[GRASS-user] Re: r.stream.order problem making on mac os x

stephen sefick ssefick at gmail.com
Sun Sep 27 18:23:19 EDT 2009


Is this what you were talking about?  If it is not I can find it if
you tell me what I am looking for.

Process:         r.stream.order [73041]
Path:            /Applications/GRASS-6.4.app/Contents/MacOS/bin/r.stream.order
Identifier:      r.stream.order
2   r.stream.order                	0x0000213e write_maps + 46
3   r.stream.order                	0x00002b71 main + 897
4   r.stream.order                	0x00001a56 start + 54
    0x1000 -     0x3fff +r.stream.order ??? (???)
<7ba7322bd390054caeff9595a09fd4d0>
/Applications/GRASS-6.4.app/Contents/MacOS/bin/r.stream.order

On Sun, Sep 27, 2009 at 4:37 PM, William Kyngesburye
<woklist at kyngchaos.com> wrote:
> There should be a crash log for r.stream.order, which you can find in your
> home logs with Console.app.  The trace is especialy useful, though the
> binary images info can be helpful.
>
> On Sep 27, 2009, at 4:17 PM, stephen sefick wrote:
>
>> I am building a MacOSX .app and this works just fine.  I can use GRASS
>> and everything that I have tried has worked fine.  The
>> r.stream.extract function worked wonderfully and output raster maps
>> from r.terraflow flow accumulation and direction map.  I tried to feed
>> this into r.stream.order.  I got a bus error on the command line, and
>> in the GUI it just stops.  In both instances I get a ignore report mac
>> GUI message.  This is what I did with the previous ordering software -
>> r.stream, and everything worked fine.  If there is anymore information
>> that I can provide please tell me and I will be happy to provide this.
>> Thanks for all of the help
>>
>
> -----
> William Kyngesburye <kyngchaos*at*kyngchaos*dot*com>
> http://www.kyngchaos.com/
>
> "History is an illusion caused by the passage of time, and time is an
> illusion caused by the passage of history."
>
> - Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
>
>
>



-- 
Stephen Sefick

Let's not spend our time and resources thinking about things that are
so little or so large that all they really do for us is puff us up and
make us feel like gods.  We are mammals, and have not exhausted the
annoying little problems of being mammals.

								-K. Mullis


More information about the grass-user mailing list