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minus-squarelobut@lemmy.calinkfedilinkarrow-up23·1 month agoNot a word of a lie, I saw a “segmentation fault” error in JavaScript. Can’t remember how we resolved it, but it did blow my mind.
minus-squarejj4211@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up12·1 month agoTechnically any language runtime can end in a segmentation fault. For some languages, in principle this shouldn’t be possible, but the runtimes can have bugs and/or you are calling libraries that do some native code at some point.
minus-squareapelsin12@lemm.eelinkfedilinkarrow-up9·1 month agoIve also seen this, but not from js but node
minus-squareVitabytesDev@feddit.nllinkfedilinkarrow-up6·1 month agoI have seen a Java program I wrote terminate with SIGSEGV. I think a library was causing it.
minus-squareburlemarx@lemmygrad.mllinkfedilinkarrow-up1·1 month agoYup, can confirm. We had a wrapper to a C++ library using JNI, so whenever this library crashed so did the entire JVM.
Not a word of a lie, I saw a “segmentation fault” error in JavaScript.
Can’t remember how we resolved it, but it did blow my mind.
Technically any language runtime can end in a segmentation fault.
For some languages, in principle this shouldn’t be possible, but the runtimes can have bugs and/or you are calling libraries that do some native code at some point.
Ive also seen this, but not from js but node
I have seen a Java program I wrote terminate with SIGSEGV. I think a library was causing it.
Yup, can confirm. We had a wrapper to a C++ library using JNI, so whenever this library crashed so did the entire JVM.