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a933dad1 1Debugging GNU Emacs
437368fe 2Copyright (c) 1985, 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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3
4 Permission is granted to anyone to make or distribute verbatim copies
5 of this document as received, in any medium, provided that the
6 copyright notice and permission notice are preserved,
7 and that the distributor grants the recipient permission
8 for further redistribution as permitted by this notice.
9
10 Permission is granted to distribute modified versions
11 of this document, or of portions of it,
12 under the above conditions, provided also that they
13 carry prominent notices stating who last changed them.
14
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15[People who debug Emacs on Windows using native Windows debuggers
16should read the Windows-specific section near the end of this
17document.]
18
19It is a good idea to run Emacs under GDB (or some other suitable
20debugger) *all the time*. Then, when Emacs crashes, you will be able
21to debug the live process, not just a core dump. (This is especially
22important on systems which don't support core files, and instead print
23just the registers and some stack addresses.)
24
25If Emacs hangs, or seems to be stuck in some infinite loop, typing
26"kill -TSTP PID", where PID is the Emacs process ID, will cause GDB to
27kick in, provided that you run under GDB.
28
29** Getting control to the debugger
a933dad1 30
3102e429 31`Fsignal' is a very useful place to put a breakpoint in.
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32All Lisp errors go through there.
33
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34It is useful, when debugging, to have a guaranteed way to return to
35the debugger at any time. When using X, this is easy: type C-c at the
36window where Emacs is running under GDB, and it will stop Emacs just
37as it would stop any ordinary program. When Emacs is running in a
38terminal, things are not so easy.
39
40The src/.gdbinit file in the Emacs distribution arranges for SIGINT
41(C-g in Emacs) to be passed to Emacs and not give control back to GDB.
42On modern POSIX systems, you can override that with this command:
43
44 handle int stop nopass
45
46After this `handle' command, SIGINT will return control to GDB. If
47you want the C-g to cause a QUIT within Emacs as well, omit the
48`nopass'.
49
50A technique that can work when `handle SIGINT' does not is to store
51the code for some character into the variable stop_character. Thus,
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52
53 set stop_character = 29
54
55makes Control-] (decimal code 29) the stop character.
56Typing Control-] will cause immediate stop. You cannot
57use the set command until the inferior process has been started.
58Put a breakpoint early in `main', or suspend the Emacs,
59to get an opportunity to do the set command.
60
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61** Examining Lisp object values.
62
63When you have a live process to debug, and it has not encountered a
64fatal error, you can use the GDB command `pr'. First print the value
65in the ordinary way, with the `p' command. Then type `pr' with no
66arguments. This calls a subroutine which uses the Lisp printer.
67
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68Note: It is not a good idea to try `pr' if you know that Emacs is in
69deep trouble: its stack smashed (e.g., if it encountered SIGSEGV due
70to stack overflow), or crucial data structures, such as `obarray',
71corrupted, etc. In such cases, the Emacs subroutine called by `pr'
72might make more damage, like overwrite some data that is important for
73debugging the original problem.
74
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75Also, on some systems it is impossible to use `pr' if you stopped
76Emacs while it was inside `select'. This is in fact what happens if
77you stop Emacs while it is waiting. In such a situation, don't try to
78use `pr'. Instead, use `s' to step out of the system call. Then
79Emacs will be between instructions and capable of handling `pr'.
a933dad1 80
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81If you can't use `pr' command, for whatever reason, you can fall back
82on lower-level commands. Use the `xtype' command to print out the
83data type of the last data value. Once you know the data type, use
84the command that corresponds to that type. Here are these commands:
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85
86 xint xptr xwindow xmarker xoverlay xmiscfree xintfwd xboolfwd xobjfwd
87 xbufobjfwd xkbobjfwd xbuflocal xbuffer xsymbol xstring xvector xframe
88 xwinconfig xcompiled xcons xcar xcdr xsubr xprocess xfloat xscrollbar
89
90Each one of them applies to a certain type or class of types.
91(Some of these types are not visible in Lisp, because they exist only
92internally.)
93
94Each x... command prints some information about the value, and
95produces a GDB value (subsequently available in $) through which you
96can get at the rest of the contents.
97
437368fe 98In general, most of the rest of the contents will be additional Lisp
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99objects which you can examine in turn with the x... commands.
100
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101Even with a live process, these x... commands are useful for
102examining the fields in a buffer, window, process, frame or marker.
103Here's an example using concepts explained in the node "Value History"
104of the GDB manual to print the variable frame from this line in
105xmenu.c:
106
107 buf.frame_or_window = frame;
108
109First, use these commands:
110
111 cd src
112 gdb emacs
113 b xmenu.c:1296
114 r -q
115
116Then type C-x 5 2 to create a new frame, and it hits the breakpoint:
117
118 (gdb) p frame
119 $1 = 1077872640
120 (gdb) xtype
121 Lisp_Vectorlike
122 PVEC_FRAME
123 (gdb) xframe
124 $2 = (struct frame *) 0x3f0800
125 (gdb) p *$
126 $3 = {
127 size = 536871989,
128 next = 0x366240,
129 name = 809661752,
130 [...]
131 }
132 (gdb) p $3->name
133 $4 = 809661752
134
135Now we can use `pr' to print the name of the frame:
136
137 (gdb) pr
138 "emacs@steenrod.math.nwu.edu"
139
140The Emacs C code heavily uses macros defined in lisp.h. So suppose
141we want the address of the l-value expression near the bottom of
142`add_command_key' from keyboard.c:
143
144 XVECTOR (this_command_keys)->contents[this_command_key_count++] = key;
145
146XVECTOR is a macro, and therefore GDB does not know about it.
147GDB cannot evaluate "p XVECTOR (this_command_keys)".
148
149However, you can use the xvector command in GDB to get the same
150result. Here is how:
151
152 (gdb) p this_command_keys
153 $1 = 1078005760
154 (gdb) xvector
155 $2 = (struct Lisp_Vector *) 0x411000
156 0
157 (gdb) p $->contents[this_command_key_count]
158 $3 = 1077872640
159 (gdb) p &$
160 $4 = (int *) 0x411008
161
162Here's a related example of macros and the GDB `define' command.
163There are many Lisp vectors such as `recent_keys', which contains the
164last 100 keystrokes. We can print this Lisp vector
165
166p recent_keys
167pr
168
169But this may be inconvenient, since `recent_keys' is much more verbose
170than `C-h l'. We might want to print only the last 10 elements of
171this vector. `recent_keys' is updated in keyboard.c by the command
172
173 XVECTOR (recent_keys)->contents[recent_keys_index] = c;
174
175So we define a GDB command `xvector-elts', so the last 10 keystrokes
176are printed by
177
178 xvector-elts recent_keys recent_keys_index 10
179
180where you can define xvector-elts as follows:
181
182 define xvector-elts
183 set $i = 0
184 p $arg0
185 xvector
186 set $foo = $
187 while $i < $arg2
188 p $foo->contents[$arg1-($i++)]
189 pr
190 end
191 document xvector-elts
192 Prints a range of elements of a Lisp vector.
193 xvector-elts v n i
194 prints `i' elements of the vector `v' ending at the index `n'.
195 end
196
197** Getting Lisp-level backtrace information within GDB
198
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199The most convenient way is to use the `xbacktrace' command. This
200shows the names of the Lisp functions that are currently active.
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201
202If that doesn't work (e.g., because the `backtrace_list' structure is
203corrupted), type "bt" at the GDB prompt, to produce the C-level
204backtrace, and look for stack frames that call Ffuncall. Select them
205one by one in GDB, by typing "up N", where N is the appropriate number
206of frames to go up, and in each frame that calls Ffuncall type this:
207
208 p *args
209 pr
210
211This will print the name of the Lisp function called by that level
212of function calling.
213
214By printing the remaining elements of args, you can see the argument
215values. Here's how to print the first argument:
216
217 p args[1]
218 pr
219
220If you do not have a live process, you can use xtype and the other
221x... commands such as xsymbol to get such information, albeit less
222conveniently. For example:
223
224 p *args
225 xtype
226
227and, assuming that "xtype" says that args[0] is a symbol:
228
229 xsymbol
230
231** Debugging what happens while preloading and dumping Emacs
232
233Type `gdb temacs' and start it with `r -batch -l loadup dump'.
234
235If temacs actually succeeds when running under GDB in this way, do not
236try to run the dumped Emacs, because it was dumped with the GDB
237breakpoints in it.
238
239** Debugging `temacs'
240
241Debugging `temacs' is useful when you want to establish whether a
242problem happens in an undumped Emacs. To run `temacs' under a
243debugger, type "gdb temacs", then start it with `r -batch -l loadup'.
244
245** If you encounter X protocol errors
246
247Try evaluating (x-synchronize t). That puts Emacs into synchronous
248mode, where each Xlib call checks for errors before it returns. This
249mode is much slower, but when you get an error, you will see exactly
250which call really caused the error.
251
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252You can start Emacs in a synchronous mode by invoking it with the -xrm
253option, like this:
254
9031cdf2 255 emacs -xrm "emacs.synchronous: true"
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256
257Setting a breakpoint in the function `x_error_quitter' and looking at
258the backtrace when Emacs stops inside that function will show what
259code causes the X protocol errors.
260
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261Some bugs related to the X protocol disappear when Emacs runs in a
262synchronous mode. To track down those bugs, we suggest the following
263procedure:
264
265 - Run Emacs under a debugger and put a breakpoint inside the
266 primitive function which, when called from Lisp, triggers the X
267 protocol errors. For example, if the errors happen when you
268 delete a frame, put a breakpoint inside `Fdelete_frame'.
269
270 - When the breakpoint breaks, step through the code, looking for
271 calls to X functions (the ones whose names begin with "X" or
272 "Xt" or "Xm").
273
274 - Insert calls to `XSync' before and after each call to the X
275 functions, like this:
276
277 XSync (f->output_data.x->display_info->display, 0);
278
279 where `f' is the pointer to the `struct frame' of the selected
280 frame, normally available via XFRAME (selected_frame). (Most
281 functions which call X already have some variable that holds the
282 pointer to the frame, perhaps called `f' or `sf', so you shouldn't
283 need to compute it.)
284
285 If your debugger can call functions in the program being debugged,
286 you should be able to issue the calls to `XSync' without recompiling
287 Emacs. For example, with GDB, just type:
288
289 call XSync (f->output_data.x->display_info->display, 0)
290
291 before and immediately after the suspect X calls. If your
292 debugger does not support this, you will need to add these pairs
293 of calls in the source and rebuild Emacs.
294
295 Either way, systematically step through the code and issue these
296 calls until you find the first X function called by Emacs after
297 which a call to `XSync' winds up in the function
298 `x_error_quitter'. The first X function call for which this
299 happens is the one that generated the X protocol error.
300
301 - You should now look around this offending X call and try to figure
302 out what is wrong with it.
303
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304** If the symptom of the bug is that Emacs fails to respond
305
306Don't assume Emacs is `hung'--it may instead be in an infinite loop.
307To find out which, make the problem happen under GDB and stop Emacs
308once it is not responding. (If Emacs is using X Windows directly, you
309can stop Emacs by typing C-z at the GDB job.) Then try stepping with
310`step'. If Emacs is hung, the `step' command won't return. If it is
311looping, `step' will return.
312
313If this shows Emacs is hung in a system call, stop it again and
314examine the arguments of the call. If you report the bug, it is very
315important to state exactly where in the source the system call is, and
316what the arguments are.
317
318If Emacs is in an infinite loop, try to determine where the loop
319starts and ends. The easiest way to do this is to use the GDB command
320`finish'. Each time you use it, Emacs resumes execution until it
321exits one stack frame. Keep typing `finish' until it doesn't
322return--that means the infinite loop is in the stack frame which you
323just tried to finish.
324
325Stop Emacs again, and use `finish' repeatedly again until you get back
326to that frame. Then use `next' to step through that frame. By
327stepping, you will see where the loop starts and ends. Also, examine
328the data being used in the loop and try to determine why the loop does
329not exit when it should.
330
331** If certain operations in Emacs are slower than they used to be, here
332is some advice for how to find out why.
333
334Stop Emacs repeatedly during the slow operation, and make a backtrace
335each time. Compare the backtraces looking for a pattern--a specific
336function that shows up more often than you'd expect.
337
338If you don't see a pattern in the C backtraces, get some Lisp
339backtrace information by typing "xbacktrace" or by looking at Ffuncall
340frames (see above), and again look for a pattern.
341
342When using X, you can stop Emacs at any time by typing C-z at GDB.
343When not using X, you can do this with C-g. On non-Unix platforms,
344such as MS-DOS, you might need to press C-BREAK instead.
345
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346** If GDB does not run and your debuggers can't load Emacs.
347
348On some systems, no debugger can load Emacs with a symbol table,
349perhaps because they all have fixed limits on the number of symbols
350and Emacs exceeds the limits. Here is a method that can be used
351in such an extremity. Do
352
353 nm -n temacs > nmout
354 strip temacs
355 adb temacs
356 0xd:i
357 0xe:i
358 14:i
359 17:i
360 :r -l loadup (or whatever)
361
362It is necessary to refer to the file `nmout' to convert
363numeric addresses into symbols and vice versa.
364
365It is useful to be running under a window system.
366Then, if Emacs becomes hopelessly wedged, you can create
367another window to do kill -9 in. kill -ILL is often
368useful too, since that may make Emacs dump core or return
369to adb.
370
371
372** Debugging incorrect screen updating.
373
374To debug Emacs problems that update the screen wrong, it is useful
375to have a record of what input you typed and what Emacs sent to the
376screen. To make these records, do
377
378(open-dribble-file "~/.dribble")
379(open-termscript "~/.termscript")
380
381The dribble file contains all characters read by Emacs from the
382terminal, and the termscript file contains all characters it sent to
383the terminal. The use of the directory `~/' prevents interference
384with any other user.
385
386If you have irreproducible display problems, put those two expressions
387in your ~/.emacs file. When the problem happens, exit the Emacs that
388you were running, kill it, and rename the two files. Then you can start
389another Emacs without clobbering those files, and use it to examine them.
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390
391An easy way to see if too much text is being redrawn on a terminal is to
392evaluate `(setq inverse-video t)' before you try the operation you think
393will cause too much redrawing. This doesn't refresh the screen, so only
394newly drawn text is in inverse video.
437368fe 395
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396The Emacs display code includes special debugging code, but it is
397normally disabled. You can enable it by building Emacs with the
398pre-processing symbol GLYPH_DEBUG defined. Here's one easy way,
399suitable for Unix and GNU systems, to build such a debugging version:
400
401 MYCPPFLAGS='-DGLYPH_DEBUG=1' make
402
403Building Emacs like that activates many assertions which scrutinize
404display code operation more than Emacs does normally. (To see the
405code which tests these assertions, look for calls to the `xassert'
406macros.) Any assertion that is reported to fail should be
407investigated.
408
409Building with GLYPH_DEBUG defined also defines several helper
410functions which can help debugging display code. One such function is
411`dump_glyph_matrix'. If you run Emacs under GDB, you can print the
412contents of any glyph matrix by just calling that function with the
413matrix as its argument. For example, the following command will print
414the contents of the current matrix of the window whose pointer is in
415`w':
416
417 (gdb) p dump_glyph_matrix (w->current_matrix, 2)
418
419(The second argument 2 tells dump_glyph_matrix to print the glyphs in
420a long form.) You can dump the selected window's current glyph matrix
421interactively with "M-x dump-glyph-matrix RET"; see the documentation
422of this function for more details.
423
424Several more functions for debugging display code are available in
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425Emacs compiled with GLYPH_DEBUG defined; type "C-h f dump- TAB" and
426"C-h f trace- TAB" to see the full list.
3f715e77 427
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428
429** Debugging LessTif
430
431If you encounter bugs whereby Emacs built with LessTif grabs all mouse
432and keyboard events, or LessTif menus behave weirdly, it might be
433helpful to set the `DEBUGSOURCES' and `DEBUG_FILE' environment
434variables, so that one can see what LessTif was doing at this point.
435For instance
436
6806e867 437 export DEBUGSOURCES="RowColumn.c:MenuShell.c:MenuUtil.c"
437368fe 438 export DEBUG_FILE=/usr/tmp/LESSTIF_TRACE
2aa25884 439 emacs &
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440
441causes LessTif to print traces from the three named source files to a
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442file in `/usr/tmp' (that file can get pretty large). The above should
443be typed at the shell prompt before invoking Emacs, as shown by the
444last line above.
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445
446Running GDB from another terminal could also help with such problems.
447You can arrange for GDB to run on one machine, with the Emacs display
448appearing on another. Then, when the bug happens, you can go back to
449the machine where you started GDB and use the debugger from there.
450
451
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452** Debugging problems which happen in GC
453
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454The array `last_marked' (defined on alloc.c) can be used to display up
455to 500 last objects marked by the garbage collection process.
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456Whenever the garbage collector marks a Lisp object, it records the
457pointer to that object in the `last_marked' array. The variable
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458`last_marked_index' holds the index into the `last_marked' array one
459place beyond where the pointer to the very last marked object is
460stored.
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461
462The single most important goal in debugging GC problems is to find the
463Lisp data structure that got corrupted. This is not easy since GC
464changes the tag bits and relocates strings which make it hard to look
465at Lisp objects with commands such as `pr'. It is sometimes necessary
466to convert Lisp_Object variables into pointers to C struct's manually.
467Use the `last_marked' array and the source to reconstruct the sequence
468that objects were marked.
469
470Once you discover the corrupted Lisp object or data structure, it is
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471useful to look at it in a fresh Emacs session and compare its contents
472with a session that you are debugging.
437368fe 473
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474** Debugging problems with non-ASCII characters
475
476If you experience problems which seem to be related to non-ASCII
477characters, such as \201 characters appearing in the buffer or in your
478files, set the variable byte-debug-flag to t. This causes Emacs to do
479some extra checks, such as look for broken relations between byte and
480character positions in buffers and strings; the resulting diagnostics
481might pinpoint the cause of the problem.
482
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483** Debugging the TTY (non-windowed) version
484
485The most convenient method of debugging the character-terminal display
486is to do that on a window system such as X. Begin by starting an
487xterm window, then type these commands inside that window:
488
489 $ tty
490 $ echo $TERM
491
492Let's say these commands print "/dev/ttyp4" and "xterm", respectively.
493
494Now start Emacs (the normal, windowed-display session, i.e. without
495the `-nw' option), and invoke "M-x gdb RET emacs RET" from there. Now
496type these commands at GDB's prompt:
497
498 (gdb) set args -nw -t /dev/ttyp4
499 (gdb) set environment TERM xterm
500 (gdb) run
501
502The debugged Emacs should now start in no-window mode with its display
503directed to the xterm window you opened above.
504
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505Similar arrangement is possible on a character terminal by using the
506`screen' package.
507
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508** Running Emacs built with malloc debugging packages
509
510If Emacs exhibits bugs that seem to be related to use of memory
511allocated off the heap, it might be useful to link Emacs with a
512special debugging library, such as Electric Fence (a.k.a. efence) or
513GNU Checker, which helps find such problems.
514
515Emacs compiled with such packages might not run without some hacking,
516because Emacs replaces the system's memory allocation functions with
517its own versions, and because the dumping process might be
518incompatible with the way these packages use to track allocated
519memory. Here are some of the changes you might find necessary
520(SYSTEM-NAME and MACHINE-NAME are the names of your OS- and
521CPU-specific headers in the subdirectories of `src'):
522
523 - In src/s/SYSTEM-NAME.h add "#define SYSTEM_MALLOC".
524
525 - In src/m/MACHINE-NAME.h add "#define CANNOT_DUMP" and
526 "#define CANNOT_UNEXEC".
527
528 - Configure with a different --prefix= option. If you use GCC,
529 version 2.7.2 is preferred, as some malloc debugging packages
530 work a lot better with it than with 2.95 or later versions.
531
532 - Type "make" then "make -k install".
533
534 - If required, invoke the package-specific command to prepare
535 src/temacs for execution.
536
537 - cd ..; src/temacs
538
539(Note that this runs `temacs' instead of the usual `emacs' executable.
540This avoids problems with dumping Emacs mentioned above.)
541
542Some malloc debugging libraries might print lots of false alarms for
543bitfields used by Emacs in some data structures. If you want to get
544rid of the false alarms, you will have to hack the definitions of
545these data structures on the respective headers to remove the `:N'
546bitfield definitions (which will cause each such field to use a full
547int).
548
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549** Some suggestions for debugging on MS Windows:
550
551 (written by Marc Fleischeuers, Geoff Voelker and Andrew Innes)
552
3102e429 553To debug Emacs with Microsoft Visual C++, you either start emacs from
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554the debugger or attach the debugger to a running emacs process.
555
556To start emacs from the debugger, you can use the file bin/debug.bat.
557The Microsoft Developer studio will start and under Project, Settings,
3102e429 558Debug, General you can set the command-line arguments and Emacs's
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559startup directory. Set breakpoints (Edit, Breakpoints) at Fsignal and
560other functions that you want to examine. Run the program (Build,
561Start debug). Emacs will start and the debugger will take control as
562soon as a breakpoint is hit.
563
3102e429 564You can also attach the debugger to an already running Emacs process.
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565To do this, start up the Microsoft Developer studio and select Build,
566Start debug, Attach to process. Choose the Emacs process from the
567list. Send a break to the running process (Debug, Break) and you will
568find that execution is halted somewhere in user32.dll. Open the stack
569trace window and go up the stack to w32_msg_pump. Now you can set
570breakpoints in Emacs (Edit, Breakpoints). Continue the running Emacs
571process (Debug, Step out) and control will return to Emacs, until a
572breakpoint is hit.
573
3102e429 574To examine the contents of a Lisp variable, you can use the function
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575'debug_print'. Right-click on a variable, select QuickWatch (it has
576an eyeglass symbol on its button in the toolbar), and in the text
577field at the top of the window, place 'debug_print(' and ')' around
578the expression. Press 'Recalculate' and the output is sent to stderr,
579and to the debugger via the OutputDebugString routine. The output
580sent to stderr should be displayed in the console window that was
581opened when the emacs.exe executable was started. The output sent to
582the debugger should be displayed in the 'Debug' pane in the Output
583window. If Emacs was started from the debugger, a console window was
584opened at Emacs' startup; this console window also shows the output of
585'debug_print'.
586
587For example, start and run Emacs in the debugger until it is waiting
588for user input. Then click on the `Break' button in the debugger to
589halt execution. Emacs should halt in `ZwUserGetMessage' waiting for
590an input event. Use the `Call Stack' window to select the procedure
591`w32_msp_pump' up the call stack (see below for why you have to do
592this). Open the QuickWatch window and enter
593"debug_print(Vexec_path)". Evaluating this expression will then print
3102e429 594out the contents of the Lisp variable `exec-path'.
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595
596If QuickWatch reports that the symbol is unknown, then check the call
597stack in the `Call Stack' window. If the selected frame in the call
598stack is not an Emacs procedure, then the debugger won't recognize
599Emacs symbols. Instead, select a frame that is inside an Emacs
600procedure and try using `debug_print' again.
601
602If QuickWatch invokes debug_print but nothing happens, then check the
603thread that is selected in the debugger. If the selected thread is
604not the last thread to run (the "current" thread), then it cannot be
605used to execute debug_print. Use the Debug menu to select the current
606thread and try using debug_print again. Note that the debugger halts
607execution (e.g., due to a breakpoint) in the context of the current
608thread, so this should only be a problem if you've explicitly switched
609threads.
610
3102e429 611It is also possible to keep appropriately masked and typecast Lisp
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612symbols in the Watch window, this is more convenient when steeping
613though the code. For instance, on entering apply_lambda, you can
614watch (struct Lisp_Symbol *) (0xfffffff & args[0]).
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615
616Optimizations often confuse the MS debugger. For example, the
617debugger will sometimes report wrong line numbers, e.g., when it
618prints the backtrace for a crash. It is usually best to look at the
619disassembly to determine exactly what code is being run--the
620disassembly will probably show several source lines followed by a
621block of assembler for those lines. The actual point where Emacs
622crashes will be one of those source lines, but not neccesarily the one
623that the debugger reports.
624
625Another problematic area with the MS debugger is with variables that
626are stored in registers: it will sometimes display wrong values for
627those variables. Usually you will not be able to see any value for a
628register variable, but if it is only being stored in a register
629temporarily, you will see an old value for it. Again, you need to
630look at the disassembly to determine which registers are being used,
631and look at those registers directly, to see the actual current values
632of these variables.