Debugging GNU Emacs Copyright (C) 1985, 2000-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc. See the end of the file for license conditions. ** Preliminaries This section can be skipped if you are already familiar with building Emacs with debug info, configuring and starting GDB, and simple GDB debugging techniques. *** Configuring Emacs for debugging It is best to configure and build Emacs with special options that will make the debugging easier. Here are the configure-time options we recommend (they are in addition to any other options you might need, such as --prefix): ./configure --enable-checking='yes,glyphs' --enable-check-lisp-object-type \ CFLAGS='-O0 -g3' The -O0 flag is important, as debugging optimized code can be hard. If the problem happens only with optimized code, you may need to enable optimizations. If that happens, try using -Og first instead of -O2, as -Og disables some optimizations that make debugging some code exceptionally hard. Older versions of GCC may need more than just the -g3 flag. For more, search for "analyze failed assertions" below. The 2 --enable-* switches are optional. They don't have any effect on debugging with GDB, but will compile additional code that might catch the problem you are debugging much earlier, in the form of assertion violation. The --enable-checking option also enables additional functionality useful for debugging display problems; see more about this below under "Debugging Emacs redisplay problems". Emacs needs not be installed to be debugged, you can debug the binary created in the 'src' directory. *** Configuring GDB To start GDB to debug Emacs, you can simply type "gdb ./emacs RET" at the shell prompt (assuming you do that from the directory of the Emacs executable, usually the 'src' sub-directory of the Emacs tree). However, we recommend starting GDB from Emacs, see below. When you debug Emacs with GDB, you should start GDB in the directory where the Emacs executable was made (the 'src' directory in the Emacs source tree). That directory has a .gdbinit file that defines various "user-defined" commands for debugging Emacs. (These commands are described below under "Examining Lisp object values" and "Debugging Emacs Redisplay problems".) Starting the debugger from Emacs, via the "M-x gdb" command (described below), when the current buffer visits one of the Emacs C source files will automatically start GDB in the 'src' directory. If you invoke "M-x gdb" from a buffer whose default directory is different, such as from the "*scratch*" buffer, you can change the default directory with the "M-x cd" command before starting the debugger. Recent GDB versions by default do not automatically load .gdbinit files in the directory where you invoke GDB. With those versions of GDB, you will see a warning when GDB starts, like this: warning: File ".../src/.gdbinit" auto-loading has been declined by your `auto-load safe-path' set to "$debugdir:$datadir/auto-load". The simplest way to fix this is to add the following line to your ~/.gdbinit file (creating such a file if it doesn't already exist): add-auto-load-safe-path /path/to/emacs/src/.gdbinit There are other ways to overcome that difficulty, they are all described in the node "Auto-loading safe path" in the GDB user manual. If nothing else helps, type "source /path/to/.gdbinit RET" at the GDB prompt, to unconditionally load the GDB init file. Running GDB on macOS sometimes brings an error message like this: Unable to find Mach task port for process-id NNN: (os/kern) failure (0x5). To overcome this, search the Internet for the phrase "Unable to find Mach task port for process-id", and you will find detailed instructions to follow. *** Use the Emacs GDB UI front-end We recommend using the GUI front-end for GDB provided by Emacs. With it, you can start GDB by typing "M-x gdb RET". This will suggest the file name of the default binary to debug; if the suggested default is not the Emacs binary you want to debug, change the file name as needed. Alternatively, if you want to attach the debugger to an already running Emacs process, change the GDB command shown in the minibuffer to say this: gdb -i=mi -p PID where PID is the numerical process ID of the running Emacs process, displayed by system utilities such as 'top' or 'ps' on Posix hosts and Task Manager on MS-Windows. Once the debugger starts, open the additional windows provided by the GDB UI, by typing "M-x gdb-many-windows RET". (Alternatively, click Gud->GDB-MI->Display Other Windows" from the menu bar.) At this point, make your frame large enough (or full-screen) such that the windows you just opened have enough space to show the content without horizontal scrolling. You can later restore your window configuration with the companion command "M-x gdb-restore-windows RET", or by deselecting "Display Other Windows" from the menu bar. *** Setting initial breakpoints Before you let Emacs run, you should now set breakpoints in the code which you want to debug, so that Emacs stops there and lets GDB take control. If the code which you want to debug is executed under some rare conditions, or only when a certain Emacs command is manually invoked, then just set your breakpoint there, let Emacs run, and trigger the breakpoint by invoking that command or reproducing those rare conditions. If you are less lucky, and the code in question is run very frequently, you will have to find some way of avoiding triggering your breakpoint when the conditions for the buggy behavior did not yet happen. There's no single recipe for this, you will have to be creative and study the code to see what's appropriate. Some useful tricks for that: . Make your breakpoint conditional on certain buffer or string position. For example: (gdb) break foo.c:1234 if PT >= 9876 . Set a break point in some rarely called function, then create the conditions for the bug, call that rare function, and when GDB gets control, set the breakpoint in the buggy code, knowing that it will now be called when the bug happens. . If the bug manifests itself as an error message, set a breakpoint in Fsignal, and when it breaks, look at the backtrace to see what triggers the error. Some additional techniques are described below under "Getting control to the debugger". You are now ready to start your debugging session. *** Running Emacs from GDB If you are starting a new Emacs session, type "run", followed by any command-line arguments (e.g., "-Q") into the *gud-emacs* buffer and press RET. If you ran GDB outside of Emacs, type "run" followed by the command-line arguments at the GDB prompt instead. If you attached the debugger to a running Emacs, type "continue" into the *gud-emacs* buffer and press RET. Many variables you will encounter while debugging are Lisp objects. These are normally displayed as opaque pointers or integers that are hard to interpret, especially if they represent long lists. (They are instead displayed as structures containing these opaque values, if --enable-check-lisp-object-type is in effect.) You can use the 'pp' command to display them in their Lisp form. That command displays its output on the standard error stream, which you can redirect to a file using "M-x redirect-debugging-output". This means that if you attach GDB to a running Emacs that was invoked from a desktop icon, chances are you will not see the output at all, or it will wind up in an obscure place (check the documentation of your desktop environment). Additional information about displaying Lisp objects can be found under "Examining Lisp object values" below. The rest of this document describes specific useful techniques for debugging Emacs; we suggest reading it in its entirety the first time you are about to debug Emacs, then look up your specific issues whenever you need. Good luck! ** When you are trying to analyze failed assertions or backtraces, it is essential to compile Emacs with flags suitable for debugging. Although CFLAGS="-O0 -g3" often suffices with modern compilers, you may benefit further by using CFLAGS="-O0 -g3 -gdwarf-4", replacing "4" by the highest version of DWARF that your compiler supports; this is especially important for GCC versions older than 4.8. With GCC and higher optimization levels such as -O2, the -fno-omit-frame-pointer and -fno-crossjumping options are often essential. The latter prevents GCC from using the same abort call for all assertions in a given function, rendering the stack backtrace useless for identifying the specific failed assertion. ** It is a good idea to run Emacs under GDB (or some other suitable debugger) *all the time*. Then, when Emacs crashes, you will be able to debug the live process, not just a core dump. (This is especially important on systems which don't support core files, and instead print just the registers and some stack addresses.) ** If Emacs hangs, or seems to be stuck in some infinite loop, typing "kill -TSTP PID", where PID is the Emacs process ID, will cause GDB to kick in, provided that you run under GDB. ** Getting control to the debugger Setting a breakpoint in a strategic place, after loading Emacs into the debugger, but before running it, is the most efficient way of making sure control will be returned to the debugger when you need that. 'Fsignal' is a very useful place to put a breakpoint in. All Lisp errors go through there. If you are only interested in errors that would fire the Lisp debugger, breaking at 'maybe_call_debugger' is useful. Another technique for getting control to the debugger is to put a breakpoint in some rarely used function. One such convenient function is Fredraw_display, which you can invoke at will interactively with "M-x redraw-display RET". It is also useful to have a guaranteed way to return to the debugger at any arbitrary time. When using X, this is easy: type C-z at the window where you are interacting with GDB, and it will stop Emacs just as it would stop any ordinary program. (This doesn't work if GDB was attached to a running Emacs process; in that case, you will need to type C-z to the shell window from which Emacs was started, or use the "kill -TSTP" method described below.) When Emacs is displaying on a text terminal, things are not so easy, so we describe the various alternatives below (however, those of them that use signals only work on Posix systems). The src/.gdbinit file in the Emacs distribution arranges for SIGINT (C-g in Emacs on a text-mode frame) to be passed to Emacs and not give control back to GDB. On modern systems, you can override that with this command: handle SIGINT stop nopass After this 'handle' command, SIGINT will return control to GDB. If you want the C-g to cause a quit within Emacs as well, omit the 'nopass'. See the GDB manual for more details about signal handling and the 'handle' command. A technique that can work when 'handle SIGINT' does not is to store the code for some character into the variable stop_character. Thus, 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, so start Emacs with the 'start' command, to get an opportunity to do the above 'set' command. On a Posix host, you can also send a signal using the 'kill' command from a shell prompt, like this: kill -TSTP Emacs-PID where Emacs-PID is the process ID of Emacs being debugged. Other useful signals to send are SIGUSR1 and SIGUSR2; see "Error Debugging" in the ELisp manual for how to use those. When Emacs is displaying on a text terminal, it is useful to have a separate terminal for the debug session. This can be done by starting Emacs as usual, then attaching to it from gdb with the 'attach' command which is explained in the node "Attach" of the GDB manual. On MS-Windows, you can alternatively start Emacs from its own separate console by setting the new-console option before running Emacs under GDB: (gdb) set new-console 1 (gdb) run If you do this, then typing C-c or C-BREAK into the console window through which you interact with GDB will stop Emacs and return control to the debugger, no matter if Emacs displays GUI or text-mode frames. This is the only reliable alternative on MS-Windows to get control to the debugger, besides setting breakpoints in advance. ** Examining Lisp object values. When you have a live process to debug, and it has not encountered a fatal error, you can use the GDB command 'pr'. First print the value in the ordinary way, with the 'p' command. Then type 'pr' with no arguments. This calls a subroutine which uses the Lisp printer. You can also use 'pp value' to print the emacs value directly. To see the current value of a Lisp Variable, use 'pv variable'. These commands send their output to stderr; if that is closed or redirected to some file you don't know, you won't see their output. This is particularly so for Emacs invoked on MS-Windows from the desktop shortcut. You can use the command 'redirect-debugging-output' to redirect stderr to a file. Note: It is not a good idea to try 'pr', 'pp', or 'pv' if you know that Emacs is in deep trouble: its stack smashed (e.g., if it encountered SIGSEGV due to stack overflow), or crucial data structures, such as 'obarray', corrupted, etc. In such cases, the Emacs subroutine called by 'pr' might make more damage, like overwrite some data that is important for debugging the original problem. Also, on some systems it is impossible to use 'pr' if you stopped Emacs while it was inside 'select'. This is in fact what happens if you stop Emacs while it is waiting. In such a situation, don't try to use 'pr'. Instead, use 's' to step out of the system call. Then Emacs will be between instructions and capable of handling 'pr'. If you can't use 'pr' command, for whatever reason, you can use the 'xpr' command to print out the data type and value of the last data value, For example: p it->object xpr You may also analyze data values using lower-level commands. Use the 'xtype' command to print out the data type of the last data value. Once you know the data type, use the command that corresponds to that type. Here are these commands: xint xptr xwindow xmarker xoverlay xmiscfree xintfwd xboolfwd xobjfwd xbufobjfwd xkbobjfwd xbuflocal xbuffer xsymbol xstring xvector xframe xwinconfig xcompiled xcons xcar xcdr xsubr xprocess xfloat xscrollbar xchartable xsubchartable xboolvector xhashtable xlist xcoding xcharset xfontset xfont Each one of them applies to a certain type or class of types. (Some of these types are not visible in Lisp, because they exist only internally.) Each x... command prints some information about the value, and produces a GDB value (subsequently available in $) through which you can get at the rest of the contents. In general, most of the rest of the contents will be additional Lisp objects which you can examine in turn with the x... commands. Even with a live process, these x... commands are useful for examining the fields in a buffer, window, process, frame or marker. Here's an example using concepts explained in the node "Value History" of the GDB manual to print values associated with the variable called frame. First, use these commands: cd src gdb emacs b set_frame_buffer_list r -q Then Emacs hits the breakpoint: (gdb) p frame $1 = 139854428 (gdb) xpr Lisp_Vectorlike PVEC_FRAME $2 = (struct frame *) 0x8560258 "emacs@localhost" (gdb) p *$ $3 = { size = 1073742931, next = 0x85dfe58, name = 140615219, [...] } Now we can use 'pp' to print the frame parameters: (gdb) pp $->param_alist ((background-mode . light) (display-type . color) [...]) The Emacs C code heavily uses macros defined in lisp.h. So suppose we want the address of the l-value expression near the bottom of 'add_command_key' from keyboard.c: XVECTOR (this_command_keys)->contents[this_command_key_count++] = key; XVECTOR is a macro, so GDB only knows about it if Emacs has been compiled with preprocessor macro information. GCC provides this if you specify the options '-gdwarf-N' (where N is 2 or higher) and '-g3'. In this case, GDB can evaluate expressions like "p XVECTOR (this_command_keys)". When this information isn't available, you can use the xvector command in GDB to get the same result. Here is how: (gdb) p this_command_keys $1 = 1078005760 (gdb) xvector $2 = (struct Lisp_Vector *) 0x411000 0 (gdb) p $->contents[this_command_key_count] $3 = 1077872640 (gdb) p &$ $4 = (int *) 0x411008 Here's a related example of macros and the GDB 'define' command. There are many Lisp vectors such as 'recent_keys', which contains the last 300 keystrokes. We can print this Lisp vector p recent_keys pr But this may be inconvenient, since 'recent_keys' is much more verbose than 'C-h l'. We might want to print only the last 10 elements of this vector. 'recent_keys' is updated in keyboard.c by the command XVECTOR (recent_keys)->contents[recent_keys_index] = c; So we define a GDB command 'xvector-elts', so the last 10 keystrokes are printed by xvector-elts recent_keys recent_keys_index 10 where you can define xvector-elts as follows: define xvector-elts set $i = 0 p $arg0 xvector set $foo = $ while $i < $arg2 p $foo->contents[$arg1-($i++)] pr end document xvector-elts Prints a range of elements of a Lisp vector. xvector-elts v n i prints 'i' elements of the vector 'v' ending at the index 'n'. end ** Getting Lisp-level backtrace information within GDB The most convenient way is to use the 'xbacktrace' command. This shows the names of the Lisp functions that are currently active. If that doesn't work (e.g., because the 'backtrace_list' structure is corrupted), type "bt" at the GDB prompt, to produce the C-level backtrace, and look for stack frames that call Ffuncall. Select them one by one in GDB, by typing "up N", where N is the appropriate number of frames to go up, and in each frame that calls Ffuncall type this: p *args pr This will print the name of the Lisp function called by that level of function calling. By printing the remaining elements of args, you can see the argument values. Here's how to print the first argument: p args[1] pr If you do not have a live process, you can use xtype and the other x... commands such as xsymbol to get such information, albeit less conveniently. For example: p *args xtype and, assuming that "xtype" says that args[0] is a symbol: xsymbol ** Debugging Emacs redisplay problems If you configured Emacs with --enable-checking='glyphs', you can use redisplay tracing facilities from a running Emacs session. The command "M-x trace-redisplay RET" will produce a trace of what redisplay does on the standard error stream. This is very useful for understanding the code paths taken by the display engine under various conditions, especially if some redisplay optimizations produce wrong results. (You know that redisplay optimizations might be involved if "M-x redraw-display RET", or even just typing "M-x", causes Emacs to correct the bad display.) Since the cursor blinking feature triggers periodic redisplay cycles, we recommend disabling 'blink-cursor-mode' before invoking 'trace-redisplay', so that you have less clutter in the trace. You can also have up to 30 last trace messages dumped to standard error by invoking the 'dump-redisplay-history' command. To find the code paths which were taken by the display engine, search xdisp.c for the trace messages you see. The command 'dump-glyph-matrix' is useful for producing on standard error stream a full dump of the selected window's glyph matrix. See the function's doc string for more details. If you are debugging redisplay issues in text-mode frames, you may find the command 'dump-frame-glyph-matrix' useful. Other commands useful for debugging redisplay are 'dump-glyph-row' and 'dump-tool-bar-row'. If you run Emacs under GDB, you can print the contents of any glyph matrix by just calling that function with the matrix as its argument. For example, the following command will print the contents of the current matrix of the window whose pointer is in 'w': (gdb) p dump_glyph_matrix (w->current_matrix, 2) (The second argument 2 tells dump_glyph_matrix to print the glyphs in a long form.) The Emacs display code includes special debugging code, but it is normally disabled. Configuring Emacs with --enable-checking='yes,glyphs' enables it. Building Emacs like that activates many assertions which scrutinize display code operation more than Emacs does normally. (To see the code which tests these assertions, look for calls to the 'eassert' macros.) Any assertion that is reported to fail should be investigated. When you debug display problems running emacs under X, you can use the 'ff' command to flush all pending display updates to the screen. The src/.gdbinit file defines many useful commands for dumping redisplay related data structures in a terse and user-friendly format: 'ppt' prints value of PT, narrowing, and gap in current buffer. 'pit' dumps the current display iterator 'it'. 'pwin' dumps the current window 'win'. 'prow' dumps the current glyph_row 'row'. 'pg' dumps the current glyph 'glyph'. 'pgi' dumps the next glyph. 'pgrow' dumps all glyphs in current glyph_row 'row'. 'pcursor' dumps current output_cursor. The above commands also exist in a version with an 'x' suffix which takes an object of the relevant type as argument. For example, 'pgrowx' dumps all glyphs in its argument, which must be of type 'struct glyph_row'. Since redisplay is performed by Emacs very frequently, you need to place your breakpoints cleverly to avoid hitting them all the time, when the issue you are debugging did not (yet) happen. Here are some useful techniques for that: . Put a breakpoint at 'Fredraw_display' before running Emacs. Then do whatever is required to reproduce the bad display, and invoke "M-x redraw-display". The debugger will kick in, and you can set or enable breakpoints in strategic places, knowing that the bad display will be redrawn from scratch. . For debugging incorrect cursor position, a good place to put a breakpoint is in 'set_cursor_from_row'. The first time this function is called as part of 'redraw-display', Emacs is redrawing the minibuffer window, which is usually not what you want; type "continue" to get to the call you want. In general, always make sure 'set_cursor_from_row' is called for the right window and buffer by examining the value of w->contents: it should be the buffer whose display you are debugging. . 'set_cursor_from_row' is also a good place to look at the contents of a screen line (a.k.a. "glyph row"), by means of the 'pgrow' GDB command. Of course, you need first to make sure the cursor is on the screen line which you want to investigate. If you have set a breakpoint in 'Fredraw_display', as advised above, move cursor to that line before invoking 'redraw-display'. . If the problem happens only at some specific buffer position or for some specific rarely-used character, you can make your breakpoints conditional on those values. The display engine maintains the buffer and string position it is processing in the it->current member; for example, the buffer character position is in it->current.pos.charpos. Most redisplay functions accept a pointer to a 'struct it' object as their argument, so you can make conditional breakpoints in those functions, like this: (gdb) break x_produce_glyphs if it->current.pos.charpos == 1234 For conditioning on the character being displayed, use it->c or it->char_to_display. . You can also make the breakpoints conditional on what object is being used for producing glyphs for display. The it->method member has the value GET_FROM_BUFFER for displaying buffer contents, GET_FROM_STRING for displaying a Lisp string (e.g., a 'display' property or an overlay string), GET_FROM_IMAGE for displaying an image, etc. See 'enum it_method' in dispextern.h for the full list of values. ** Debugging problems with native-compiled Lisp. When you encounter problems specific to native-compilation of Lisp, we recommend to follow the procedure below to try to identify the cause: . Reduce the problematic .el file to the minimum by bisection, and try identifying the function that causes the problem. . Reduce the problematic function to the minimal code that still reproduces the problem. . Study the problem's artifacts, like Lisp or C backtraces, to try identifying the cause of the problem. If you cannot figure out the cause for the problem using the above, native-compile the problematic file after setting the variable 'comp-libgccjit-reproducer' to a non-nil value. That should produce a file named ELNFILENAME_libgccjit_repro.c, where ELNFILENAME is the name of the problematic .eln file, either in the same directory where the .eln file is produced, or under your ~/.emacs.d/eln-cache (which one depends on how the native-compilation is invoked). It is also possible that the reproducer file's name will be something like subr--trampoline-XXXXXXX_FUNCTION_libgccjit_repro.c, where XXXXXXX is a long string of hex digits and FUNCTION is some function from the compiled .el file. Attach that reproducer C file to your bug report. ** Following longjmp call. Recent versions of glibc (2.4+?) encrypt stored values for setjmp/longjmp which prevents GDB from being able to follow a longjmp call using 'next'. To disable this protection you need to set the environment variable LD_POINTER_GUARD to 0. ** Using GDB in Emacs Debugging with GDB in Emacs offers some advantages over the command line (See the GDB Graphical Interface node of the Emacs manual). There are also some features available just for debugging Emacs: 1) The command gud-print is available on the tool bar (the 'p' icon) and allows the user to print the s-expression of the variable at point, in the GUD buffer. 2) Pressing 'p' on a component of a watch expression that is a lisp object in the speedbar prints its s-expression in the GUD buffer. 3) The STOP button on the tool bar and the Signals->STOP menu-bar menu item are adjusted so that they send SIGTSTP instead of the usual SIGINT. 4) The command gud-pv has the global binding 'C-x C-a C-v' and prints the value of the lisp variable at point. ** Debugging what happens while preloading and dumping Emacs Debugging 'temacs' is useful when you want to establish whether a problem happens in an undumped Emacs. To run 'temacs' under a debugger, type "gdb temacs", then start it with 'r -batch -l loadup'. If you need to debug what happens during dumping, start it with 'r -batch -l loadup dump' instead. For debugging the bootstrap dumping, use "loadup bootstrap" instead of "loadup dump". If temacs actually succeeds when running under GDB in this way, do not try to run the dumped Emacs, because it was dumped with the GDB breakpoints in it. ** If you encounter X protocol errors The X server normally reports protocol errors asynchronously, so you find out about them long after the primitive which caused the error has returned. To get clear information about the cause of an error, try evaluating (x-synchronize t). That puts Emacs into synchronous mode, where each Xlib call checks for errors before it returns. This mode is much slower, but when you get an error, you will see exactly which call really caused the error. You can start Emacs in a synchronous mode by invoking it with the -xrm option, like this: emacs -xrm "emacs.synchronous: true" Setting a breakpoint in the function 'x_error_quitter' and looking at the backtrace when Emacs stops inside that function will show what code causes the X protocol errors. Note that the -xrm option may have no effect when you make an Emacs process invoked with the -nw option a server and want to trace X protocol errors from subsequent invocations of emacsclient in a GUI frame. In that case calling the initial Emacs via emacs -nw --eval '(setq x-command-line-resources "emacs.synchronous: true")' should give more reliable results. For X protocol errors related to displaying unusual characters or to font-related customizations, try invoking Emacs like this: XFT_DEBUG=16 emacs -xrm "emacs.synchronous: true" This should produce information from the libXft library which could give useful hints regarding font-related problems in that library. Some bugs related to the X protocol disappear when Emacs runs in a synchronous mode. To track down those bugs, we suggest the following procedure: - Run Emacs under a debugger and put a breakpoint inside the primitive function which, when called from Lisp, triggers the X protocol errors. For example, if the errors happen when you delete a frame, put a breakpoint inside 'Fdelete_frame'. - When the breakpoint breaks, step through the code, looking for calls to X functions (the ones whose names begin with "X" or "Xt" or "Xm"). - Insert calls to 'XSync' before and after each call to the X functions, like this: XSync (f->output_data.x->display_info->display, 0); where 'f' is the pointer to the 'struct frame' of the selected frame, normally available via XFRAME (selected_frame). (Most functions which call X already have some variable that holds the pointer to the frame, perhaps called 'f' or 'sf', so you shouldn't need to compute it.) If your debugger can call functions in the program being debugged, you should be able to issue the calls to 'XSync' without recompiling Emacs. For example, with GDB, just type: call XSync (f->output_data.x->display_info->display, 0) before and immediately after the suspect X calls. If your debugger does not support this, you will need to add these pairs of calls in the source and rebuild Emacs. Either way, systematically step through the code and issue these calls until you find the first X function called by Emacs after which a call to 'XSync' winds up in the function 'x_error_quitter'. The first X function call for which this happens is the one that generated the X protocol error. - You should now look around this offending X call and try to figure out what is wrong with it. ** If Emacs causes errors or memory leaks in your X server You can trace the traffic between Emacs and your X server with a tool like xmon. Xmon can be used to see exactly what Emacs sends when X protocol errors happen. If Emacs causes the X server memory usage to increase you can use xmon to see what items Emacs creates in the server (windows, graphical contexts, pixmaps) and what items Emacs delete. If there are consistently more creations than deletions, the type of item and the activity you do when the items get created can give a hint where to start debugging. ** If the symptom of the bug is that Emacs fails to respond Don't assume Emacs is 'hung'--it may instead be in an infinite loop. To find out which, make the problem happen under GDB and stop Emacs once it is not responding. (If Emacs is using X Windows directly, you can stop Emacs by typing C-z at the GDB job. On MS-Windows, run Emacs as usual, and then attach GDB to it -- that will usually interrupt whatever Emacs is doing and let you perform the steps described below.) Then try stepping with 'step'. If Emacs is hung, the 'step' command won't return. If it is looping, 'step' will return. If this shows Emacs is hung in a system call, stop it again and examine the arguments of the call. If you report the bug, it is very important to state exactly where in the source the system call is, and what the arguments are. If Emacs is in an infinite loop, try to determine where the loop starts and ends. The easiest way to do this is to use the GDB command 'finish'. Each time you use it, Emacs resumes execution until it exits one stack frame. Keep typing 'finish' until it doesn't return--that means the infinite loop is in the stack frame which you just tried to finish. Stop Emacs again, and use 'finish' repeatedly again until you get back to that frame. Then use 'next' to step through that frame. By stepping, you will see where the loop starts and ends. Also, examine the data being used in the loop and try to determine why the loop does not exit when it should. On GNU and Unix systems, you can also try sending Emacs SIGUSR2, which, if 'debug-on-event' has its default value, will cause Emacs to attempt to break out of its current loop and enter the Lisp debugger. (See the node "Debugging" in the ELisp manual for the details about the Lisp debugger.) This feature is useful when a C-level debugger is not conveniently available. ** If certain operations in Emacs are slower than they used to be, here is some advice for how to find out why. Stop Emacs repeatedly during the slow operation, and make a backtrace each time. Compare the backtraces looking for a pattern--a specific function that shows up more often than you'd expect. If you don't see a pattern in the C backtraces, get some Lisp backtrace information by typing "xbacktrace" or by looking at Ffuncall frames (see above), and again look for a pattern. When using X, you can stop Emacs at any time by typing C-z at GDB. When not using X, you can do this with C-g. On non-Unix platforms, such as MS-DOS, you might need to press C-BREAK instead. ** 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 on a text terminal. 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 irreproducible 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. An easy way to see if too much text is being redrawn on a terminal is to evaluate '(setq inverse-video t)' before you try the operation you think will cause too much redrawing. This doesn't refresh the screen, so only newly drawn text is in inverse video. ** Debugging LessTif If you encounter bugs whereby Emacs built with LessTif grabs all mouse and keyboard events, or LessTif menus behave weirdly, it might be helpful to set the 'DEBUGSOURCES' and 'DEBUG_FILE' environment variables, so that one can see what LessTif was doing at this point. For instance export DEBUGSOURCES="RowColumn.c:MenuShell.c:MenuUtil.c" export DEBUG_FILE=/usr/tmp/LESSTIF_TRACE emacs & causes LessTif to print traces from the three named source files to a file in '/usr/tmp' (that file can get pretty large). The above should be typed at the shell prompt before invoking Emacs, as shown by the last line above. Running GDB from another terminal could also help with such problems. You can arrange for GDB to run on one machine, with the Emacs display appearing on another. Then, when the bug happens, you can go back to the machine where you started GDB and use the debugger from there. ** Debugging problems which happen in GC The array 'last_marked' (defined on alloc.c) can be used to display up to the 512 most-recent objects marked by the garbage collection process. Whenever the garbage collector marks a Lisp object, it records the pointer to that object in the 'last_marked' array, which is maintained as a circular buffer. The variable 'last_marked_index' holds the index into the 'last_marked' array one place beyond where the pointer to the very last marked object is stored. The single most important goal in debugging GC problems is to find the Lisp data structure that got corrupted. This is not easy since GC changes the tag bits and relocates strings which make it hard to look at Lisp objects with commands such as 'pr'. It is sometimes necessary to convert Lisp_Object variables into pointers to C struct's manually. Use the 'last_marked' array and the source to reconstruct the sequence that objects were marked. In general, you need to correlate the values recorded in the 'last_marked' array with the corresponding stack frames in the backtrace, beginning with the innermost frame. Some subroutines of 'mark_object' are invoked recursively, others loop over portions of the data structure and mark them as they go. By looking at the code of those routines and comparing the frames in the backtrace with the values in 'last_marked', you will be able to find connections between the values in 'last_marked'. E.g., when GC finds a cons cell, it recursively marks its car and its cdr. Similar things happen with properties of symbols, elements of vectors, etc. Use these connections to reconstruct the data structure that was being marked, paying special attention to the strings and names of symbols that you encounter: these strings and symbol names can be used to grep the sources to find out what high-level symbols and global variables are involved in the crash. Once you discover the corrupted Lisp object or data structure, grep the sources for its uses and try to figure out what could cause the corruption. If looking at the sources doesn't help, you could try setting a watchpoint on the corrupted data, and see what code modifies it in some invalid way. (Obviously, this technique is only useful for data that is modified only very rarely.) It is also useful to look at the corrupted object or data structure in a fresh Emacs session and compare its contents with a session that you are debugging. ** Debugging the TTY (non-windowed) version The most convenient method of debugging the character-terminal display is to do that on a window system such as X. Begin by starting an xterm window, then type these commands inside that window: $ tty $ echo $TERM Let's say these commands print "/dev/ttyp4" and "xterm", respectively. Now start Emacs (the normal, windowed-display session, i.e. without the '-nw' option), and invoke "M-x gdb RET emacs RET" from there. Now type these commands at GDB's prompt: (gdb) set args -nw -t /dev/ttyp4 (gdb) set environment TERM xterm (gdb) run The debugged Emacs should now start in no-window mode with its display directed to the xterm window you opened above. Similar arrangement is possible on a character terminal by using the 'screen' package. On MS-Windows, you can start Emacs in its own separate console by setting the new-console option before running Emacs under GDB: (gdb) set new-console 1 (gdb) run ** Running Emacs with undefined-behavior sanitization Building Emacs with undefined-behavior sanitization can help find several kinds of low-level problems in C code, including: * Out-of-bounds access of many (but not all) arrays. * Signed integer overflow, e.g., (INT_MAX + 1). * Integer shifts by a negative or wider-than-word value. * Misaligned pointers and pointer overflow. * Loading a bool or enum value that is out of range for its type. * Passing NULL to or returning NULL from a function requiring nonnull. * Passing a size larger than the corresponding array to memcmp etc. * Passing invalid values to some builtin functions, e.g., __builtin_clz (0). * Reaching __builtin_unreachable calls (in Emacs, 'eassume' failure). To use UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer with GCC and similar compilers, append '-fsanitize=undefined' to CFLAGS, either when running 'configure' or running 'make'. When supported, you can also specify 'bound-strict' and 'float-cast-overflow'. For example: ./configure \ CFLAGS='-O0 -g3 -fsanitize=undefined,bounds-strict,float-cast-overflow' You may need to append '-static-libubsan' to CFLAGS if your version of GCC is installed in an unusual location. When using GDB to debug an executable with undefined-behavior sanitization, the GDB command: (gdb) rbreak ^__ubsan_handle_ will let you gain control when an error is detected and before UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer outputs to stderr or terminates the program. ** Running Emacs with address sanitization Building Emacs with address sanitization can help debug memory-use problems, such as freeing the same object twice. To use AddressSanitizer with GCC and similar compilers, append '-fsanitize=address' to CFLAGS, either when running 'configure' or running 'make'. Configure, build and run Emacs with ASAN_OPTIONS='detect_leaks=0' in the environment to suppress diagnostics of minor memory leaks in Emacs. For example: export ASAN_OPTIONS='detect_leaks=0' ./configure CFLAGS='-O0 -g3 -fsanitize=address' make src/emacs You may need to append '-static-libasan' to CFLAGS if your version of GCC is installed in an unusual location. When using GDB to debug an executable with address sanitization, the GDB command: (gdb) rbreak ^__asan_report_ will let you gain control when an error is detected and before AddressSanitizer outputs to stderr or terminates the program. Address sanitization is incompatible with undefined-behavior sanitization, unfortunately. Address sanitization is also incompatible with the --with-dumping=unexec option of 'configure'. ** Running Emacs under Valgrind Valgrind is free software that can be useful when debugging low-level Emacs problems. Unlike GCC sanitizers, Valgrind does not need you to compile Emacs with special debugging flags, so it can be helpful in investigating problems that vanish when Emacs is recompiled with debugging enabled. However, by default Valgrind generates many false alarms with Emacs, and you will need to maintain a suppressions file to suppress these false alarms and use Valgrind effectively. For example, you might invoke Valgrind this way: valgrind --suppressions=valgrind.supp ./emacs where valgrind.supp contains groups of lines like the following, which suppresses some Valgrind false alarms during Emacs garbage collection: { Fgarbage_collect Cond - conservative garbage collection Memcheck:Cond ... fun:Fgarbage_collect } Unfortunately Valgrind suppression files tend to be system-dependent, so you will need to keep one around that matches your system. ** How to recover buffer contents from an Emacs core dump file The file etc/emacs-buffer.gdb defines a set of GDB commands for recovering the contents of Emacs buffers from a core dump file. You might also find those commands useful for displaying the list of buffers in human-readable format from within the debugger. This file is part of GNU Emacs. GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GNU Emacs. If not, see . Local variables: mode: outline paragraph-separate: "[ ]*$" end: