan McCollam wrote:
I'm running dovecot 1.0.7 on CentOS 5.5, and I've configured it to work
this version is so old it is essentially unsupported
The response seems to be "nobody keeps their quota in MySQL", but the
Lots of people do, us included
setup I'm using is what's recommended by the authors of PostfixAdmin: http://postfixadmin.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/postfixadmin/trunk/DOCUMENTS/DOVECOT.txt?revision=808&view=markup
don't use postfix admin, corporately we use internal written portal, privately, for this domain etc I use GRS. without problem.
- If it is something that should be addressed, do you think I would be better off trying to patch and recompile the 1.0.7 version, or just upgrading to a newer version of Dovecot (keeping in mind that 1.0.7 seems to be the latest available in CentOS repositories)
*shakes head* who cares what version they have, it is outdated, and any bugs may have been found and fixed years ago! The same applies to ancient debian versions as well, in ANY software you have issues with, it is wise to use their latest current stable before asking them for help, be it dovecot, apache, postfix, bind... or whatever :) As developers hate wasting their time on ancient resolved bugs. sadly people who decide to only rely upon the ancient distro versions need to remember they are really "use at your own risk" packages.
Please download 1.2.12, the current stable release, however read the release notes because some settings will be incompatible with 1.0.x. there wont be too many differences but might be some, depending on your setup.
On Sat, 2010-06-19 at 09:53 -0400, Charles Marcus wrote:
On 6/19/2010 6:43 AM, Noel Butler wrote:
don't use postfix admin,
I apparently left out "I" (dont use it), this either way should have been clear by the rest of my paragraph, unless of course you were trolling.
On 2010-06-19 5:49 PM, Noel Butler wrote:
On Sat, 2010-06-19 at 09:53 -0400, Charles Marcus wrote:
On 6/19/2010 6:43 AM, Noel Butler wrote:
don't use postfix admin,
I apparently left out "I" (dont use it), this either way should have been clear by the rest of my paragraph, unless of course you were trolling.
Ummm... you make an honest mistake, and when I simply post a comment countering the admonition, you accuse me of trolling (because I *did* read the rest of your post, and no, the rest of your comments did *not* 'make it clear')? It's not like I criticized you, or said you're nuts, or anything - I simply said something counter to what you said.
Think before you type.
Indeed, I almost accused *you* of trolling (but I didn't - hint hint), because postfixadmin *is* an excellent tool to manage postfix users in an sql database.
--
Best regards,
Charles
participants (3)
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Brendan McCollam
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Charles Marcus
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Noel Butler