Debugging GNU Emacs Copyright (c) 1985 Richard M. Stallman. Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the copyright notice and permission notice are preserved, and that the distributor grants the recipient permission for further redistribution as permitted by this notice. Permission is granted to distribute modified versions of this document, or of portions of it, under the above conditions, provided also that they carry prominent notices stating who last changed them. On 4.2 you will probably find that dbx does not work for debugging GNU Emacs. For one thing, dbx does not keep the inferior process's terminal modes separate from its own. For another, dbx does not put the inferior in a separate process group, which makes trouble when an inferior uses interrupt input, which GNU Emacs must do on 4.2. dbx has also been observed to have other problems, such as getting incorrect values for register variables in stack frames other than the innermost one. The Emacs distribution now contains GDB, the new source-level debugger for the GNU system. GDB works for debugging Emacs. GDB currently runs on vaxes under 4.2 and on Sun 2 and Sun 3 systems. ** Some useful techniques `Fsignal' is a very useful place to stop in. All Lisp errors go through there. It is useful, when debugging, to have a guaranteed way to return to the debugger at any time. If you are using interrupt-drived input, which is the default, then Emacs is using RAW mode and the only way you can do it is to store the code for some character into the variable stop_character: set stop_character = 29 makes Control-] (decimal code 29) the stop character. Typing Control-] will cause immediate stop. You cannot use the set command until the inferior process has been started. Put a breakpoint early in `main', or suspend the Emacs, to get an opportunity to do the set command. If you are using cbreak input (see the Lisp function set-input-mode), then typing Control-g will cause a SIGINT, which will return control to the debugger immediately unless you have done ignore 3 (in dbx) or handle 3 nostop noprint (in gdb) You will note that most of GNU Emacs is written to avoid declaring a local variable in an inner block, even in cases where using one would be the cleanest thing to do. This is because dbx cannot access any of the variables in a function which has even one variable defined in an inner block. A few functions in GNU Emacs do have variables in inner blocks, only because I wrote them before realizing that dbx had this problem and never rewrote them to avoid it. I believe that GDB does not have such a problem. ** If GDB does not run and your debuggers can't load Emacs. On some systems, no debugger can load Emacs with a symbol table, perhaps because they all have fixed limits on the number of symbols and Emacs exceeds the limits. Here is a method that can be used in such an extremity. Do nm -n temacs > nmout strip temacs adb temacs 0xd:i 0xe:i 14:i 17:i :r -l loadup (or whatever) It is necessary to refer to the file `nmout' to convert numeric addresses into symbols and vice versa. It is useful to be running under a window system. Then, if Emacs becomes hopelessly wedged, you can create another window to do kill -9 in. kill -ILL is often useful too, since that may make Emacs dump core or return to adb. ** Debugging incorrect screen updating. To debug Emacs problems that update the screen wrong, it is useful to have a record of what input you typed and what Emacs sent to the screen. To make these records, do (open-dribble-file "~/.dribble") (open-termscript "~/.termscript") The dribble file contains all characters read by Emacs from the terminal, and the termscript file contains all characters it sent to the terminal. The use of the directory `~/' prevents interference with any other user. If you have unreproduceable display problems, put those two expressions in your ~/.emacs file. When the problem happens, exit the Emacs that you were running, kill it, and rename the two files. Then you can start another Emacs without clobbering those files, and use it to examine them.