I've been used to the paranoia of catch(AggregateException ex) ... ex.Handle(...) but got questioned by a coworker recursively asking "but why" and now my beliefs are shattered
how am i supposed to trust whether or not a library's async methods are going to do regular typed exceptions or AggregateException if I'm interested in a particular exception type
someone no longer with the company added SharpCompress to our own source code back in TFVC days, years before we migrated to git, and made some modifications to it. And today no one knows exactly what special snowflake fixes he made in there or even what version he copied from.
Ah yep, that linked victim encountered a glibc version-too-small issue, something I knew of but am currently unaffected by. But all the debugging posts up to that point might still be valuable techniques.
So I guess I'll try to collab with the resident linux gurus to try and get lldb available on this lil' device, as well as maybe try to put full-fledged debian install onto ARM32 qemu emulator and hope it's a "similar enough" environment for analysis.
Seems like most of the non-VS prescribed approaches involve running lldb or dotnet-dump analyze on the same platform as what produced the crash, which is problematic here since it's a wacky custom yocto linux someone in the company set up for IoT-ish devices.
I'm starting to wonder if the reason VS refuses to do anything with it is because it came from a single-file executable, rather than an environment with a nicely compartmentalized dotnet system libraries folder.