Apache OpenOffice (AOO) Bugzilla – Issue 17196
MS Word Doc Does not open and eats up all CPU cycles
Last modified: 2013-08-07 14:43:45 UTC
I am running Windows 2000 SP3 when I open the attached MS Word 2000 file the CPU utalization goes way up and and stays there. OpenOffice.com then becomes unresponsive. I have left the system like this for several hours and the file never does open. No error message is generated and the program never exits. this file did open fine in Version 1.02. Thank you for your Help
Created attachment 7903 [details] MS Word 200 DOC (will not open)
Duplicated with OOo1.1rc2 on Windows 2000. Confirmed.
HI->CMC: Reproducible also with RC2.
cmc->hi: It chugs a little during loading with SRX645m15 under 2000 but not too much but it does complete within a short period of time for me (20 secs in debugging version). Can you confirm this ?
No, on XP the Taskmanager still shows after 3 min. "Not Responding" and the CPU Usage is 100%. Seems to be hang. Tested also with NonPro and Win2000, I broke up after clicking the x.th assertion. 645m15-6.01_8669.
Hmm, In product it leaps to 99% after importing during pagination and stays there permanently. Interestingly in nonproduct it works, (albeit with the debug window asserts disabled). Perhaps something corrupt coming from the filter which gets safely handled in debug only code.
Created attachment 8310 [details] First assert problem
Created attachment 8330 [details] Second problem
I think I see it, there are section breaks inside the results of a field. This is unexpected, results of fields are ignored as we recalculate them from the field codes, so the section break characters are not seen but the section break properties associated with those unseen characters are.
I believe the changes now checked in for 1.1.1 should clear the problem.
Reopen to reassign
cmc->mru: Resolved with corkfilterteam10, looking well too.
Agree, looks good in CWS corkfilterteam10.
Verified. Fix will be available in OO 1.1.1.
Fix will be available in OO 1.1.1. Checked with srx645m27.