crash when opening folder on D drive
Moderators: helmut, XnTriq, xnview
crash when opening folder on D drive
Hi
XnView 1.97
Win 7 64 bit
XnView crashes when opening a folder (hangs).
Any way to figure out what is causing this error?
Thx
XnView 1.97
Win 7 64 bit
XnView crashes when opening a folder (hangs).
Any way to figure out what is causing this error?
Thx
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
Maybe XnView is not "hanging"... maybe it is making thumbnails instead.
Are you in thumbnail mode? Are there lots of images in the folder or are some of the images extremely large? If you let it just sit there a while, does it come back?
IMO XnView provides insufficient feedback during long operations.
Are you in thumbnail mode? Are there lots of images in the folder or are some of the images extremely large? If you let it just sit there a while, does it come back?
IMO XnView provides insufficient feedback during long operations.
John
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
Hi
Not every folder
Not using thumbnail mode.
Might just be folder too large (31 GB, 16,000 files)?
Note that I can access this folder with other applications (e.g. Xplorer2, Windows Photo Gallery) without a problem
Not every folder
Not using thumbnail mode.
Might just be folder too large (31 GB, 16,000 files)?
Note that I can access this folder with other applications (e.g. Xplorer2, Windows Photo Gallery) without a problem
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
This one can speed things up:
Options... Browser>File list> Misc>Scan the headers in folders [never]
Options... Browser>File list> Misc>Scan the headers in folders [never]
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
Sorry to be so clueless, but what is the header scan for?marsh wrote:This one can speed things up:
Options... Browser>File list> Misc>Scan the headers in folders [never]
John
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
Did some more testing, not related to folder size
Pictures are stored in D\folder A, which is a shared folder.
I can access pictures in D\Test folder
When I move Test folder to D (path D\folder A\Test folder) ,and try to open Test folder, XnView hangs.
Pictures are stored in D\folder A, which is a shared folder.
I can access pictures in D\Test folder
When I move Test folder to D (path D\folder A\Test folder) ,and try to open Test folder, XnView hangs.
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
It scans for type and properties (more meaningful for details view than using thumbnails).JohnFredC wrote:Sorry to be so clueless, but what is the header scan for?marsh wrote:This one can speed things up:
Options... Browser>File list> Misc>Scan the headers in folders [never]
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
JohnFredC wrote:Sorry to be so clueless, but what is the header scan for?
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
Exactly the same problem here.
Using XnView 1.97 (but same problem with 1.96 or 1.94). System Win XP Home SP3.
As soon as I open a folder in partition D:, XnView hangs. Apparently it's not just slow making thumbnails - there are just a few picture files. No activity of XnView whatever. Process is not using CPU time. I have to abort the program.
I tried to re-install an older version, but have the same problem again. On the other hand, this problem hasn't been present earlier. Something must have changed permanently when I switched to version 1.97. Very strange.
No issues whatever on partitions C: (system partition) and E:. Seems that XnView doesn't like the letter "D"...
Using XnView 1.97 (but same problem with 1.96 or 1.94). System Win XP Home SP3.
As soon as I open a folder in partition D:, XnView hangs. Apparently it's not just slow making thumbnails - there are just a few picture files. No activity of XnView whatever. Process is not using CPU time. I have to abort the program.
I tried to re-install an older version, but have the same problem again. On the other hand, this problem hasn't been present earlier. Something must have changed permanently when I switched to version 1.97. Very strange.
No issues whatever on partitions C: (system partition) and E:. Seems that XnView doesn't like the letter "D"...

Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
Well, maybe some corrupted file, but what file?? I really don't know.
There are no problems whatsoever with Windows Explorer or other programs (including alternative picture viewers). It's only XnView that has such problem. Something may have gone wrong with the installation of version 1.97 recently.
I will try to de-install XnView and make a complete new installation. Are there any data files (e.g. in the system "application data" folder) or settings in the Window Registry that need to be removed manually to get XnView completely off the system?
Update: issue seems to be present on other partitions also.
There are no problems whatsoever with Windows Explorer or other programs (including alternative picture viewers). It's only XnView that has such problem. Something may have gone wrong with the installation of version 1.97 recently.
I will try to de-install XnView and make a complete new installation. Are there any data files (e.g. in the system "application data" folder) or settings in the Window Registry that need to be removed manually to get XnView completely off the system?
Update: issue seems to be present on other partitions also.
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
Only the xnview.inibobby70 wrote: I will try to de-install XnView and make a complete new installation. Are there any data files (e.g. in the system "application data" folder) or settings in the Window Registry that need to be removed manually to get XnView completely off the system?
Pierre.
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
I did some reaseach on the problem. To make a long story short: this issue is still present, and I don't know an easy solution.
1) I removed XnView (including the xnview.ini file) from my PC and rebooted. Installed the latest version (1.97.3, Libformat 5.62) and tried again. Viewing picture files is no problem. But there is an issue whenever the file browser within XnView comes into play. When I click around in the folder structure, sooner or later XnView will "hang". Hourglass symbol is visible, XnView window frozen, program is not using CPU time any more, no response any more, apparently in some kind of "wait" state. Contrary to what I believed first, this issue isn't limited to partition D, but may also show on other partitions.
2) I have no problems with the drive or partition. Drive health check OK. Windows Explorer and other programs (including other graphics file viewers) fine.
3) Fortunately I still have the installation files of some older XnView versions. Tried those as well. XnView 1.74 (Libformat 4.25) is working fine. There is an issue with XnView 1.80.3 (Libformat 4.51) and later versions, as far as I can see.
4) On the other hand, this issue is quite new. I cannot recall such problems with XnView before April 2010. The only change made to my system in April that might be related to this problem was installing this month's MS Security Updates for Windows XP. (I also installed a Linux system on a separate partition - but this should have no effect on XnView as those partitions are inaccessible and invisible for Windows.)
5) My "educated guess" so far: there may be some incompatibilites between recent versions of XnView and changes made by the latest MS Security Update. At least I don't have another reasonable explanation.
As far as I'm concerned, I will now use a different file viewer or an old version (1.74) of XnView. Maybe this issue will clear up some time later. Just wanted to give you some kind of feedback.
1) I removed XnView (including the xnview.ini file) from my PC and rebooted. Installed the latest version (1.97.3, Libformat 5.62) and tried again. Viewing picture files is no problem. But there is an issue whenever the file browser within XnView comes into play. When I click around in the folder structure, sooner or later XnView will "hang". Hourglass symbol is visible, XnView window frozen, program is not using CPU time any more, no response any more, apparently in some kind of "wait" state. Contrary to what I believed first, this issue isn't limited to partition D, but may also show on other partitions.
2) I have no problems with the drive or partition. Drive health check OK. Windows Explorer and other programs (including other graphics file viewers) fine.
3) Fortunately I still have the installation files of some older XnView versions. Tried those as well. XnView 1.74 (Libformat 4.25) is working fine. There is an issue with XnView 1.80.3 (Libformat 4.51) and later versions, as far as I can see.
4) On the other hand, this issue is quite new. I cannot recall such problems with XnView before April 2010. The only change made to my system in April that might be related to this problem was installing this month's MS Security Updates for Windows XP. (I also installed a Linux system on a separate partition - but this should have no effect on XnView as those partitions are inaccessible and invisible for Windows.)
5) My "educated guess" so far: there may be some incompatibilites between recent versions of XnView and changes made by the latest MS Security Update. At least I don't have another reasonable explanation.
As far as I'm concerned, I will now use a different file viewer or an old version (1.74) of XnView. Maybe this issue will clear up some time later. Just wanted to give you some kind of feedback.
Re: crash when opening folder on D drive
You use folder's tree or file list to change folder?bobby70 wrote:1) I removed XnView (including the xnview.ini file) from my PC and rebooted. Installed the latest version (1.97.3, Libformat 5.62) and tried again. Viewing picture files is no problem. But there is an issue whenever the file browser within XnView comes into play. When I click around in the folder structure, sooner or later XnView will "hang". Hourglass symbol is visible, XnView window frozen, program is not using CPU time any more, no response any more, apparently in some kind of "wait" state. Contrary to what I believed first, this issue isn't limited to partition D, but may also show on other partitions.
And send me your email by PM
Pierre.