* disappearing lines @ 2023-01-16 13:19 Peter Münster 2023-01-16 14:42 ` Panagiotis Koutsourakis 2023-01-16 16:57 ` Arash Esbati 0 siblings, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Peter Münster @ 2023-01-16 13:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Hi, My todo.org file is always loaded in an emacs buffer. Sometimes (at least 2 times during the last 3 years), I observe, that all lines beginning with 2, 3, 4 or 5 have disappeared. I guess, that I've made accidentally some keystroke, that deletes such line. What could this be please? TIA for any hints, -- Peter ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-16 13:19 disappearing lines Peter Münster @ 2023-01-16 14:42 ` Panagiotis Koutsourakis 2023-01-16 16:57 ` Arash Esbati 1 sibling, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Panagiotis Koutsourakis @ 2023-01-16 14:42 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs Hi Peter, On Mon, Jan 16 2023, Peter Münster wrote: > Hi, > > My todo.org file is always loaded in an emacs buffer. Sometimes (at > least 2 times during the last 3 years), I observe, that all lines > beginning with 2, 3, 4 or 5 have disappeared. I guess, that I've made > accidentally some keystroke, that deletes such line. What could this be please? > > TIA for any hints, I don't know specifically what key/command might have done this, but you can use the function `view-lossage' (bound to "C-h l" by default) to see the last few (300 by default) keystrokes emacs processed. -- Best regards, Panos. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-16 13:19 disappearing lines Peter Münster 2023-01-16 14:42 ` Panagiotis Koutsourakis @ 2023-01-16 16:57 ` Arash Esbati 2023-01-16 19:31 ` Peter Münster 1 sibling, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Arash Esbati @ 2023-01-16 16:57 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Münster; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs Peter Münster <pm@a16n.net> writes: > My todo.org file is always loaded in an emacs buffer. Sometimes (at > least 2 times during the last 3 years), I observe, that all lines > beginning with 2, 3, 4 or 5 have disappeared. I guess, that I've made > accidentally some keystroke, that deletes such line. What could this be please? You can check your last keystrokes with `C-h l': ,----[ C-h k C-h l ] | C-h l runs the command view-lossage (found in global-map), which is an | interactive native-compiled Lisp function in ‘help.el’. | | It is bound to C-h l, <f1> l and <help> l. | It can also be invoked from the menu: Help → Describe → Show Recent | Inputs | | (view-lossage) | | Display last few input keystrokes and the commands run. | For convenience this uses the same format as | ‘edit-last-kbd-macro’. | See ‘lossage-size’ to update the number of recorded keystrokes. | | To record all your input, use ‘open-dribble-file’. | | Probably introduced at or before Emacs version 23.1. | `---- So next time this happens, hit `C-h l' and see what you've hit. Best, Arash ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-16 16:57 ` Arash Esbati @ 2023-01-16 19:31 ` Peter Münster 2023-01-16 19:46 ` Jean Louis 2023-01-16 20:24 ` Marcin Borkowski 0 siblings, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Peter Münster @ 2023-01-16 19:31 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Mon, Jan 16 2023, Arash Esbati wrote: > You can check your last keystrokes with `C-h l': This is not so easy, it works only in the same emacs session. Last time, I've discovered the disappearance of the lines 9 days later. I make daily backups, so I've used the diff between backup of 9 days ago and 8 days ago, to restore my file. It's annoying, because it's a very big file, with all things that I need to remember. About 20k lines. And about 300 lines have vanished... I would really like to understand, how this could happen... No, I don't have a cat, walking on the keyboard... ;) > | To record all your input, use ‘open-dribble-file’. I guess, that it would be very hard to find the bad keypress several days later. There are no timestamps... Best, -- Peter ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-16 19:31 ` Peter Münster @ 2023-01-16 19:46 ` Jean Louis 2023-01-17 6:50 ` Peter Münster 2023-01-16 20:24 ` Marcin Borkowski 1 sibling, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Jean Louis @ 2023-01-16 19:46 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Münster; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs * Peter Münster <pm@a16n.net> [2023-01-16 22:33]: > On Mon, Jan 16 2023, Arash Esbati wrote: > > > You can check your last keystrokes with `C-h l': > > This is not so easy, it works only in the same emacs session. > Last time, I've discovered the disappearance of the lines 9 days later. > I make daily backups, so I've used the diff between backup of 9 days ago > and 8 days ago, to restore my file. It's annoying, because it's a very > big file, with all things that I need to remember. About 20k lines. > And about 300 lines have vanished... Did you find in backups? Did you watch in todo file in ~/.emacs.d/todo/ or where? Did you find it directly in file without using todo mode? When you say lines are missing do you mean only in todo-mode or maybe in the file when you open it without todo-mode? There may be backup file pending too. What happens when you use hide/show with v and V? -- Jean Take action in Free Software Foundation campaigns: https://www.fsf.org/campaigns In support of Richard M. Stallman https://stallmansupport.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-16 19:46 ` Jean Louis @ 2023-01-17 6:50 ` Peter Münster 2023-01-17 15:00 ` Jean Louis 0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Peter Münster @ 2023-01-17 6:50 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Mon, Jan 16 2023, Jean Louis wrote: > Did you find in backups? What? Yes, I did find the vanished lines. > Did you watch in todo file in ~/.emacs.d/todo/ or where? My todo.org is elsewhere. > Did you find it directly in file without using todo mode? I don't use todo-mode, but org-mode. > When you say lines are missing do you mean only in todo-mode or maybe > in the file when you open it without todo-mode? In the file todo.org (but the name doesn't matter). > What happens when you use hide/show with v and V? ??? -- Peter ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-17 6:50 ` Peter Münster @ 2023-01-17 15:00 ` Jean Louis 0 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Jean Louis @ 2023-01-17 15:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Münster; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs * Peter Münster <pm@a16n.net> [2023-01-17 09:52]: > On Mon, Jan 16 2023, Jean Louis wrote: > > > Did you find in backups? > > What? > > Yes, I did find the vanished lines. > > > > Did you watch in todo file in ~/.emacs.d/todo/ or where? > > My todo.org is elsewhere. Entschuldigung Peter, but I was thinking you use todo-mode and not Org mode. There are many ways how I have lost lines of code. Not that I can remember how I came to it. But it happens. I have implemented automatic version control system by using database, so I do not think about it. But when I need something missing, I recall it back, or can do diff over previous snapshots and find what is missing. It can happen to me due to invoking unknown commands or human mistakes. -- Jean Take action in Free Software Foundation campaigns: https://www.fsf.org/campaigns In support of Richard M. Stallman https://stallmansupport.org/ ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-16 19:31 ` Peter Münster 2023-01-16 19:46 ` Jean Louis @ 2023-01-16 20:24 ` Marcin Borkowski 2023-01-16 21:14 ` H. Dieter Wilhelm 2023-01-17 8:20 ` Panagiotis Koutsourakis 1 sibling, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Marcin Borkowski @ 2023-01-16 20:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Peter Münster; +Cc: help-gnu-emacs On 2023-01-16, at 20:31, Peter Münster <pm@a16n.net> wrote: > On Mon, Jan 16 2023, Arash Esbati wrote: > >> You can check your last keystrokes with `C-h l': > > This is not so easy, it works only in the same emacs session. > Last time, I've discovered the disappearance of the lines 9 days later. > I make daily backups, so I've used the diff between backup of 9 days ago > and 8 days ago, to restore my file. It's annoying, because it's a very > big file, with all things that I need to remember. About 20k lines. > And about 300 lines have vanished... > I would really like to understand, how this could happen... I know that won't help you /right now/, but I had similar problems in the past, and I pretty much got rid of them by commiting all my Org mode files to Git every day (well, almost every day - my average over the last 640 days is 0.90 times per day, although I'm getting closer to 1 recently). It would be great if Org mode had some way to warn me when I delete something that is invisible (or undo in invisible parts of the buffer), but I know of no such feature, so I do what I do. It takes literally a minute or two every day, and I find it a very useful habit. Hth, -- Marcin Borkowski http://mbork.pl ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-16 20:24 ` Marcin Borkowski @ 2023-01-16 21:14 ` H. Dieter Wilhelm 2023-01-17 1:11 ` Samuel Wales 2023-01-17 8:20 ` Panagiotis Koutsourakis 1 sibling, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: H. Dieter Wilhelm @ 2023-01-16 21:14 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Marcin Borkowski; +Cc: Peter Münster, help-gnu-emacs Marcin Borkowski <mbork@mbork.pl> writes: > I know that won't help you /right now/, but I had similar problems in > the past, and I pretty much got rid of them by commiting all my Org mode > files to Git every day (well, almost every day - my average over the > last 640 days is 0.90 times per day, although I'm getting closer to 1 > recently). It would be great if Org mode had some way to warn me when > I delete something that is invisible (or undo in invisible parts of the > buffer), but I know of no such feature, so I do what I do. It takes > literally a minute or two every day, and I find it a very useful habit. From time to time I lost, more or less, large portions of my org file - from various self inflicted reasons. For me Emacs' auto numbered backups (for 200 days) are good enough, so far. Dieter -- Best wishes H. Dieter Wilhelm Zwingenberg, Germany ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-16 21:14 ` H. Dieter Wilhelm @ 2023-01-17 1:11 ` Samuel Wales 2023-01-17 6:56 ` Peter Münster 2023-01-17 19:47 ` H. Dieter Wilhelm 0 siblings, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Samuel Wales @ 2023-01-17 1:11 UTC (permalink / raw) To: H. Dieter Wilhelm; +Cc: Marcin Borkowski, Peter Münster, help-gnu-emacs you probably already know this but backup-walker is a useful package for a quick overview and i think there is a more generic one that allows different backends [one could want git or rsnapshot but idk which are supported]. in addition to git i use a shell script to compare old and new versions. it is for if git is not working, i suspect git or magit corruption [which i definitely do], and other purposes. as a sort of double check. i am currently wondering if it is possible to store a copy of files or shas and times someplace and use them to detect silent [e.g. git-fsck does not notice] corruption in files or in magit or git or even fs. but i do not have a clear idea on this. i know there's a program called bitrot that does one thing for this. i wonder if you could automate narrowing to specific issues so that you do not have to wade through large diffs? is it possible you have hardware issues such as a flaky cable inside your kb? i'd think other hw issues would be less likely given the specificity of the format. [still no guarantee i will notice any replies even if to or cc me :[ but i tryt o check occsionally. gmail filtering !@#$.] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-17 1:11 ` Samuel Wales @ 2023-01-17 6:56 ` Peter Münster 2023-01-17 19:47 ` H. Dieter Wilhelm 1 sibling, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Peter Münster @ 2023-01-17 6:56 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Mon, Jan 16 2023, Samuel Wales wrote: > is it possible you have hardware issues such as a flaky cable inside > your kb? I really don't know. But IMO it's more likely some emacs-command, that I invoke accidentally, than a kb-issue. -- Peter ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-17 1:11 ` Samuel Wales 2023-01-17 6:56 ` Peter Münster @ 2023-01-17 19:47 ` H. Dieter Wilhelm 1 sibling, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: H. Dieter Wilhelm @ 2023-01-17 19:47 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Samuel Wales; +Cc: Marcin Borkowski, Peter Münster, help-gnu-emacs Samuel Wales <samologist@gmail.com> writes: > you probably already know this but backup-walker is a useful package > for a quick overview and i think there is a more generic one that Thank you for the hint, I didn't know about backup-walker. Installed it from Melpa but unfortunately it isn't working for my backups from Emacs-28.2 on Windows. (This package was last updated in 2013!) But the idea looks promising, I think I'll have a deeper look when I'm in the need of my backups. Dieter -- Best wishes H. Dieter Wilhelm Zwingenberg, Germany ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-16 20:24 ` Marcin Borkowski 2023-01-16 21:14 ` H. Dieter Wilhelm @ 2023-01-17 8:20 ` Panagiotis Koutsourakis 2023-01-17 11:28 ` Peter Münster 1 sibling, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread From: Panagiotis Koutsourakis @ 2023-01-17 8:20 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Mon, Jan 16 2023, Marcin Borkowski wrote: > On 2023-01-16, at 20:31, Peter Münster <pm@a16n.net> wrote: > >> On Mon, Jan 16 2023, Arash Esbati wrote: >> >>> You can check your last keystrokes with `C-h l': >> >> This is not so easy, it works only in the same emacs session. >> Last time, I've discovered the disappearance of the lines 9 days later. >> I make daily backups, so I've used the diff between backup of 9 days ago >> and 8 days ago, to restore my file. It's annoying, because it's a very >> big file, with all things that I need to remember. About 20k lines. >> And about 300 lines have vanished... >> I would really like to understand, how this could happen... > > I know that won't help you /right now/, but I had similar problems in > the past, and I pretty much got rid of them by commiting all my Org mode > files to Git every day (well, almost every day - my average over the > last 640 days is 0.90 times per day, although I'm getting closer to 1 I have something like this in my emacs configuration: (run-at-time t 600 (lambda () (org-save-all-org-buffers) (call-process "org-git-sync.sh" nil "*Org git sync*" nil))) The script org-git-sync.sh performs a git commit. Essentially this autosaves my org directory every 10 minutes. One nice property is that if nothing has changed in the last 10 minutes git commit will fail, so I only get meaningful history in my git repository. > recently). It would be great if Org mode had some way to warn me when > I delete something that is invisible (or undo in invisible parts of the > buffer), but I know of no such feature, so I do what I do. It takes > literally a minute or two every day, and I find it a very useful habit. There is the option `org-fold-catch-invisible-edits' (`org-catch-invisible-edits' in older versions of org mode) that will warn you or throw an error or both if you make changes in an invisible part of the org buffer. I am not sure if it works for undo, though. > > Hth, -- Best regards, Panos. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
* Re: disappearing lines 2023-01-17 8:20 ` Panagiotis Koutsourakis @ 2023-01-17 11:28 ` Peter Münster 0 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread From: Peter Münster @ 2023-01-17 11:28 UTC (permalink / raw) To: help-gnu-emacs On Tue, Jan 17 2023, Panagiotis Koutsourakis wrote: > (run-at-time t 600 > (lambda () > (org-save-all-org-buffers) > (call-process "org-git-sync.sh" nil "*Org git sync*" nil))) Thanks, this seems interesting. I'll try to set up a script, that warns me, whenever too many lines have changed. And then I could use view-lossage. > if you make changes in an invisible part of the org buffer. Everything is visible in my buffer, so that doesn't apply in my case. -- Peter ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2023-01-17 19:47 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 14+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2023-01-16 13:19 disappearing lines Peter Münster 2023-01-16 14:42 ` Panagiotis Koutsourakis 2023-01-16 16:57 ` Arash Esbati 2023-01-16 19:31 ` Peter Münster 2023-01-16 19:46 ` Jean Louis 2023-01-17 6:50 ` Peter Münster 2023-01-17 15:00 ` Jean Louis 2023-01-16 20:24 ` Marcin Borkowski 2023-01-16 21:14 ` H. Dieter Wilhelm 2023-01-17 1:11 ` Samuel Wales 2023-01-17 6:56 ` Peter Münster 2023-01-17 19:47 ` H. Dieter Wilhelm 2023-01-17 8:20 ` Panagiotis Koutsourakis 2023-01-17 11:28 ` Peter Münster
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