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1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2002,
3 @c 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5 @iftex
6 @chapter Dealing with Common Problems
7
8 If you type an Emacs command you did not intend, the results are often
9 mysterious. This chapter tells what you can do to cancel your mistake or
10 recover from a mysterious situation. Emacs bugs and system crashes are
11 also considered.
12 @end iftex
13
14 @ifnottex
15 @raisesections
16 @end ifnottex
17
18 @node Quitting, Lossage, Customization, Top
19 @section Quitting and Aborting
20 @cindex quitting
21
22 @table @kbd
23 @item C-g
24 @itemx C-@key{BREAK} @r{(MS-DOS only)}
25 Quit: cancel running or partially typed command.
26 @item C-]
27 Abort innermost recursive editing level and cancel the command which
28 invoked it (@code{abort-recursive-edit}).
29 @item @key{ESC} @key{ESC} @key{ESC}
30 Either quit or abort, whichever makes sense (@code{keyboard-escape-quit}).
31 @item M-x top-level
32 Abort all recursive editing levels that are currently executing.
33 @item C-x u
34 Cancel a previously made change in the buffer contents (@code{undo}).
35 @end table
36
37 There are two ways of canceling a command before it has finished:
38 @dfn{quitting} with @kbd{C-g}, and @dfn{aborting} with @kbd{C-]} or
39 @kbd{M-x top-level}. Quitting cancels a partially typed command, or
40 one which is still running. Aborting exits a recursive editing level
41 and cancels the command that invoked the recursive edit.
42 (@xref{Recursive Edit}.)
43
44 @cindex quitting
45 @kindex C-g
46 Quitting with @kbd{C-g} is the way to get rid of a partially typed
47 command, or a numeric argument that you don't want. It also stops a
48 running command in the middle in a relatively safe way, so you can use
49 it if you accidentally give a command which takes a long time. In
50 particular, it is safe to quit out of a kill command; either your text
51 will @emph{all} still be in the buffer, or it will @emph{all} be in
52 the kill ring, or maybe both. Quitting an incremental search does
53 special things, documented under searching; it may take two successive
54 @kbd{C-g} characters to get out of a search (@pxref{Incremental
55 Search}).
56
57 On MS-DOS, the character @kbd{C-@key{BREAK}} serves as a quit character
58 like @kbd{C-g}. The reason is that it is not feasible, on MS-DOS, to
59 recognize @kbd{C-g} while a command is running, between interactions
60 with the user. By contrast, it @emph{is} feasible to recognize
61 @kbd{C-@key{BREAK}} at all times.
62 @iftex
63 @xref{MS-DOS Keyboard,,,emacs-xtra, Specialized Emacs Features}.
64 @end iftex
65 @ifnottex
66 @xref{MS-DOS Keyboard}.
67 @end ifnottex
68
69
70 @findex keyboard-quit
71 @kbd{C-g} works by setting the variable @code{quit-flag} to @code{t}
72 the instant @kbd{C-g} is typed; Emacs Lisp checks this variable
73 frequently, and quits if it is non-@code{nil}. @kbd{C-g} is only
74 actually executed as a command if you type it while Emacs is waiting for
75 input. In that case, the command it runs is @code{keyboard-quit}.
76
77 On a text terminal, if you quit with @kbd{C-g} a second time before
78 the first @kbd{C-g} is recognized, you activate the ``emergency
79 escape'' feature and return to the shell. @xref{Emergency Escape}.
80
81 @cindex NFS and quitting
82 There are some situations where you cannot quit. When Emacs is
83 waiting for the operating system to do something, quitting is
84 impossible unless special pains are taken for the particular system
85 call within Emacs where the waiting occurs. We have done this for the
86 system calls that users are likely to want to quit from, but it's
87 possible you will a case not handled. In one very common
88 case---waiting for file input or output using NFS---Emacs itself knows
89 how to quit, but many NFS implementations simply do not allow user
90 programs to stop waiting for NFS when the NFS server is hung.
91
92 @cindex aborting recursive edit
93 @findex abort-recursive-edit
94 @kindex C-]
95 Aborting with @kbd{C-]} (@code{abort-recursive-edit}) is used to get
96 out of a recursive editing level and cancel the command which invoked
97 it. Quitting with @kbd{C-g} does not do this, and could not do this,
98 because it is used to cancel a partially typed command @emph{within} the
99 recursive editing level. Both operations are useful. For example, if
100 you are in a recursive edit and type @kbd{C-u 8} to enter a numeric
101 argument, you can cancel that argument with @kbd{C-g} and remain in the
102 recursive edit.
103
104 @findex keyboard-escape-quit
105 @kindex ESC ESC ESC
106 The sequence @kbd{@key{ESC} @key{ESC} @key{ESC}}
107 (@code{keyboard-escape-quit}) can either quit or abort. (We defined
108 it this way because @key{ESC} means ``get out'' in many PC programs.)
109 It can cancel a prefix argument, clear a selected region, or get out
110 of a Query Replace, like @kbd{C-g}. It can get out of the minibuffer
111 or a recursive edit, like @kbd{C-]}. It can also get out of splitting
112 the frame into multiple windows, as with @kbd{C-x 1}. One thing it
113 cannot do, however, is stop a command that is running. That's because
114 it executes as an ordinary command, and Emacs doesn't notice it until
115 it is ready for the next command.
116
117 @findex top-level
118 The command @kbd{M-x top-level} is equivalent to ``enough'' @kbd{C-]}
119 commands to get you out of all the levels of recursive edits that you
120 are in. @kbd{C-]} gets you out one level at a time, but @kbd{M-x
121 top-level} goes out all levels at once. Both @kbd{C-]} and @kbd{M-x
122 top-level} are like all other commands, and unlike @kbd{C-g}, in that
123 they take effect only when Emacs is ready for a command. @kbd{C-]} is
124 an ordinary key and has its meaning only because of its binding in the
125 keymap. @xref{Recursive Edit}.
126
127 @kbd{C-x u} (@code{undo}) is not strictly speaking a way of canceling
128 a command, but you can think of it as canceling a command that already
129 finished executing. @xref{Undo}, for more information
130 about the undo facility.
131
132 @node Lossage, Bugs, Quitting, Top
133 @section Dealing with Emacs Trouble
134
135 This section describes various conditions in which Emacs fails to work
136 normally, and how to recognize them and correct them. For a list of
137 additional problems you might encounter, see @ref{Bugs and problems, ,
138 Bugs and problems, efaq, GNU Emacs FAQ}, and the file @file{etc/PROBLEMS}
139 in the Emacs distribution. Type @kbd{C-h C-f} to read the FAQ; type
140 @kbd{C-h C-e} to read the @file{PROBLEMS} file.
141
142 @menu
143 * DEL Does Not Delete:: What to do if @key{DEL} doesn't delete.
144 * Stuck Recursive:: `[...]' in mode line around the parentheses.
145 * Screen Garbled:: Garbage on the screen.
146 * Text Garbled:: Garbage in the text.
147 * Memory Full:: How to cope when you run out of memory.
148 * After a Crash:: Recovering editing in an Emacs session that crashed.
149 * Emergency Escape:: Emergency escape---
150 What to do if Emacs stops responding.
151 * Total Frustration:: When you are at your wits' end.
152 @end menu
153
154 @node DEL Does Not Delete
155 @subsection If @key{DEL} Fails to Delete
156 @cindex @key{DEL} vs @key{BACKSPACE}
157 @cindex @key{BACKSPACE} vs @key{DEL}
158 @cindex usual erasure key
159
160 Every keyboard has a large key, a little ways above the @key{RET} or
161 @key{ENTER} key, which you normally use outside Emacs to erase the
162 last character that you typed. We call this key @dfn{the usual
163 erasure key}. In Emacs, it is supposed to be equivalent to @key{DEL},
164 and when Emacs is properly configured for your terminal, it translates
165 that key into the character @key{DEL}.
166
167 When Emacs starts up on a graphical display, it determines
168 automatically which key should be @key{DEL}. In some unusual cases
169 Emacs gets the wrong information from the system. If the usual
170 erasure key deletes forwards instead of backwards, that is probably
171 what happened---Emacs ought to be treating the @key{DELETE} key as
172 @key{DEL}, but it isn't.
173
174 On a graphical display, if the usual erasure key is labeled
175 @key{BACKSPACE} and there is a @key{DELETE} key elsewhere, but the
176 @key{DELETE} key deletes backward instead of forward, that too
177 suggests Emacs got the wrong information---but in the opposite sense.
178 It ought to be treating the @key{BACKSPACE} key as @key{DEL}, and
179 treating @key{DELETE} differently, but it isn't.
180
181 On a text-only terminal, if you find the usual erasure key prompts
182 for a Help command, like @kbd{Control-h}, instead of deleting a
183 character, it means that key is actually sending the @key{BS}
184 character. Emacs ought to be treating @key{BS} as @key{DEL}, but it
185 isn't.
186
187 In all of those cases, the immediate remedy is the same: use the
188 command @kbd{M-x normal-erase-is-backspace-mode}. This toggles
189 between the two modes that Emacs supports for handling @key{DEL}, so
190 if Emacs starts in the wrong mode, this should switch to the right
191 mode. On a text-only terminal, if you want to ask for help when
192 @key{BS} is treated as @key{DEL}, use @key{F1}; @kbd{C-?} may also
193 work, if it sends character code 127.
194
195 @findex normal-erase-is-backspace-mode
196 To fix the problem automatically for every Emacs session, you can
197 put one of the following lines into your @file{.emacs} file
198 (@pxref{Init File}). For the first case above, where @key{DELETE}
199 deletes forwards instead of backwards, use this line to make
200 @key{DELETE} act as @key{DEL} (resulting in behavior compatible
201 with Emacs 20 and previous versions):
202
203 @lisp
204 (normal-erase-is-backspace-mode 0)
205 @end lisp
206
207 @noindent
208 For the other two cases, where @key{BACKSPACE} ought to act as
209 @key{DEL}, use this line:
210
211 @lisp
212 (normal-erase-is-backspace-mode 1)
213 @end lisp
214
215 @vindex normal-erase-is-backspace
216 Another way to fix the problem for every Emacs session is to
217 customize the variable @code{normal-erase-is-backspace}: the value
218 @code{t} specifies the mode where @key{BS} or @key{BACKSPACE} is
219 @key{DEL}, and @code{nil} specifies the other mode. @xref{Easy
220 Customization}.
221
222 On a graphical display, it can also happen that the usual erasure key
223 is labeled @key{BACKSPACE}, there is a @key{DELETE} key elsewhere, and
224 both keys delete forward. This probably means that someone has
225 redefined your @key{BACKSPACE} key as a @key{DELETE} key. With X,
226 this is typically done with a command to the @code{xmodmap} program
227 when you start the server or log in. The most likely motive for this
228 customization was to support old versions of Emacs, so we recommend
229 you simply remove it now.
230
231 @node Stuck Recursive
232 @subsection Recursive Editing Levels
233
234 Recursive editing levels are important and useful features of Emacs, but
235 they can seem like malfunctions if you do not understand them.
236
237 If the mode line has square brackets @samp{[@dots{}]} around the parentheses
238 that contain the names of the major and minor modes, you have entered a
239 recursive editing level. If you did not do this on purpose, or if you
240 don't understand what that means, you should just get out of the recursive
241 editing level. To do so, type @kbd{M-x top-level}. This is called getting
242 back to top level. @xref{Recursive Edit}.
243
244 @node Screen Garbled
245 @subsection Garbage on the Screen
246
247 If the text on a text terminal looks wrong, the first thing to do is
248 see whether it is wrong in the buffer. Type @kbd{C-l} to redisplay
249 the entire screen. If the screen appears correct after this, the
250 problem was entirely in the previous screen update. (Otherwise, see
251 the following section.)
252
253 Display updating problems often result from an incorrect terminfo
254 entry for the terminal you are using. The file @file{etc/TERMS} in
255 the Emacs distribution gives the fixes for known problems of this
256 sort. @file{INSTALL} contains general advice for these problems in
257 one of its sections. To investigate the possibility that you have
258 this sort of problem, try Emacs on another terminal made by a
259 different manufacturer. If problems happen frequently on one kind of
260 terminal but not another kind, it is likely to be a bad terminfo entry,
261 though it could also be due to a bug in Emacs that appears for
262 terminals that have or that lack specific features.
263
264 @node Text Garbled
265 @subsection Garbage in the Text
266
267 If @kbd{C-l} shows that the text is wrong, first type @kbd{C-h l} to
268 see what commands you typed to produce the observed results. Then try
269 undoing the changes step by step using @kbd{C-x u}, until it gets back
270 to a state you consider correct.
271
272 If a large portion of text appears to be missing at the beginning or
273 end of the buffer, check for the word @samp{Narrow} in the mode line.
274 If it appears, the text you don't see is probably still present, but
275 temporarily off-limits. To make it accessible again, type @kbd{C-x n
276 w}. @xref{Narrowing}.
277
278 @node Memory Full
279 @subsection Running out of Memory
280 @cindex memory full
281 @cindex out of memory
282
283 If you get the error message @samp{Virtual memory exceeded}, save
284 your modified buffers with @kbd{C-x s}. This method of saving them
285 has the smallest need for additional memory. Emacs keeps a reserve of
286 memory which it makes available when this error happens; that should
287 be enough to enable @kbd{C-x s} to complete its work. When the
288 reserve has been used, @samp{!MEM FULL!} appears at the beginning of
289 the mode line, indicating there is no more reserve.
290
291 Once you have saved your modified buffers, you can exit this Emacs
292 session and start another, or you can use @kbd{M-x kill-some-buffers}
293 to free space in the current Emacs job. If this frees up sufficient
294 space, Emacs will refill its memory reserve, and @samp{!MEM FULL!}
295 will disappear from the mode line. That means you can safely go on
296 editing in the same Emacs session.
297
298 Do not use @kbd{M-x buffer-menu} to save or kill buffers when you run
299 out of memory, because the buffer menu needs a fair amount of memory
300 itself, and the reserve supply may not be enough.
301
302 @node After a Crash
303 @subsection Recovery After a Crash
304
305 If Emacs or the computer crashes, you can recover the files you were
306 editing at the time of the crash from their auto-save files. To do
307 this, start Emacs again and type the command @kbd{M-x recover-session}.
308
309 This command initially displays a buffer which lists interrupted
310 session files, each with its date. You must choose which session to
311 recover from. Typically the one you want is the most recent one. Move
312 point to the one you choose, and type @kbd{C-c C-c}.
313
314 Then @code{recover-session} considers each of the files that you
315 were editing during that session; for each such file, it asks whether
316 to recover that file. If you answer @kbd{y} for a file, it shows the
317 dates of that file and its auto-save file, then asks once again
318 whether to recover that file. For the second question, you must
319 confirm with @kbd{yes}. If you do, Emacs visits the file but gets the
320 text from the auto-save file.
321
322 When @code{recover-session} is done, the files you've chosen to
323 recover are present in Emacs buffers. You should then save them. Only
324 this---saving them---updates the files themselves.
325
326 As a last resort, if you had buffers with content which were not
327 associated with any files, or if the autosave was not recent enough to
328 have recorded important changes, you can use the
329 @file{etc/emacs-buffer.gdb} script with GDB (the GNU Debugger) to
330 retrieve them from a core dump--provided that a core dump was saved,
331 and that the Emacs executable was not stripped of its debugging
332 symbols.
333
334 As soon as you get the core dump, rename it to another name such as
335 @file{core.emacs}, so that another crash won't overwrite it.
336
337 To use this script, run @code{gdb} with the file name of your Emacs
338 executable and the file name of the core dump, e.g. @samp{gdb
339 /usr/bin/emacs core.emacs}. At the @code{(gdb)} prompt, load the
340 recovery script: @samp{source /usr/src/emacs/etc/emacs-buffer.gdb}.
341 Then type the command @code{ybuffer-list} to see which buffers are
342 available. For each buffer, it lists a buffer number. To save a
343 buffer, use @code{ysave-buffer}; you specify the buffer number, and
344 the file name to write that buffer into. You should use a file name
345 which does not already exist; if the file does exist, the script does
346 not make a backup of its old contents.
347
348 @node Emergency Escape
349 @subsection Emergency Escape
350
351 On text-only terminals, the @dfn{emergency escape} feature suspends
352 Emacs immediately if you type @kbd{C-g} a second time before Emacs can
353 actually respond to the first one by quitting. This is so you can
354 always get out of GNU Emacs no matter how badly it might be hung.
355 When things are working properly, Emacs recognizes and handles the
356 first @kbd{C-g} so fast that the second one won't trigger emergency
357 escape. However, if some problem prevents Emacs from handling the
358 first @kbd{C-g} properly, then the second one will get you back to the
359 shell.
360
361 When you resume Emacs after a suspension caused by emergency escape,
362 it asks two questions before going back to what it had been doing:
363
364 @example
365 Auto-save? (y or n)
366 Abort (and dump core)? (y or n)
367 @end example
368
369 @noindent
370 Answer each one with @kbd{y} or @kbd{n} followed by @key{RET}.
371
372 Saying @kbd{y} to @samp{Auto-save?} causes immediate auto-saving of
373 all modified buffers in which auto-saving is enabled. Saying @kbd{n}
374 skips this.
375
376 Saying @kbd{y} to @samp{Abort (and dump core)?} causes Emacs to
377 crash, dumping core. This is to enable a wizard to figure out why
378 Emacs was failing to quit in the first place. Execution does not
379 continue after a core dump.
380
381 If you answer this question @kbd{n}, Emacs execution resumes. With
382 luck, Emacs will ultimately do the requested quit. If not, each
383 subsequent @kbd{C-g} invokes emergency escape again.
384
385 If Emacs is not really hung, just slow, you may invoke the double
386 @kbd{C-g} feature without really meaning to. Then just resume and
387 answer @kbd{n} to both questions, and you will get back to the former
388 state. The quit you requested will happen by and by.
389
390 Emergency escape is active only for text terminals. On graphical
391 displays, you can use the mouse to kill Emacs or switch to another
392 program.
393
394 On MS-DOS, you must type @kbd{C-@key{BREAK}} (twice) to cause
395 emergency escape---but there are cases where it won't work, when
396 system call hangs or when Emacs is stuck in a tight loop in C code.
397
398 @node Total Frustration
399 @subsection Help for Total Frustration
400 @cindex Eliza
401 @cindex doctor
402
403 If using Emacs (or something else) becomes terribly frustrating and none
404 of the techniques described above solve the problem, Emacs can still help
405 you.
406
407 First, if the Emacs you are using is not responding to commands, type
408 @kbd{C-g C-g} to get out of it and then start a new one.
409
410 @findex doctor
411 Second, type @kbd{M-x doctor @key{RET}}.
412
413 The Emacs psychotherapist will help you feel better. Each time you
414 say something to the psychotherapist, you must end it by typing
415 @key{RET} @key{RET}. This indicates you are finished typing.
416
417 @node Bugs, Contributing, Lossage, Top
418 @section Reporting Bugs
419
420 @cindex bugs
421 Sometimes you will encounter a bug in Emacs. Although we cannot
422 promise we can or will fix the bug, and we might not even agree that it
423 is a bug, we want to hear about problems you encounter. Often we agree
424 they are bugs and want to fix them.
425
426 To make it possible for us to fix a bug, you must report it. In order
427 to do so effectively, you must know when and how to do it.
428
429 Before reporting a bug, it is a good idea to see if it is already
430 known. You can find the list of known problems in the file
431 @file{etc/PROBLEMS} in the Emacs distribution; type @kbd{C-h C-e} to read
432 it. Some additional user-level problems can be found in @ref{Bugs and
433 problems, , Bugs and problems, efaq, GNU Emacs FAQ}. Looking up your
434 problem in these two documents might provide you with a solution or a
435 work-around, or give you additional information about related issues.
436
437 @menu
438 * Criteria: Bug Criteria. Have you really found a bug?
439 * Understanding Bug Reporting:: How to report a bug effectively.
440 * Checklist:: Steps to follow for a good bug report.
441 * Sending Patches:: How to send a patch for GNU Emacs.
442 @end menu
443
444 @node Bug Criteria
445 @subsection When Is There a Bug
446
447 If Emacs accesses an invalid memory location (``segmentation
448 fault''), or exits with an operating system error message that
449 indicates a problem in the program (as opposed to something like
450 ``disk full''), then it is certainly a bug.
451
452 If Emacs updates the display in a way that does not correspond to what is
453 in the buffer, then it is certainly a bug. If a command seems to do the
454 wrong thing but the problem corrects itself if you type @kbd{C-l}, it is a
455 case of incorrect display updating.
456
457 Taking forever to complete a command can be a bug, but you must make
458 certain that it was really Emacs's fault. Some commands simply take a
459 long time. Type @kbd{C-g} (@kbd{C-@key{BREAK}} on MS-DOS) and then @kbd{C-h l}
460 to see whether the input Emacs received was what you intended to type;
461 if the input was such that you @emph{know} it should have been processed
462 quickly, report a bug. If you don't know whether the command should
463 take a long time, find out by looking in the manual or by asking for
464 assistance.
465
466 If a command you are familiar with causes an Emacs error message in a
467 case where its usual definition ought to be reasonable, it is probably a
468 bug.
469
470 If a command does the wrong thing, that is a bug. But be sure you know
471 for certain what it ought to have done. If you aren't familiar with the
472 command, or don't know for certain how the command is supposed to work,
473 then it might actually be working right. Rather than jumping to
474 conclusions, show the problem to someone who knows for certain.
475
476 Finally, a command's intended definition may not be the best
477 possible definition for editing with. This is a very important sort
478 of problem, but it is also a matter of judgment. Also, it is easy to
479 come to such a conclusion out of ignorance of some of the existing
480 features. It is probably best not to complain about such a problem
481 until you have checked the documentation in the usual ways, feel
482 confident that you understand it, and know for certain that what you
483 want is not available. Ask other Emacs users, too. If you are not
484 sure what the command is supposed to do after a careful reading of the
485 manual, check the index and glossary for any terms that may be
486 unclear.
487
488 If after careful rereading of the manual you still do not understand
489 what the command should do, that indicates a bug in the manual, which
490 you should report. The manual's job is to make everything clear to
491 people who are not Emacs experts---including you. It is just as
492 important to report documentation bugs as program bugs.
493
494 If the on-line documentation string of a function or variable disagrees
495 with the manual, one of them must be wrong; that is a bug.
496
497 @node Understanding Bug Reporting
498 @subsection Understanding Bug Reporting
499
500 @findex emacs-version
501 When you decide that there is a bug, it is important to report it and to
502 report it in a way which is useful. What is most useful is an exact
503 description of what commands you type, starting with the shell command to
504 run Emacs, until the problem happens.
505
506 The most important principle in reporting a bug is to report
507 @emph{facts}. Hypotheses and verbal descriptions are no substitute for
508 the detailed raw data. Reporting the facts is straightforward, but many
509 people strain to posit explanations and report them instead of the
510 facts. If the explanations are based on guesses about how Emacs is
511 implemented, they will be useless; meanwhile, lacking the facts, we will
512 have no real information about the bug.
513
514 For example, suppose that you type @kbd{C-x C-f /glorp/baz.ugh
515 @key{RET}}, visiting a file which (you know) happens to be rather
516 large, and Emacs displays @samp{I feel pretty today}. The best way to
517 report the bug is with a sentence like the preceding one, because it
518 gives all the facts.
519
520 A bad way would be to assume that the problem is due to the size of
521 the file and say, ``I visited a large file, and Emacs displayed @samp{I
522 feel pretty today}.'' This is what we mean by ``guessing
523 explanations.'' The problem is just as likely to be due to the fact
524 that there is a @samp{z} in the file name. If this is so, then when we
525 got your report, we would try out the problem with some ``large file,''
526 probably with no @samp{z} in its name, and not see any problem. There
527 is no way in the world that we could guess that we should try visiting a
528 file with a @samp{z} in its name.
529
530 Alternatively, the problem might be due to the fact that the file starts
531 with exactly 25 spaces. For this reason, you should make sure that you
532 inform us of the exact contents of any file that is needed to reproduce the
533 bug. What if the problem only occurs when you have typed the @kbd{C-x C-a}
534 command previously? This is why we ask you to give the exact sequence of
535 characters you typed since starting the Emacs session.
536
537 You should not even say ``visit a file'' instead of @kbd{C-x C-f} unless
538 you @emph{know} that it makes no difference which visiting command is used.
539 Similarly, rather than saying ``if I have three characters on the line,''
540 say ``after I type @kbd{@key{RET} A B C @key{RET} C-p},'' if that is
541 the way you entered the text.
542
543 So please don't guess any explanations when you report a bug. If you
544 want to actually @emph{debug} the problem, and report explanations that
545 are more than guesses, that is useful---but please include the facts as
546 well.
547
548 @node Checklist
549 @subsection Checklist for Bug Reports
550
551 @cindex reporting bugs
552 The best way to send a bug report is to mail it electronically to the
553 Emacs maintainers at @email{bug-gnu-emacs@@gnu.org}, or to
554 @email{emacs-pretest-bug@@gnu.org} if you are pretesting an Emacs beta
555 release. (If you want to suggest a change as an improvement, use the
556 same address.)
557
558 If you'd like to read the bug reports, you can find them on the
559 newsgroup @samp{gnu.emacs.bug}; keep in mind, however, that as a
560 spectator you should not criticize anything about what you see there.
561 The purpose of bug reports is to give information to the Emacs
562 maintainers. Spectators are welcome only as long as they do not
563 interfere with this. In particular, some bug reports contain fairly
564 large amounts of data; spectators should not complain about this.
565
566 Please do not post bug reports using netnews; mail is more reliable
567 than netnews about reporting your correct address, which we may need
568 in order to ask you for more information. If your data is more than
569 500,000 bytes, please don't include it directly in the bug report;
570 instead, offer to send it on request, or make it available by ftp and
571 say where.
572
573 @findex report-emacs-bug
574 A convenient way to send a bug report for Emacs is to use the command
575 @kbd{M-x report-emacs-bug}. This sets up a mail buffer (@pxref{Sending
576 Mail}) and automatically inserts @emph{some} of the essential
577 information. However, it cannot supply all the necessary information;
578 you should still read and follow the guidelines below, so you can enter
579 the other crucial information by hand before you send the message.
580
581 To enable maintainers to investigate a bug, your report
582 should include all these things:
583
584 @itemize @bullet
585 @item
586 The version number of Emacs. Without this, we won't know whether there
587 is any point in looking for the bug in the current version of GNU
588 Emacs.
589
590 You can get the version number by typing @kbd{M-x emacs-version
591 @key{RET}}. If that command does not work, you probably have something
592 other than GNU Emacs, so you will have to report the bug somewhere
593 else.
594
595 @item
596 The type of machine you are using, and the operating system name and
597 version number. @kbd{M-x emacs-version @key{RET}} provides this
598 information too. Copy its output from the @samp{*Messages*} buffer, so
599 that you get it all and get it accurately.
600
601 @item
602 The operands given to the @code{configure} command when Emacs was
603 installed.
604
605 @item
606 A complete list of any modifications you have made to the Emacs source.
607 (We may not have time to investigate the bug unless it happens in an
608 unmodified Emacs. But if you've made modifications and you don't tell
609 us, you are sending us on a wild goose chase.)
610
611 Be precise about these changes. A description in English is not
612 enough---send a context diff for them.
613
614 Adding files of your own, or porting to another machine, is a
615 modification of the source.
616
617 @item
618 Details of any other deviations from the standard procedure for installing
619 GNU Emacs.
620
621 @item
622 The complete text of any files needed to reproduce the bug.
623
624 If you can tell us a way to cause the problem without visiting any files,
625 please do so. This makes it much easier to debug. If you do need files,
626 make sure you arrange for us to see their exact contents. For example, it
627 can matter whether there are spaces at the ends of lines, or a
628 newline after the last line in the buffer (nothing ought to care whether
629 the last line is terminated, but try telling the bugs that).
630
631 @item
632 The precise commands we need to type to reproduce the bug.
633
634 @findex open-dribble-file
635 @cindex dribble file
636 @cindex logging keystrokes
637 The easy way to record the input to Emacs precisely is to write a
638 dribble file. To start the file, execute the Lisp expression
639
640 @example
641 (open-dribble-file "~/dribble")
642 @end example
643
644 @noindent
645 using @kbd{M-:} or from the @samp{*scratch*} buffer just after
646 starting Emacs. From then on, Emacs copies all your input to the
647 specified dribble file until the Emacs process is killed.
648
649 @item
650 @findex open-termscript
651 @cindex termscript file
652 @cindex @env{TERM} environment variable
653 For possible display bugs, the terminal type (the value of environment
654 variable @env{TERM}), the complete termcap entry for the terminal from
655 @file{/etc/termcap} (since that file is not identical on all machines),
656 and the output that Emacs actually sent to the terminal.
657
658 The way to collect the terminal output is to execute the Lisp expression
659
660 @example
661 (open-termscript "~/termscript")
662 @end example
663
664 @noindent
665 using @kbd{M-:} or from the @samp{*scratch*} buffer just after
666 starting Emacs. From then on, Emacs copies all terminal output to the
667 specified termscript file as well, until the Emacs process is killed.
668 If the problem happens when Emacs starts up, put this expression into
669 your @file{.emacs} file so that the termscript file will be open when
670 Emacs displays the screen for the first time.
671
672 Be warned: it is often difficult, and sometimes impossible, to fix a
673 terminal-dependent bug without access to a terminal of the type that
674 stimulates the bug.
675
676 @item
677 If non-@acronym{ASCII} text or internationalization is relevant, the locale that
678 was current when you started Emacs. On GNU/Linux and Unix systems, or
679 if you use a Posix-style shell such as Bash, you can use this shell
680 command to view the relevant values:
681
682 @smallexample
683 echo LC_ALL=$LC_ALL LC_COLLATE=$LC_COLLATE LC_CTYPE=$LC_CTYPE \
684 LC_MESSAGES=$LC_MESSAGES LC_TIME=$LC_TIME LANG=$LANG
685 @end smallexample
686
687 Alternatively, use the @command{locale} command, if your system has it,
688 to display your locale settings.
689
690 You can use the @kbd{M-!} command to execute these commands from
691 Emacs, and then copy the output from the @samp{*Messages*} buffer into
692 the bug report. Alternatively, @kbd{M-x getenv @key{RET} LC_ALL
693 @key{RET}} will display the value of @code{LC_ALL} in the echo area, and
694 you can copy its output from the @samp{*Messages*} buffer.
695
696 @item
697 A description of what behavior you observe that you believe is
698 incorrect. For example, ``The Emacs process gets a fatal signal,'' or,
699 ``The resulting text is as follows, which I think is wrong.''
700
701 Of course, if the bug is that Emacs gets a fatal signal, then one can't
702 miss it. But if the bug is incorrect text, the maintainer might fail to
703 notice what is wrong. Why leave it to chance?
704
705 Even if the problem you experience is a fatal signal, you should still
706 say so explicitly. Suppose something strange is going on, such as, your
707 copy of the source is out of sync, or you have encountered a bug in the
708 C library on your system. (This has happened!) Your copy might crash
709 and the copy here might not. If you @emph{said} to expect a crash, then
710 when Emacs here fails to crash, we would know that the bug was not
711 happening. If you don't say to expect a crash, then we would not know
712 whether the bug was happening---we would not be able to draw any
713 conclusion from our observations.
714
715 @item
716 If the bug is that the Emacs Manual or the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual
717 fails to describe the actual behavior of Emacs, or that the text is
718 confusing, copy in the text from the online manual which you think is
719 at fault. If the section is small, just the section name is enough.
720
721 @item
722 If the manifestation of the bug is an Emacs error message, it is
723 important to report the precise text of the error message, and a
724 backtrace showing how the Lisp program in Emacs arrived at the error.
725
726 To get the error message text accurately, copy it from the
727 @samp{*Messages*} buffer into the bug report. Copy all of it, not just
728 part.
729
730 @findex toggle-debug-on-error
731 @pindex Edebug
732 To make a backtrace for the error, use @kbd{M-x toggle-debug-on-error}
733 before the error happens (that is to say, you must give that command
734 and then make the bug happen). This causes the error to start the Lisp
735 debugger, which shows you a backtrace. Copy the text of the
736 debugger's backtrace into the bug report. @xref{Debugger,, The Lisp
737 Debugger, elisp, the Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for information on
738 debugging Emacs Lisp programs with the Edebug package.
739
740 This use of the debugger is possible only if you know how to make the
741 bug happen again. If you can't make it happen again, at least copy
742 the whole error message.
743
744 @item
745 Check whether any programs you have loaded into the Lisp world,
746 including your @file{.emacs} file, set any variables that may affect the
747 functioning of Emacs. Also, see whether the problem happens in a
748 freshly started Emacs without loading your @file{.emacs} file (start
749 Emacs with the @code{-q} switch to prevent loading the init file). If
750 the problem does @emph{not} occur then, you must report the precise
751 contents of any programs that you must load into the Lisp world in order
752 to cause the problem to occur.
753
754 @item
755 If the problem does depend on an init file or other Lisp programs that
756 are not part of the standard Emacs system, then you should make sure it
757 is not a bug in those programs by complaining to their maintainers
758 first. After they verify that they are using Emacs in a way that is
759 supposed to work, they should report the bug.
760
761 @item
762 If you wish to mention something in the GNU Emacs source, show the line
763 of code with a few lines of context. Don't just give a line number.
764
765 The line numbers in the development sources don't match those in your
766 sources. It would take extra work for the maintainers to determine what
767 code is in your version at a given line number, and we could not be
768 certain.
769
770 @item
771 Additional information from a C debugger such as GDB might enable
772 someone to find a problem on a machine which he does not have available.
773 If you don't know how to use GDB, please read the GDB manual---it is not
774 very long, and using GDB is easy. You can find the GDB distribution,
775 including the GDB manual in online form, in most of the same places you
776 can find the Emacs distribution. To run Emacs under GDB, you should
777 switch to the @file{src} subdirectory in which Emacs was compiled, then
778 do @samp{gdb emacs}. It is important for the directory @file{src} to be
779 current so that GDB will read the @file{.gdbinit} file in this
780 directory.
781
782 However, you need to think when you collect the additional information
783 if you want it to show what causes the bug.
784
785 @cindex backtrace for bug reports
786 For example, many people send just a backtrace, but that is not very
787 useful by itself. A simple backtrace with arguments often conveys
788 little about what is happening inside GNU Emacs, because most of the
789 arguments listed in the backtrace are pointers to Lisp objects. The
790 numeric values of these pointers have no significance whatever; all that
791 matters is the contents of the objects they point to (and most of the
792 contents are themselves pointers).
793
794 @findex debug_print
795 To provide useful information, you need to show the values of Lisp
796 objects in Lisp notation. Do this for each variable which is a Lisp
797 object, in several stack frames near the bottom of the stack. Look at
798 the source to see which variables are Lisp objects, because the debugger
799 thinks of them as integers.
800
801 To show a variable's value in Lisp syntax, first print its value, then
802 use the user-defined GDB command @code{pr} to print the Lisp object in
803 Lisp syntax. (If you must use another debugger, call the function
804 @code{debug_print} with the object as an argument.) The @code{pr}
805 command is defined by the file @file{.gdbinit}, and it works only if you
806 are debugging a running process (not with a core dump).
807
808 To make Lisp errors stop Emacs and return to GDB, put a breakpoint at
809 @code{Fsignal}.
810
811 For a short listing of Lisp functions running, type the GDB
812 command @code{xbacktrace}.
813
814 The file @file{.gdbinit} defines several other commands that are useful
815 for examining the data types and contents of Lisp objects. Their names
816 begin with @samp{x}. These commands work at a lower level than
817 @code{pr}, and are less convenient, but they may work even when
818 @code{pr} does not, such as when debugging a core dump or when Emacs has
819 had a fatal signal.
820
821 @cindex debugging Emacs, tricks and techniques
822 More detailed advice and other useful techniques for debugging Emacs
823 are available in the file @file{etc/DEBUG} in the Emacs distribution.
824 That file also includes instructions for investigating problems
825 whereby Emacs stops responding (many people assume that Emacs is
826 ``hung,'' whereas in fact it might be in an infinite loop).
827
828 To find the file @file{etc/DEBUG} in your Emacs installation, use the
829 directory name stored in the variable @code{data-directory}.
830 @end itemize
831
832 Here are some things that are not necessary in a bug report:
833
834 @itemize @bullet
835 @item
836 A description of the envelope of the bug---this is not necessary for a
837 reproducible bug.
838
839 Often people who encounter a bug spend a lot of time investigating
840 which changes to the input file will make the bug go away and which
841 changes will not affect it.
842
843 This is often time-consuming and not very useful, because the way we
844 will find the bug is by running a single example under the debugger
845 with breakpoints, not by pure deduction from a series of examples.
846 You might as well save time by not searching for additional examples.
847 It is better to send the bug report right away, go back to editing,
848 and find another bug to report.
849
850 Of course, if you can find a simpler example to report @emph{instead} of
851 the original one, that is a convenience. Errors in the output will be
852 easier to spot, running under the debugger will take less time, etc.
853
854 However, simplification is not vital; if you can't do this or don't have
855 time to try, please report the bug with your original test case.
856
857 @item
858 A core dump file.
859
860 Debugging the core dump might be useful, but it can only be done on
861 your machine, with your Emacs executable. Therefore, sending the core
862 dump file to the Emacs maintainers won't be useful. Above all, don't
863 include the core file in an email bug report! Such a large message
864 can be extremely inconvenient.
865
866 @item
867 A system-call trace of Emacs execution.
868
869 System-call traces are very useful for certain special kinds of
870 debugging, but in most cases they give little useful information. It is
871 therefore strange that many people seem to think that @emph{the} way to
872 report information about a crash is to send a system-call trace. Perhaps
873 this is a habit formed from experience debugging programs that don't
874 have source code or debugging symbols.
875
876 In most programs, a backtrace is normally far, far more informative than
877 a system-call trace. Even in Emacs, a simple backtrace is generally
878 more informative, though to give full information you should supplement
879 the backtrace by displaying variable values and printing them as Lisp
880 objects with @code{pr} (see above).
881
882 @item
883 A patch for the bug.
884
885 A patch for the bug is useful if it is a good one. But don't omit the
886 other information that a bug report needs, such as the test case, on the
887 assumption that a patch is sufficient. We might see problems with your
888 patch and decide to fix the problem another way, or we might not
889 understand it at all. And if we can't understand what bug you are
890 trying to fix, or why your patch should be an improvement, we mustn't
891 install it.
892
893 @ifnottex
894 @xref{Sending Patches}, for guidelines on how to make it easy for us to
895 understand and install your patches.
896 @end ifnottex
897
898 @item
899 A guess about what the bug is or what it depends on.
900
901 Such guesses are usually wrong. Even experts can't guess right about
902 such things without first using the debugger to find the facts.
903 @end itemize
904
905 @node Sending Patches
906 @subsection Sending Patches for GNU Emacs
907
908 @cindex sending patches for GNU Emacs
909 @cindex patches, sending
910 If you would like to write bug fixes or improvements for GNU Emacs,
911 that is very helpful. When you send your changes, please follow these
912 guidelines to make it easy for the maintainers to use them. If you
913 don't follow these guidelines, your information might still be useful,
914 but using it will take extra work. Maintaining GNU Emacs is a lot of
915 work in the best of circumstances, and we can't keep up unless you do
916 your best to help.
917
918 @itemize @bullet
919 @item
920 Send an explanation with your changes of what problem they fix or what
921 improvement they bring about. For a bug fix, just include a copy of the
922 bug report, and explain why the change fixes the bug.
923
924 (Referring to a bug report is not as good as including it, because then
925 we will have to look it up, and we have probably already deleted it if
926 we've already fixed the bug.)
927
928 @item
929 Always include a proper bug report for the problem you think you have
930 fixed. We need to convince ourselves that the change is right before
931 installing it. Even if it is correct, we might have trouble
932 understanding it if we don't have a way to reproduce the problem.
933
934 @item
935 Include all the comments that are appropriate to help people reading the
936 source in the future understand why this change was needed.
937
938 @item
939 Don't mix together changes made for different reasons.
940 Send them @emph{individually}.
941
942 If you make two changes for separate reasons, then we might not want to
943 install them both. We might want to install just one. If you send them
944 all jumbled together in a single set of diffs, we have to do extra work
945 to disentangle them---to figure out which parts of the change serve
946 which purpose. If we don't have time for this, we might have to ignore
947 your changes entirely.
948
949 If you send each change as soon as you have written it, with its own
950 explanation, then two changes never get tangled up, and we can consider
951 each one properly without any extra work to disentangle them.
952
953 @item
954 Send each change as soon as that change is finished. Sometimes people
955 think they are helping us by accumulating many changes to send them all
956 together. As explained above, this is absolutely the worst thing you
957 could do.
958
959 Since you should send each change separately, you might as well send it
960 right away. That gives us the option of installing it immediately if it
961 is important.
962
963 @item
964 Use @samp{diff -c} to make your diffs. Diffs without context are hard
965 to install reliably. More than that, they are hard to study; we must
966 always study a patch to decide whether we want to install it. Unidiff
967 format is better than contextless diffs, but not as easy to read as
968 @samp{-c} format.
969
970 If you have GNU diff, use @samp{diff -c -F'^[_a-zA-Z0-9$]+ *('} when
971 making diffs of C code. This shows the name of the function that each
972 change occurs in.
973
974 @item
975 Avoid any ambiguity as to which is the old version and which is the new.
976 Please make the old version the first argument to diff, and the new
977 version the second argument. And please give one version or the other a
978 name that indicates whether it is the old version or your new changed
979 one.
980
981 @item
982 Write the change log entries for your changes. This is both to save us
983 the extra work of writing them, and to help explain your changes so we
984 can understand them.
985
986 The purpose of the change log is to show people where to find what was
987 changed. So you need to be specific about what functions you changed;
988 in large functions, it's often helpful to indicate where within the
989 function the change was.
990
991 On the other hand, once you have shown people where to find the change,
992 you need not explain its purpose in the change log. Thus, if you add a
993 new function, all you need to say about it is that it is new. If you
994 feel that the purpose needs explaining, it probably does---but put the
995 explanation in comments in the code. It will be more useful there.
996
997 Please read the @file{ChangeLog} files in the @file{src} and
998 @file{lisp} directories to see what sorts of information to put in,
999 and to learn the style that we use. @xref{Change Log}.
1000
1001 @item
1002 When you write the fix, keep in mind that we can't install a change that
1003 would break other systems. Please think about what effect your change
1004 will have if compiled on another type of system.
1005
1006 Sometimes people send fixes that @emph{might} be an improvement in
1007 general---but it is hard to be sure of this. It's hard to install
1008 such changes because we have to study them very carefully. Of course,
1009 a good explanation of the reasoning by which you concluded the change
1010 was correct can help convince us.
1011
1012 The safest changes are changes to the configuration files for a
1013 particular machine. These are safe because they can't create new bugs
1014 on other machines.
1015
1016 Please help us keep up with the workload by designing the patch in a
1017 form that is clearly safe to install.
1018 @end itemize
1019
1020 @node Contributing, Service, Bugs, Top
1021 @section Contributing to Emacs Development
1022
1023 If you would like to help pretest Emacs releases to assure they work
1024 well, or if you would like to work on improving Emacs, please contact
1025 the maintainers at @email{emacs-devel@@gnu.org}. A pretester
1026 should be prepared to investigate bugs as well as report them. If you'd
1027 like to work on improving Emacs, please ask for suggested projects or
1028 suggest your own ideas.
1029
1030 If you have already written an improvement, please tell us about it. If
1031 you have not yet started work, it is useful to contact
1032 @email{emacs-devel@@gnu.org} before you start; it might be
1033 possible to suggest ways to make your extension fit in better with the
1034 rest of Emacs.
1035
1036 The development version of Emacs can be downloaded from the CVS
1037 repository where it is actively maintained by a group of developers.
1038 See the Emacs project page
1039 @url{http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/emacs/} for details.
1040
1041 @node Service, Copying, Contributing, Top
1042 @section How To Get Help with GNU Emacs
1043
1044 If you need help installing, using or changing GNU Emacs, there are two
1045 ways to find it:
1046
1047 @itemize @bullet
1048 @item
1049 Send a message to the mailing list
1050 @email{help-gnu-emacs@@gnu.org}, or post your request on
1051 newsgroup @code{gnu.emacs.help}. (This mailing list and newsgroup
1052 interconnect, so it does not matter which one you use.)
1053
1054 @item
1055 Look in the service directory for someone who might help you for a fee.
1056 The service directory is found in the file named @file{etc/SERVICE} in the
1057 Emacs distribution.
1058 @end itemize
1059
1060 @ifnottex
1061 @lowersections
1062 @end ifnottex
1063
1064 @ignore
1065 arch-tag: c9cba76d-b2cb-4e0c-ae3f-19d5ef35817c
1066 @end ignore