Merge changes from emacs-23 branch.
[bpt/emacs.git] / etc / PROBLEMS
1 Known Problems with GNU Emacs
2
3 Copyright (C) 1987, 1988, 1989, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
4 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010
5 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6 See the end of the file for license conditions.
7
8
9 This file describes various problems that have been encountered
10 in compiling, installing and running GNU Emacs. Try doing C-c C-t
11 and browsing through the outline headers. (See C-h m for help on
12 Outline mode.) Information about systems that are no longer supported,
13 and old Emacs releases, has been removed. Consult older versions of
14 this file if you are interested in that information.
15
16 * Mule-UCS doesn't work in Emacs 23.
17
18 It's completely redundant now, as far as we know.
19
20 * Emacs startup failures
21
22 ** Emacs fails to start, complaining about missing fonts.
23
24 A typical error message might be something like
25
26 No fonts match `-*-fixed-medium-r-*--6-*-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1'
27
28 This happens because some X resource specifies a bad font family for
29 Emacs to use. The possible places where this specification might be
30 are:
31
32 - in your ~/.Xdefaults file
33
34 - client-side X resource file, such as ~/Emacs or
35 /usr/X11R6/lib/app-defaults/Emacs or
36 /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/app-defaults/Emacs
37
38 One of these files might have bad or malformed specification of a
39 fontset that Emacs should use. To fix the problem, you need to find
40 the problematic line(s) and correct them.
41
42 ** Emacs aborts while starting up, only when run without X.
43
44 This problem often results from compiling Emacs with GCC when GCC was
45 installed incorrectly. The usual error in installing GCC is to
46 specify --includedir=/usr/include. Installation of GCC makes
47 corrected copies of the system header files. GCC is supposed to use
48 the corrected copies in preference to the original system headers.
49 Specifying --includedir=/usr/include causes the original system header
50 files to be used. On some systems, the definition of ioctl in the
51 original system header files is invalid for ANSI C and causes Emacs
52 not to work.
53
54 The fix is to reinstall GCC, and this time do not specify --includedir
55 when you configure it. Then recompile Emacs. Specifying --includedir
56 is appropriate only in very special cases and it should *never* be the
57 same directory where system header files are kept.
58
59 ** Emacs does not start, complaining that it cannot open termcap database file.
60
61 If your system uses Terminfo rather than termcap (most modern
62 systems do), this could happen if the proper version of
63 ncurses is not visible to the Emacs configure script (i.e. it
64 cannot be found along the usual path the linker looks for
65 libraries). It can happen because your version of ncurses is
66 obsolete, or is available only in form of binaries.
67
68 The solution is to install an up-to-date version of ncurses in
69 the developer's form (header files, static libraries and
70 symbolic links); in some GNU/Linux distributions (e.g. Debian)
71 it constitutes a separate package.
72
73 ** Emacs 20 and later fails to load Lisp files at startup.
74
75 The typical error message might be like this:
76
77 "Cannot open load file: fontset"
78
79 This could happen if you compress the file lisp/subdirs.el. That file
80 tells Emacs what are the directories where it should look for Lisp
81 files. Emacs cannot work with subdirs.el compressed, since the
82 Auto-compress mode it needs for this will not be loaded until later,
83 when your .emacs file is processed. (The package `fontset.el' is
84 required to set up fonts used to display text on window systems, and
85 it's loaded very early in the startup procedure.)
86
87 Similarly, any other .el file for which there's no corresponding .elc
88 file could fail to load if it is compressed.
89
90 The solution is to uncompress all .el files that don't have a .elc file.
91
92 Another possible reason for such failures is stale *.elc files
93 lurking somewhere on your load-path -- see the next section.
94
95 ** Emacs prints an error at startup after upgrading from an earlier version.
96
97 An example of such an error is:
98
99 x-complement-fontset-spec: "Wrong type argument: stringp, nil"
100
101 This can be another symptom of stale *.elc files in your load-path.
102 The following command will print any duplicate Lisp files that are
103 present in load-path:
104
105 emacs -q -batch -f list-load-path-shadows
106
107 If this command prints any file names, some of these files are stale,
108 and should be deleted or their directories removed from your
109 load-path.
110
111 ** With X11R6.4, public-patch-3, Emacs crashes at startup.
112
113 Reportedly this patch in X fixes the problem.
114
115 --- xc/lib/X11/imInt.c~ Wed Jun 30 13:31:56 1999
116 +++ xc/lib/X11/imInt.c Thu Jul 1 15:10:27 1999
117 @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
118 -/* $TOG: imInt.c /main/5 1998/05/30 21:11:16 kaleb $ */
119 +/* $TOG: imInt.c /main/5 1998/05/30 21:11:16 kaleb $ */
120 /******************************************************************
121
122 Copyright 1992, 1993, 1994 by FUJITSU LIMITED
123 @@ -166,8 +166,8 @@
124 _XimMakeImName(lcd)
125 XLCd lcd;
126 {
127 - char* begin;
128 - char* end;
129 + char* begin = NULL;
130 + char* end = NULL;
131 char* ret;
132 int i = 0;
133 char* ximmodifier = XIMMODIFIER;
134 @@ -182,7 +182,11 @@
135 }
136 ret = Xmalloc(end - begin + 2);
137 if (ret != NULL) {
138 - (void)strncpy(ret, begin, end - begin + 1);
139 + if (begin != NULL) {
140 + (void)strncpy(ret, begin, end - begin + 1);
141 + } else {
142 + ret[0] = '\0';
143 + }
144 ret[end - begin + 1] = '\0';
145 }
146 return ret;
147
148 ** Emacs crashes on startup after a glibc upgrade.
149
150 This is caused by a binary incompatible change to the malloc
151 implementation in glibc 2.5.90-22. As a result, Emacs binaries built
152 using prior versions of glibc crash when run under 2.5.90-22.
153
154 This problem was first seen in pre-release versions of Fedora 7, and
155 may be fixed in the final Fedora 7 release. To stop the crash from
156 happening, first try upgrading to the newest version of glibc; if this
157 does not work, rebuild Emacs with the same version of glibc that you
158 will run it under. For details, see
159
160 https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=239344
161
162 * Crash bugs
163
164 ** Emacs crashes when running in a terminal, if compiled with GCC 4.5.0
165 This version of GCC is buggy: see
166
167 http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=6031
168 http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=43904
169
170 You can work around this error in gcc-4.5 by omitting sibling call
171 optimization. To do this, configure Emacs with
172
173 CFLAGS="-g -O2 -fno-optimize-sibling-calls" ./configure
174
175 ** Emacs crashes in x-popup-dialog.
176
177 This can happen if the dialog widget cannot find the font it wants to
178 use. You can work around the problem by specifying another font with
179 an X resource--for example, `Emacs.dialog*.font: 9x15' (or any font that
180 happens to exist on your X server).
181
182 ** Emacs crashes when you use Bibtex mode.
183
184 This happens if your system puts a small limit on stack size. You can
185 prevent the problem by using a suitable shell command (often `ulimit')
186 to raise the stack size limit before you run Emacs.
187
188 Patches to raise the stack size limit automatically in `main'
189 (src/emacs.c) on various systems would be greatly appreciated.
190
191 ** Error message `Symbol's value as variable is void: x', followed by
192 a segmentation fault and core dump.
193
194 This has been tracked to a bug in tar! People report that tar erroneously
195 added a line like this at the beginning of files of Lisp code:
196
197 x FILENAME, N bytes, B tape blocks
198
199 If your tar has this problem, install GNU tar--if you can manage to
200 untar it :-).
201
202 ** Crashes when displaying GIF images in Emacs built with version
203 libungif-4.1.0 are resolved by using version libungif-4.1.0b1.
204 Configure checks for the correct version, but this problem could occur
205 if a binary built against a shared libungif is run on a system with an
206 older version.
207
208 ** Emacs aborts inside the function `tparam1'.
209
210 This can happen if Emacs was built without terminfo support, but the
211 terminal's capabilities use format that is only supported by terminfo.
212 If your system has ncurses installed, this might happen if your
213 version of ncurses is broken; upgrading to a newer version of ncurses
214 and reconfiguring and rebuilding Emacs should solve this.
215
216 All modern systems support terminfo, so even if ncurses is not the
217 problem, you should look for a way to configure Emacs so that it uses
218 terminfo when built.
219
220 ** Emacs crashes when using some version of the Exceed X server.
221
222 Upgrading to a newer version of Exceed has been reported to prevent
223 these crashes. You should consider switching to a free X server, such
224 as Xming or Cygwin/X.
225
226 ** Emacs crashes with SIGSEGV in XtInitializeWidgetClass.
227
228 It crashes on X, but runs fine when called with option "-nw".
229
230 This has been observed when Emacs is linked with GNU ld but without passing
231 the -z nocombreloc flag. Emacs normally knows to pass the -z nocombreloc
232 flag when needed, so if you come across a situation where the flag is
233 necessary but missing, please report it via M-x report-emacs-bug.
234
235 On platforms such as Solaris, you can also work around this problem by
236 configuring your compiler to use the native linker instead of GNU ld.
237
238 ** Emacs compiled with Gtk+ crashes when closing a display (x-close-connection).
239
240 This happens because of bugs in Gtk+. Gtk+ 2.10 seems to be OK. See bug
241 http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=85715.
242
243 ** Emacs compiled with Gtk+ may loop forever if a display crashes.
244
245 This is related to the bug above. A scenario for this is when emacs is run
246 as a server, and an X frame is created. If the X server for the frame
247 crashes or exits unexpectedly and an attempt is made to create a new
248 frame on another X display, then a Gtk+ error happens in the emacs
249 server that results in an endless loop. This is not fixed in any known
250 Gtk+ version (2.14.4 being current).
251
252 * General runtime problems
253
254 ** Lisp problems
255
256 *** Changes made to .el files do not take effect.
257
258 You may have forgotten to recompile them into .elc files.
259 Then the old .elc files will be loaded, and your changes
260 will not be seen. To fix this, do M-x byte-recompile-directory
261 and specify the directory that contains the Lisp files.
262
263 Emacs should print a warning when loading a .elc file which is older
264 than the corresponding .el file.
265
266 *** Watch out for .emacs files and EMACSLOADPATH environment vars.
267
268 These control the actions of Emacs.
269 ~/.emacs is your Emacs init file.
270 EMACSLOADPATH overrides which directories the function "load" will search.
271
272 If you observe strange problems, check for these and get rid
273 of them, then try again.
274
275 *** Using epop3.el package causes Emacs to signal an error.
276
277 The error message might be something like this:
278
279 "Lisp nesting exceeds max-lisp-eval-depth"
280
281 This happens because epop3 redefines the function gethash, which is a
282 built-in primitive beginning with Emacs 21.1. We don't have a patch
283 for epop3 that fixes this, but perhaps a newer version of epop3
284 corrects that.
285
286 *** Buffers from `with-output-to-temp-buffer' get set up in Help mode.
287
288 Changes in Emacs 20.4 to the hooks used by that function cause
289 problems for some packages, specifically BBDB. See the function's
290 documentation for the hooks involved. BBDB 2.00.06 fixes the problem.
291
292 *** The Hyperbole package causes *Help* buffers not to be displayed in
293 Help mode due to setting `temp-buffer-show-hook' rather than using
294 `add-hook'. Using `(add-hook 'temp-buffer-show-hook
295 'help-mode-maybe)' after loading Hyperbole should fix this.
296
297 ** Keyboard problems
298
299 *** "Compose Character" key does strange things when used as a Meta key.
300
301 If you define one key to serve as both Meta and Compose Character, you
302 will get strange results. In previous Emacs versions, this "worked"
303 in that the key acted as Meta--that's because the older Emacs versions
304 did not try to support Compose Character. Now Emacs tries to do
305 character composition in the standard X way. This means that you
306 must pick one meaning or the other for any given key.
307
308 You can use both functions (Meta, and Compose Character) if you assign
309 them to two different keys.
310
311 *** C-z just refreshes the screen instead of suspending Emacs.
312
313 You are probably using a shell that doesn't support job control, even
314 though the system itself is capable of it. Either use a different shell,
315 or set the variable `cannot-suspend' to a non-nil value.
316
317 *** With M-x enable-flow-control, you need to type C-\ twice
318 to do incremental search--a single C-\ gets no response.
319
320 This has been traced to communicating with your machine via kermit,
321 with C-\ as the kermit escape character. One solution is to use
322 another escape character in kermit. One user did
323
324 set escape-character 17
325
326 in his .kermrc file, to make C-q the kermit escape character.
327
328 ** Mailers and other helper programs
329
330 *** movemail compiled with POP support can't connect to the POP server.
331
332 Make sure that the `pop' entry in /etc/services, or in the services
333 NIS map if your machine uses NIS, has the same port number as the
334 entry on the POP server. A common error is for the POP server to be
335 listening on port 110, the assigned port for the POP3 protocol, while
336 the client is trying to connect on port 109, the assigned port for the
337 old POP protocol.
338
339 *** RMAIL gets error getting new mail.
340
341 RMAIL gets new mail from /usr/spool/mail/$USER using a program
342 called `movemail'. This program interlocks with /bin/mail using
343 the protocol defined by /bin/mail.
344
345 There are two different protocols in general use. One of them uses
346 the `flock' system call. The other involves creating a lock file;
347 `movemail' must be able to write in /usr/spool/mail in order to do
348 this. You control which one is used by defining, or not defining,
349 the macro MAIL_USE_FLOCK in config.h or the m- or s- file it includes.
350 IF YOU DON'T USE THE FORM OF INTERLOCKING THAT IS NORMAL ON YOUR
351 SYSTEM, YOU CAN LOSE MAIL!
352
353 If your system uses the lock file protocol, and fascist restrictions
354 prevent ordinary users from writing the lock files in /usr/spool/mail,
355 you may need to make `movemail' setgid to a suitable group such as
356 `mail'. To do this, use the following commands (as root) after doing the
357 make install.
358
359 chgrp mail movemail
360 chmod 2755 movemail
361
362 Installation normally copies movemail from the build directory to an
363 installation directory which is usually under /usr/local/lib. The
364 installed copy of movemail is usually in the directory
365 /usr/local/lib/emacs/VERSION/TARGET. You must change the group and
366 mode of the installed copy; changing the group and mode of the build
367 directory copy is ineffective.
368
369 *** rcs2log gives you the awk error message "too many fields".
370
371 This is due to an arbitrary limit in certain versions of awk.
372 The solution is to use gawk (GNU awk).
373
374 ** Problems with hostname resolution
375
376 *** Emacs fails to understand most Internet host names, even though
377 the names work properly with other programs on the same system.
378 *** Emacs won't work with X-windows if the value of DISPLAY is HOSTNAME:0.
379 *** Gnus can't make contact with the specified host for nntp.
380
381 This typically happens on Suns and other systems that use shared
382 libraries. The cause is that the site has installed a version of the
383 shared library which uses a name server--but has not installed a
384 similar version of the unshared library which Emacs uses.
385
386 The result is that most programs, using the shared library, work with
387 the nameserver, but Emacs does not.
388
389 The fix is to install an unshared library that corresponds to what you
390 installed in the shared library, and then relink Emacs.
391
392 If you have already installed the name resolver in the file libresolv.a,
393 then you need to compile Emacs to use that library. The easiest way to
394 do this is to add to config.h a definition of LIBS_SYSTEM, LIBS_MACHINE
395 or LIB_STANDARD which uses -lresolv. Watch out! If you redefine a macro
396 that is already in use in your configuration to supply some other libraries,
397 be careful not to lose the others.
398
399 Thus, you could start by adding this to config.h:
400
401 #define LIBS_SYSTEM -lresolv
402
403 Then if this gives you an error for redefining a macro, and you see that
404 the s- file defines LIBS_SYSTEM as -lfoo -lbar, you could change config.h
405 again to say this:
406
407 #define LIBS_SYSTEM -lresolv -lfoo -lbar
408
409 *** Emacs does not know your host's fully-qualified domain name.
410
411 For example, (system-name) returns some variation on
412 "localhost.localdomain", rather the name you were expecting.
413
414 You need to configure your machine with a fully qualified domain name,
415 (i.e. a name with at least one ".") either in /etc/hosts,
416 /etc/hostname, the NIS, or wherever your system calls for specifying this.
417
418 If you cannot fix the configuration, you can set the Lisp variable
419 mail-host-address to the value you want.
420
421 ** NFS and RFS
422
423 *** Emacs says it has saved a file, but the file does not actually
424 appear on disk.
425
426 This can happen on certain systems when you are using NFS, if the
427 remote disk is full. It is due to a bug in NFS (or certain NFS
428 implementations), and there is apparently nothing Emacs can do to
429 detect the problem. Emacs checks the failure codes of all the system
430 calls involved in writing a file, including `close'; but in the case
431 where the problem occurs, none of those system calls fails.
432
433 *** Editing files through RFS gives spurious "file has changed" warnings.
434 It is possible that a change in Emacs 18.37 gets around this problem,
435 but in case not, here is a description of how to fix the RFS bug that
436 causes it.
437
438 There was a serious pair of bugs in the handling of the fsync() system
439 call in the RFS server.
440
441 The first is that the fsync() call is handled as another name for the
442 close() system call (!!). It appears that fsync() is not used by very
443 many programs; Emacs version 18 does an fsync() before closing files
444 to make sure that the bits are on the disk.
445
446 This is fixed by the enclosed patch to the RFS server.
447
448 The second, more serious problem, is that fsync() is treated as a
449 non-blocking system call (i.e., it's implemented as a message that
450 gets sent to the remote system without waiting for a reply). Fsync is
451 a useful tool for building atomic file transactions. Implementing it
452 as a non-blocking RPC call (when the local call blocks until the sync
453 is done) is a bad idea; unfortunately, changing it will break the RFS
454 protocol. No fix was supplied for this problem.
455
456 (as always, your line numbers may vary)
457
458 % rcsdiff -c -r1.2 serversyscall.c
459 RCS file: RCS/serversyscall.c,v
460 retrieving revision 1.2
461 diff -c -r1.2 serversyscall.c
462 *** /tmp/,RCSt1003677 Wed Jan 28 15:15:02 1987
463 --- serversyscall.c Wed Jan 28 15:14:48 1987
464 ***************
465 *** 163,169 ****
466 /*
467 * No return sent for close or fsync!
468 */
469 ! if (syscall == RSYS_close || syscall == RSYS_fsync)
470 proc->p_returnval = deallocate_fd(proc, msg->m_args[0]);
471 else
472 {
473 --- 166,172 ----
474 /*
475 * No return sent for close or fsync!
476 */
477 ! if (syscall == RSYS_close)
478 proc->p_returnval = deallocate_fd(proc, msg->m_args[0]);
479 else
480 {
481
482 ** PSGML conflicts with sgml-mode.
483
484 PSGML package uses the same names of some variables (like keymap)
485 as built-in sgml-mode.el because it was created as a replacement
486 of that package. The conflict will be shown if you load
487 sgml-mode.el before psgml.el. E.g. this could happen if you edit
488 HTML page and then start to work with SGML or XML file. html-mode
489 (from sgml-mode.el) is used for HTML file and loading of psgml.el
490 (for sgml-mode or xml-mode) will cause an error.
491
492 ** PCL-CVS
493
494 *** Lines are not updated or new lines are added in the buffer upon commit.
495
496 When committing files located higher in the hierarchy than the examined
497 directory, some versions of the CVS program return an ambiguous message
498 from which PCL-CVS cannot extract the full location of the committed
499 files. As a result, the corresponding lines in the PCL-CVS buffer are
500 not updated with the new revision of these files, and new lines are
501 added to the top-level directory.
502
503 This can happen with CVS versions 1.12.8 and 1.12.9. Upgrade to CVS
504 1.12.10 or newer to fix this problem.
505
506 ** Miscellaneous problems
507
508 *** Emacs uses 100% of CPU time
509
510 This is a known problem with some versions of the Semantic package.
511 The solution is to upgrade Semantic to version 2.0pre4 (distributed
512 with CEDET 1.0pre4) or later.
513
514 *** Self-documentation messages are garbled.
515
516 This means that the file `etc/DOC-...' doesn't properly correspond
517 with the Emacs executable. Redumping Emacs and then installing the
518 corresponding pair of files should fix the problem.
519
520 *** Programs running under terminal emulator do not recognize `emacs'
521 terminal type.
522
523 The cause of this is a shell startup file that sets the TERMCAP
524 environment variable. The terminal emulator uses that variable to
525 provide the information on the special terminal type that Emacs emulates.
526
527 Rewrite your shell startup file so that it does not change TERMCAP
528 in such a case. You could use the following conditional which sets
529 it only if it is undefined.
530
531 if ( ! ${?TERMCAP} ) setenv TERMCAP ~/my-termcap-file
532
533 Or you could set TERMCAP only when you set TERM--which should not
534 happen in a non-login shell.
535
536 *** In Shell mode, you get a ^M at the end of every line.
537
538 This happens to people who use tcsh, because it is trying to be too
539 smart. It sees that the Shell uses terminal type `unknown' and turns
540 on the flag to output ^M at the end of each line. You can fix the
541 problem by adding this to your .cshrc file:
542
543 if ($?EMACS) then
544 if ("$EMACS" =~ /*) then
545 unset edit
546 stty -icrnl -onlcr -echo susp ^Z
547 endif
548 endif
549
550 *** Emacs startup on GNU/Linux systems (and possibly other systems) is slow.
551
552 This can happen if the system is misconfigured and Emacs can't get the
553 full qualified domain name, FQDN. You should have your FQDN in the
554 /etc/hosts file, something like this:
555
556 127.0.0.1 localhost
557 129.187.137.82 nuc04.t30.physik.tu-muenchen.de nuc04
558
559 The way to set this up may vary on non-GNU systems.
560
561 *** Attempting to visit remote files via ange-ftp fails.
562
563 If the error message is "ange-ftp-file-modtime: Specified time is not
564 representable", then this could happen when `lukemftp' is used as the
565 ftp client. This was reported to happen on Debian GNU/Linux, kernel
566 version 2.4.3, with `lukemftp' 1.5-5, but might happen on other
567 systems as well. To avoid this problem, switch to using the standard
568 ftp client. On a Debian system, type
569
570 update-alternatives --config ftp
571
572 and then choose /usr/bin/netkit-ftp.
573
574 *** JPEG images aren't displayed.
575
576 This has been reported when Emacs is built with jpeg-6a library.
577 Upgrading to jpeg-6b solves the problem. Configure checks for the
578 correct version, but this problem could occur if a binary built
579 against a shared libjpeg is run on a system with an older version.
580
581 *** Dired is very slow.
582
583 This could happen if invocation of the `df' program takes a long
584 time. Possible reasons for this include:
585
586 - ClearCase mounted filesystems (VOBs) that sometimes make `df'
587 response time extremely slow (dozens of seconds);
588
589 - slow automounters on some old versions of Unix;
590
591 - slow operation of some versions of `df'.
592
593 To work around the problem, you could either (a) set the variable
594 `directory-free-space-program' to nil, and thus prevent Emacs from
595 invoking `df'; (b) use `df' from the GNU Fileutils package; or
596 (c) use CVS, which is Free Software, instead of ClearCase.
597
598 *** ps-print commands fail to find prologue files ps-prin*.ps.
599
600 This can happen if you use an old version of X-Symbol package: it
601 defines compatibility functions which trick ps-print into thinking it
602 runs in XEmacs, and look for the prologue files in a wrong directory.
603
604 The solution is to upgrade X-Symbol to a later version.
605
606 *** On systems with shared libraries you might encounter run-time errors
607 from the dynamic linker telling you that it is unable to find some
608 shared libraries, for instance those for Xaw3d or image support.
609 These errors mean Emacs has been linked with a library whose shared
610 library is not in the default search path of the dynamic linker.
611
612 Similar problems could prevent Emacs from building, since the build
613 process invokes Emacs several times.
614
615 On many systems, it is possible to set LD_LIBRARY_PATH in your
616 environment to specify additional directories where shared libraries
617 can be found.
618
619 Other systems allow to set LD_RUN_PATH in a similar way, but before
620 Emacs is linked. With LD_RUN_PATH set, the linker will include a
621 specified run-time search path in the executable.
622
623 On some systems, Emacs can crash due to problems with dynamic
624 linking. Specifically, on SGI Irix 6.5, crashes were reported with
625 backtraces like this:
626
627 (dbx) where
628 0 strcmp(0xf49239d, 0x4031184, 0x40302b4, 0x12, 0xf0000000, 0xf4923aa, 0x0, 0x492ddb2) ["/xlv22/ficus-jan23/work/irix/lib/libc/libc_n32_M3_ns/strings/strcmp.s":35, 0xfb7e480]
629 1 general_find_symbol(0xf49239d, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0xf0000000, 0xf4923aa, 0x0, 0x492ddb2)
630 ["/comp2/mtibuild/v73/workarea/v7.3/rld/rld.c":2140, 0xfb65a98]
631 2 resolve_symbol(0xf49239d, 0x4031184, 0x0, 0xfbdd438, 0x0, 0xf4923aa, 0x0, 0x492ddb2)
632 ["/comp2/mtibuild/v73/workarea/v7.3/rld/rld.c":1947, 0xfb657e4]
633 3 lazy_text_resolve(0xd18, 0x1a3, 0x40302b4, 0x12, 0xf0000000, 0xf4923aa, 0x0, 0x492ddb2)
634 ["/comp2/mtibuild/v73/workarea/v7.3/rld/rld.c":997, 0xfb64d44]
635 4 _rld_text_resolve(0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0)
636 ["/comp2/mtibuild/v73/workarea/v7.3/rld/rld_bridge.s":175, 0xfb6032c]
637
638 (`rld' is the dynamic linker.) We don't know yet why this
639 happens, but setting the environment variable LD_BIND_NOW to 1 (which
640 forces the dynamic linker to bind all shared objects early on) seems
641 to work around the problem.
642
643 Please refer to the documentation of your dynamic linker for details.
644
645 *** You request inverse video, and the first Emacs frame is in inverse
646 video, but later frames are not in inverse video.
647
648 This can happen if you have an old version of the custom library in
649 your search path for Lisp packages. Use M-x list-load-path-shadows to
650 check whether this is true. If it is, delete the old custom library.
651
652 *** When you run Ispell from Emacs, it reports a "misalignment" error.
653
654 This can happen if you compiled the Ispell program to use ASCII
655 characters only and then try to use it from Emacs with non-ASCII
656 characters, like Latin-1. The solution is to recompile Ispell with
657 support for 8-bit characters.
658
659 To see whether your Ispell program supports 8-bit characters, type
660 this at your shell's prompt:
661
662 ispell -vv
663
664 and look in the output for the string "NO8BIT". If Ispell says
665 "!NO8BIT (8BIT)", your speller supports 8-bit characters; otherwise it
666 does not.
667
668 To rebuild Ispell with 8-bit character support, edit the local.h file
669 in the Ispell distribution and make sure it does _not_ define NO8BIT.
670 Then rebuild the speller.
671
672 Another possible cause for "misalignment" error messages is that the
673 version of Ispell installed on your machine is old. Upgrade.
674
675 Yet another possibility is that you are trying to spell-check a word
676 in a language that doesn't fit the dictionary you choose for use by
677 Ispell. (Ispell can only spell-check one language at a time, because
678 it uses a single dictionary.) Make sure that the text you are
679 spelling and the dictionary used by Ispell conform to each other.
680
681 If your spell-checking program is Aspell, it has been reported that if
682 you have a personal configuration file (normally ~/.aspell.conf), it
683 can cause this error. Remove that file, execute `ispell-kill-ispell'
684 in Emacs, and then try spell-checking again.
685
686 * Runtime problems related to font handling
687
688 ** Characters are displayed as empty boxes or with wrong font under X.
689
690 *** This can occur when two different versions of FontConfig are used.
691 For example, XFree86 4.3.0 has one version and Gnome usually comes
692 with a newer version. Emacs compiled with Gtk+ will then use the
693 newer version. In most cases the problem can be temporarily fixed by
694 stopping the application that has the error (it can be Emacs or any
695 other application), removing ~/.fonts.cache-1, and then start the
696 application again. If removing ~/.fonts.cache-1 and restarting
697 doesn't help, the application with problem must be recompiled with the
698 same version of FontConfig as the rest of the system uses. For KDE,
699 it is sufficient to recompile Qt.
700
701 *** Some fonts have a missing glyph and no default character. This is
702 known to occur for character number 160 (no-break space) in some
703 fonts, such as Lucida but Emacs sets the display table for the unibyte
704 and Latin-1 version of this character to display a space.
705
706 *** Some of the fonts called for in your fontset may not exist on your
707 X server.
708
709 Each X11 font covers just a fraction of the characters that Emacs
710 supports. To display the whole range of Emacs characters requires
711 many different fonts, collected into a fontset. You can remedy the
712 problem by installing additional fonts.
713
714 The intlfonts distribution includes a full spectrum of fonts that can
715 display all the characters Emacs supports. The etl-unicode collection
716 of fonts (available from <URL:ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib/fonts/> and
717 <URL:ftp://ftp.xfree86.org/pub/mirror/X.Org/contrib/fonts/>) includes
718 fonts that can display many Unicode characters; they can also be used
719 by ps-print and ps-mule to print Unicode characters.
720
721 ** Under X11, some characters appear improperly aligned in their lines.
722
723 You may have bad X11 fonts; try installing the intlfonts distribution
724 or the etl-unicode collection (see above).
725
726 ** Under X, an unexpected monospace font is used as the default font.
727
728 When compiled with XFT, Emacs tries to use a default font named
729 "monospace". This is a "virtual font", which the operating system
730 (Fontconfig) redirects to a suitable font such as DejaVu Sans Mono.
731 On some systems, there exists a font that is actually named Monospace,
732 which takes over the virtual font. This is considered an operating
733 system bug; see
734
735 http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2008-10/msg00696.html
736
737 If you encounter this problem, set the default font to a specific font
738 in your .Xresources or initialization file. For instance, you can put
739 the following in your .Xresources:
740
741 Emacs.font: DejaVu Sans Mono 12
742
743 ** Certain fonts make each line take one pixel more than it should.
744
745 This is because these fonts contain characters a little taller than
746 the font's nominal height. Emacs needs to make sure that lines do not
747 overlap.
748
749 ** Loading fonts is very slow.
750
751 You might be getting scalable fonts instead of precomputed bitmaps.
752 Known scalable font directories are "Type1" and "Speedo". A font
753 directory contains scalable fonts if it contains the file
754 "fonts.scale".
755
756 If this is so, re-order your X windows font path to put the scalable
757 font directories last. See the documentation of `xset' for details.
758
759 With some X servers, it may be necessary to take the scalable font
760 directories out of your path entirely, at least for Emacs 19.26.
761 Changes in the future may make this unnecessary.
762
763 ** Font Lock displays portions of the buffer in incorrect faces.
764
765 By far the most frequent cause of this is a parenthesis `(' or a brace
766 `{' in column zero. Font Lock assumes that such a paren is outside of
767 any comment or string. This is of course not true in general, but the
768 vast majority of well-formatted program source files don't have such
769 parens, and therefore this assumption is used to allow optimizations
770 in Font Lock's syntactical analysis. These optimizations avoid some
771 pathological cases where jit-lock, the Just-in-Time fontification
772 introduced with Emacs 21.1, could significantly slow down scrolling
773 through the buffer, especially scrolling backwards, and also jumping
774 to the end of a very large buffer.
775
776 Beginning with version 22.1, a parenthesis or a brace in column zero
777 is highlighted in bold-red face if it is inside a string or a comment,
778 to indicate that it could interfere with Font Lock (and also with
779 indentation) and should be moved or escaped with a backslash.
780
781 If you don't use large buffers, or have a very fast machine which
782 makes the delays insignificant, you can avoid the incorrect
783 fontification by setting the variable
784 `font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function' to a nil value. (This must
785 be done _after_ turning on Font Lock.)
786
787 Another alternative is to avoid a paren in column zero. For example,
788 in a Lisp string you could precede the paren with a backslash.
789
790 ** With certain fonts, when the cursor appears on a character, the
791 character doesn't appear--you get a solid box instead.
792
793 One user on a Linux-based GNU system reported that this problem went
794 away with installation of a new X server. The failing server was
795 XFree86 3.1.1. XFree86 3.1.2 works.
796
797 ** Emacs pauses for several seconds when changing the default font.
798
799 This has been reported for fvwm 2.2.5 and the window manager of KDE
800 2.1. The reason for the pause is Xt waiting for a ConfigureNotify
801 event from the window manager, which the window manager doesn't send.
802 Xt stops waiting after a default timeout of usually 5 seconds.
803
804 A workaround for this is to add something like
805
806 emacs.waitForWM: false
807
808 to your X resources. Alternatively, add `(wait-for-wm . nil)' to a
809 frame's parameter list, like this:
810
811 (modify-frame-parameters nil '((wait-for-wm . nil)))
812
813 (this should go into your `.emacs' file).
814
815 ** Underlines appear at the wrong position.
816
817 This is caused by fonts having a wrong UNDERLINE_POSITION property.
818 Examples are the font 7x13 on XFree prior to version 4.1, or the jmk
819 neep font from the Debian xfonts-jmk package prior to version 3.0.17.
820 To circumvent this problem, set x-use-underline-position-properties
821 to nil in your `.emacs'.
822
823 To see what is the value of UNDERLINE_POSITION defined by the font,
824 type `xlsfonts -lll FONT' and look at the font's UNDERLINE_POSITION property.
825
826 ** When using Exceed, fonts sometimes appear too tall.
827
828 When the display is set to an Exceed X-server and fonts are specified
829 (either explicitly with the -fn option or implicitly with X resources)
830 then the fonts may appear "too tall". The actual character sizes are
831 correct but there is too much vertical spacing between rows, which
832 gives the appearance of "double spacing".
833
834 To prevent this, turn off the Exceed's "automatic font substitution"
835 feature (in the font part of the configuration window).
836
837 ** Subscript/superscript text in TeX is hard to read.
838
839 If `tex-fontify-script' is non-nil, tex-mode displays
840 subscript/superscript text in the faces subscript/superscript, which
841 are smaller than the normal font and lowered/raised. With some fonts,
842 nested superscripts (say) can be hard to read. Switching to a
843 different font, or changing your antialiasing setting (on an LCD
844 screen), can both make the problem disappear. Alternatively, customize
845 the following variables: tex-font-script-display (how much to
846 lower/raise); tex-suscript-height-ratio (how much smaller than
847 normal); tex-suscript-height-minimum (minimum height).
848
849 * Internationalization problems
850
851 ** M-{ does not work on a Spanish PC keyboard.
852
853 Many Spanish keyboards seem to ignore that combination. Emacs can't
854 do anything about it.
855
856 ** International characters aren't displayed under X.
857
858 *** Missing X fonts
859
860 XFree86 4 contains many fonts in iso10646-1 encoding which have
861 minimal character repertoires (whereas the encoding part of the font
862 name is meant to be a reasonable indication of the repertoire
863 according to the XLFD spec). Emacs may choose one of these to display
864 characters from the mule-unicode charsets and then typically won't be
865 able to find the glyphs to display many characters. (Check with C-u
866 C-x = .) To avoid this, you may need to use a fontset which sets the
867 font for the mule-unicode sets explicitly. E.g. to use GNU unifont,
868 include in the fontset spec:
869
870 mule-unicode-2500-33ff:-gnu-unifont-*-iso10646-1,\
871 mule-unicode-e000-ffff:-gnu-unifont-*-iso10646-1,\
872 mule-unicode-0100-24ff:-gnu-unifont-*-iso10646-1
873
874 ** The UTF-8/16/7 coding systems don't encode CJK (Far Eastern) characters.
875
876 Emacs directly supports the Unicode BMP whose code points are in the
877 ranges 0000-33ff and e000-ffff, and indirectly supports the parts of
878 CJK characters belonging to these legacy charsets:
879
880 GB2312, Big5, JISX0208, JISX0212, JISX0213-1, JISX0213-2, KSC5601
881
882 The latter support is done in Utf-Translate-Cjk mode (turned on by
883 default). Which Unicode CJK characters are decoded into which Emacs
884 charset is decided by the current language environment. For instance,
885 in Chinese-GB, most of them are decoded into chinese-gb2312.
886
887 If you read UTF-8 data with code points outside these ranges, the
888 characters appear in the buffer as raw bytes of the original UTF-8
889 (composed into a single quasi-character) and they will be written back
890 correctly as UTF-8, assuming you don't break the composed sequences.
891 If you read such characters from UTF-16 or UTF-7 data, they are
892 substituted with the Unicode `replacement character', and you lose
893 information.
894
895 ** Accented ISO-8859-1 characters are displayed as | or _.
896
897 Try other font set sizes (S-mouse-1). If the problem persists with
898 other sizes as well, your text is corrupted, probably through software
899 that is not 8-bit clean. If the problem goes away with another font
900 size, it's probably because some fonts pretend to be ISO-8859-1 fonts
901 when they are really ASCII fonts. In particular the schumacher-clean
902 fonts have this bug in some versions of X.
903
904 To see what glyphs are included in a font, use `xfd', like this:
905
906 xfd -fn -schumacher-clean-medium-r-normal--12-120-75-75-c-60-iso8859-1
907
908 If this shows only ASCII glyphs, the font is indeed the source of the problem.
909
910 The solution is to remove the corresponding lines from the appropriate
911 `fonts.alias' file, then run `mkfontdir' in that directory, and then run
912 `xset fp rehash'.
913
914 ** The `oc-unicode' package doesn't work with Emacs 21.
915
916 This package tries to define more private charsets than there are free
917 slots now. The current built-in Unicode support is actually more
918 flexible. (Use option `utf-translate-cjk-mode' if you need CJK
919 support.) Files encoded as emacs-mule using oc-unicode aren't
920 generally read correctly by Emacs 21.
921
922 ** After a while, Emacs slips into unibyte mode.
923
924 The VM mail package, which is not part of Emacs, sometimes does
925 (standard-display-european t)
926 That should be changed to
927 (standard-display-european 1 t)
928
929 * X runtime problems
930
931 ** X keyboard problems
932
933 *** You "lose characters" after typing Compose Character key.
934
935 This is because the Compose Character key is defined as the keysym
936 Multi_key, and Emacs (seeing that) does the proper X11
937 character-composition processing. If you don't want your Compose key
938 to do that, you can redefine it with xmodmap.
939
940 For example, here's one way to turn it into a Meta key:
941
942 xmodmap -e "keysym Multi_key = Meta_L"
943
944 If all users at your site of a particular keyboard prefer Meta to
945 Compose, you can make the remapping happen automatically by adding the
946 xmodmap command to the xdm setup script for that display.
947
948 *** Using X Windows, control-shift-leftbutton makes Emacs hang.
949
950 Use the shell command `xset bc' to make the old X Menu package work.
951
952 *** C-SPC fails to work on Fedora GNU/Linux (or with fcitx input method).
953
954 Fedora Core 4 steals the C-SPC key by default for the `iiimx' program
955 which is the input method for some languages. It blocks Emacs users
956 from using the C-SPC key for `set-mark-command'.
957
958 One solutions is to remove the `<Ctrl>space' from the `Iiimx' file
959 which can be found in the `/usr/lib/X11/app-defaults' directory.
960 However, that requires root access.
961
962 Another is to specify `Emacs*useXIM: false' in your X resources.
963
964 Another is to build Emacs with the `--without-xim' configure option.
965
966 The same problem happens on any other system if you are using fcitx
967 (Chinese input method) which by default use C-SPC for toggling. If
968 you want to use fcitx with Emacs, you have two choices. Toggle fcitx
969 by another key (e.g. C-\) by modifying ~/.fcitx/config, or be
970 accustomed to use C-@ for `set-mark-command'.
971
972 *** M-SPC seems to be ignored as input.
973
974 See if your X server is set up to use this as a command
975 for character composition.
976
977 *** The S-C-t key combination doesn't get passed to Emacs on X.
978
979 This happens because some X configurations assign the Ctrl-Shift-t
980 combination the same meaning as the Multi_key. The offending
981 definition is in the file `...lib/X11/locale/iso8859-1/Compose'; there
982 might be other similar combinations which are grabbed by X for similar
983 purposes.
984
985 We think that this can be countermanded with the `xmodmap' utility, if
986 you want to be able to bind one of these key sequences within Emacs.
987
988 *** Under X, C-v and/or other keys don't work.
989
990 These may have been intercepted by your window manager. In
991 particular, AfterStep 1.6 is reported to steal C-v in its default
992 configuration. Various Meta keys are also likely to be taken by the
993 configuration of the `feel'. See the WM's documentation for how to
994 change this.
995
996 *** Clicking C-mouse-2 in the scroll bar doesn't split the window.
997
998 This currently doesn't work with scroll-bar widgets (and we don't know
999 a good way of implementing it with widgets). If Emacs is configured
1000 --without-toolkit-scroll-bars, C-mouse-2 on the scroll bar does work.
1001
1002 *** Inability to send an Alt-modified key, when Emacs is communicating
1003 directly with an X server.
1004
1005 If you have tried to bind an Alt-modified key as a command, and it
1006 does not work to type the command, the first thing you should check is
1007 whether the key is getting through to Emacs. To do this, type C-h c
1008 followed by the Alt-modified key. C-h c should say what kind of event
1009 it read. If it says it read an Alt-modified key, then make sure you
1010 have made the key binding correctly.
1011
1012 If C-h c reports an event that doesn't have the Alt modifier, it may
1013 be because your X server has no key for the Alt modifier. The X
1014 server that comes from MIT does not set up the Alt modifier by default.
1015
1016 If your keyboard has keys named Alt, you can enable them as follows:
1017
1018 xmodmap -e 'add mod2 = Alt_L'
1019 xmodmap -e 'add mod2 = Alt_R'
1020
1021 If the keyboard has just one key named Alt, then only one of those
1022 commands is needed. The modifier `mod2' is a reasonable choice if you
1023 are using an unmodified MIT version of X. Otherwise, choose any
1024 modifier bit not otherwise used.
1025
1026 If your keyboard does not have keys named Alt, you can use some other
1027 keys. Use the keysym command in xmodmap to turn a function key (or
1028 some other 'spare' key) into Alt_L or into Alt_R, and then use the
1029 commands show above to make them modifier keys.
1030
1031 Note that if you have Alt keys but no Meta keys, Emacs translates Alt
1032 into Meta. This is because of the great importance of Meta in Emacs.
1033
1034 ** Window-manager and toolkit-related problems
1035
1036 *** Metacity: Resizing Emacs or ALT-Tab causes X to be unresponsive.
1037
1038 This happens sometimes when using Metacity. Resizing Emacs or ALT-Tab:bing
1039 makes the system unresponsive to the mouse or the keyboard. Killing Emacs
1040 or shifting out from X11 and back again usually cures it (i.e. Ctrl-Alt-F1
1041 and then Alt-F7). A bug for it is here:
1042 https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/metacity/+bug/231034.
1043 Note that a permanent fix seems to be to disable "assistive technologies".
1044
1045 *** Gnome: Emacs receives input directly from the keyboard, bypassing XIM.
1046
1047 This seems to happen when gnome-settings-daemon version 2.12 or later
1048 is running. If gnome-settings-daemon is not running, Emacs receives
1049 input through XIM without any problem. Furthermore, this seems only
1050 to happen in *.UTF-8 locales; zh_CN.GB2312 and zh_CN.GBK locales, for
1051 example, work fine. A bug report has been filed in the Gnome
1052 bugzilla: http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=357032
1053
1054 *** Gnome: Emacs' xterm-mouse-mode doesn't work on the Gnome terminal.
1055
1056 A symptom of this bug is that double-clicks insert a control sequence
1057 into the buffer. The reason this happens is an apparent
1058 incompatibility of the Gnome terminal with Xterm, which also affects
1059 other programs using the Xterm mouse interface. A problem report has
1060 been filed.
1061
1062 *** KDE: When running on KDE, colors or fonts are not as specified for Emacs,
1063 or messed up.
1064
1065 For example, you could see background you set for Emacs only in the
1066 empty portions of the Emacs display, while characters have some other
1067 background.
1068
1069 This happens because KDE's defaults apply its color and font
1070 definitions even to applications that weren't compiled for KDE. The
1071 solution is to uncheck the "Apply fonts and colors to non-KDE apps"
1072 option in Preferences->Look&Feel->Style (KDE 2). In KDE 3, this option
1073 is in the "Colors" section, rather than "Style".
1074
1075 Alternatively, if you do want the KDE defaults to apply to other
1076 applications, but not to Emacs, you could modify the file `Emacs.ad'
1077 (should be in the `/usr/share/apps/kdisplay/app-defaults/' directory)
1078 so that it doesn't set the default background and foreground only for
1079 Emacs. For example, make sure the following resources are either not
1080 present or commented out:
1081
1082 Emacs.default.attributeForeground
1083 Emacs.default.attributeBackground
1084 Emacs*Foreground
1085 Emacs*Background
1086
1087 It is also reported that a bug in the gtk-engines-qt engine can cause this if
1088 Emacs is compiled with Gtk+.
1089 The bug is fixed in version 0.7 or newer of gtk-engines-qt.
1090
1091 *** KDE: Emacs hangs on KDE when a large portion of text is killed.
1092
1093 This is caused by a bug in the KDE applet `klipper' which periodically
1094 requests the X clipboard contents from applications. Early versions
1095 of klipper don't implement the ICCCM protocol for large selections,
1096 which leads to Emacs being flooded with selection requests. After a
1097 while, Emacs may print a message:
1098
1099 Timed out waiting for property-notify event
1100
1101 A workaround is to not use `klipper'. An upgrade to the `klipper' that
1102 comes with KDE 3.3 or later also solves the problem.
1103
1104 *** CDE: Frames may cover dialogs they created when using CDE.
1105
1106 This can happen if you have "Allow Primary Windows On Top" enabled which
1107 seems to be the default in the Common Desktop Environment.
1108 To change, go in to "Desktop Controls" -> "Window Style Manager"
1109 and uncheck "Allow Primary Windows On Top".
1110
1111 *** Xaw3d : When using Xaw3d scroll bars without arrows, the very first mouse
1112 click in a scroll bar might be ignored by the scroll bar widget. This
1113 is probably a bug in Xaw3d; when Xaw3d is compiled with arrows, the
1114 problem disappears.
1115
1116 *** Xaw: There are known binary incompatibilities between Xaw, Xaw3d, neXtaw,
1117 XawM and the few other derivatives of Xaw. So when you compile with
1118 one of these, it may not work to dynamically link with another one.
1119 For example, strange problems, such as Emacs exiting when you type
1120 "C-x 1", were reported when Emacs compiled with Xaw3d and libXaw was
1121 used with neXtaw at run time.
1122
1123 The solution is to rebuild Emacs with the toolkit version you actually
1124 want to use, or set LD_PRELOAD to preload the same toolkit version you
1125 built Emacs with.
1126
1127 *** Open Motif: Problems with file dialogs in Emacs built with Open Motif.
1128
1129 When Emacs 21 is built with Open Motif 2.1, it can happen that the
1130 graphical file dialog boxes do not work properly. The "OK", "Filter"
1131 and "Cancel" buttons do not respond to mouse clicks. Dragging the
1132 file dialog window usually causes the buttons to work again.
1133
1134 The solution is to use LessTif instead. LessTif is a free replacement
1135 for Motif. See the file INSTALL for information on how to do this.
1136
1137 Another workaround is not to use the mouse to trigger file prompts,
1138 but to use the keyboard. This way, you will be prompted for a file in
1139 the minibuffer instead of a graphical file dialog.
1140
1141 *** LessTif: Problems in Emacs built with LessTif.
1142
1143 The problems seem to depend on the version of LessTif and the Motif
1144 emulation for which it is set up.
1145
1146 Only the Motif 1.2 emulation seems to be stable enough in LessTif.
1147 LessTif 0.92-17's Motif 1.2 emulation seems to work okay on FreeBSD.
1148 On GNU/Linux systems, lesstif-0.92.6 configured with "./configure
1149 --enable-build-12 --enable-default-12" is reported to be the most
1150 successful. The binary GNU/Linux package
1151 lesstif-devel-0.92.0-1.i386.rpm was reported to have problems with
1152 menu placement.
1153
1154 On some systems, even with Motif 1.2 emulation, Emacs occasionally
1155 locks up, grabbing all mouse and keyboard events. We still don't know
1156 what causes these problems; they are not reproducible by Emacs developers.
1157
1158 *** Motif: The Motif version of Emacs paints the screen a solid color.
1159
1160 This has been observed to result from the following X resource:
1161
1162 Emacs*default.attributeFont: -*-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-140-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
1163
1164 That the resource has this effect indicates a bug in something, but we
1165 do not yet know what. If it is an Emacs bug, we hope someone can
1166 explain what the bug is so we can fix it. In the mean time, removing
1167 the resource prevents the problem.
1168
1169 ** General X problems
1170
1171 *** Redisplay using X11 is much slower than previous Emacs versions.
1172
1173 We've noticed that certain X servers draw the text much slower when
1174 scroll bars are on the left. We don't know why this happens. If this
1175 happens to you, you can work around it by putting the scroll bars
1176 on the right (as they were in Emacs 19).
1177
1178 Here's how to do this:
1179
1180 (set-scroll-bar-mode 'right)
1181
1182 If you're not sure whether (or how much) this problem affects you,
1183 try that and see how much difference it makes. To set things back
1184 to normal, do
1185
1186 (set-scroll-bar-mode 'left)
1187
1188 *** Error messages about undefined colors on X.
1189
1190 The messages might say something like this:
1191
1192 Unable to load color "grey95"
1193
1194 (typically, in the `*Messages*' buffer), or something like this:
1195
1196 Error while displaying tooltip: (error Undefined color lightyellow)
1197
1198 These problems could happen if some other X program has used up too
1199 many colors of the X palette, leaving Emacs with insufficient system
1200 resources to load all the colors it needs.
1201
1202 A solution is to exit the offending X programs before starting Emacs.
1203
1204 "undefined color" messages can also occur if the RgbPath entry in the
1205 X configuration file is incorrect, or the rgb.txt file is not where
1206 X expects to find it.
1207
1208 *** Improving performance with slow X connections.
1209
1210 There are several ways to improve this performance, any subset of which can
1211 be carried out at the same time:
1212
1213 1) If you don't need X Input Methods (XIM) for entering text in some
1214 language you use, you can improve performance on WAN links by using
1215 the X resource useXIM to turn off use of XIM. This does not affect
1216 the use of Emacs' own input methods, which are part of the Leim
1217 package.
1218
1219 2) If the connection is very slow, you might also want to consider
1220 switching off scroll bars, menu bar, and tool bar. Adding the
1221 following forms to your .emacs file will accomplish that, but only
1222 after the the initial frame is displayed:
1223
1224 (scroll-bar-mode -1)
1225 (menu-bar-mode -1)
1226 (tool-bar-mode -1)
1227
1228 For still quicker startup, put these X resources in your .Xdefaults
1229 file:
1230
1231 Emacs.verticalScrollBars: off
1232 Emacs.menuBar: off
1233 Emacs.toolBar: off
1234
1235 3) Use ssh to forward the X connection, and enable compression on this
1236 forwarded X connection (ssh -XC remotehostname emacs ...).
1237
1238 4) Use lbxproxy on the remote end of the connection. This is an interface
1239 to the low bandwidth X extension in most modern X servers, which
1240 improves performance dramatically, at the slight expense of correctness
1241 of the X protocol. lbxproxy acheives the performance gain by grouping
1242 several X requests in one TCP packet and sending them off together,
1243 instead of requiring a round-trip for each X request in a separate
1244 packet. The switches that seem to work best for emacs are:
1245 -noatomsfile -nowinattr -cheaterrors -cheatevents
1246 Note that the -nograbcmap option is known to cause problems.
1247 For more about lbxproxy, see:
1248 http://www.xfree86.org/4.3.0/lbxproxy.1.html
1249
1250 5) If copying and killing is slow, try to disable the interaction with the
1251 native system's clipboard by adding these lines to your .emacs file:
1252 (setq interprogram-cut-function nil)
1253 (setq interprogram-paste-function nil)
1254
1255 *** Emacs gives the error, Couldn't find per display information.
1256
1257 This can result if the X server runs out of memory because Emacs uses
1258 a large number of fonts. On systems where this happens, C-h h is
1259 likely to cause it.
1260
1261 We do not know of a way to prevent the problem.
1262
1263 *** Emacs does not notice when you release the mouse.
1264
1265 There are reports that this happened with (some) Microsoft mice and
1266 that replacing the mouse made it stop.
1267
1268 *** You can't select from submenus (in the X toolkit version).
1269
1270 On certain systems, mouse-tracking and selection in top-level menus
1271 works properly with the X toolkit, but neither of them works when you
1272 bring up a submenu (such as Bookmarks or Compare or Apply Patch, in
1273 the Files menu).
1274
1275 This works on most systems. There is speculation that the failure is
1276 due to bugs in old versions of X toolkit libraries, but no one really
1277 knows. If someone debugs this and finds the precise cause, perhaps a
1278 workaround can be found.
1279
1280 *** An error message such as `X protocol error: BadMatch (invalid
1281 parameter attributes) on protocol request 93'.
1282
1283 This comes from having an invalid X resource, such as
1284 emacs*Cursor: black
1285 (which is invalid because it specifies a color name for something
1286 that isn't a color.)
1287
1288 The fix is to correct your X resources.
1289
1290 *** Slow startup on X11R6 with X windows.
1291
1292 If Emacs takes two minutes to start up on X11R6, see if your X
1293 resources specify any Adobe fonts. That causes the type-1 font
1294 renderer to start up, even if the font you asked for is not a type-1
1295 font.
1296
1297 One way to avoid this problem is to eliminate the type-1 fonts from
1298 your font path, like this:
1299
1300 xset -fp /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Type1/
1301
1302 *** Pull-down menus appear in the wrong place, in the toolkit version of Emacs.
1303
1304 An X resource of this form can cause the problem:
1305
1306 Emacs*geometry: 80x55+0+0
1307
1308 This resource is supposed to apply, and does apply, to the menus
1309 individually as well as to Emacs frames. If that is not what you
1310 want, rewrite the resource.
1311
1312 To check thoroughly for such resource specifications, use `xrdb
1313 -query' to see what resources the X server records, and also look at
1314 the user's ~/.Xdefaults and ~/.Xdefaults-* files.
1315
1316 *** Emacs running under X Windows does not handle mouse clicks.
1317 *** `emacs -geometry 80x20' finds a file named `80x20'.
1318
1319 One cause of such problems is having (setq term-file-prefix nil) in
1320 your .emacs file. Another cause is a bad value of EMACSLOADPATH in
1321 the environment.
1322
1323 *** X Windows doesn't work if DISPLAY uses a hostname.
1324
1325 People have reported kernel bugs in certain systems that cause Emacs
1326 not to work with X Windows if DISPLAY is set using a host name. But
1327 the problem does not occur if DISPLAY is set to `unix:0.0'. I think
1328 the bug has to do with SIGIO or FIONREAD.
1329
1330 You may be able to compensate for the bug by doing (set-input-mode nil nil).
1331 However, that has the disadvantage of turning off interrupts, so that
1332 you are unable to quit out of a Lisp program by typing C-g.
1333
1334 *** Prevent double pastes in X
1335
1336 The problem: a region, such as a command, is pasted twice when you copy
1337 it with your mouse from GNU Emacs to an xterm or an RXVT shell in X.
1338 The solution: try the following in your X configuration file,
1339 /etc/X11/xorg.conf This should enable both PS/2 and USB mice for
1340 single copies. You do not need any other drivers or options.
1341
1342 Section "InputDevice"
1343 Identifier "Generic Mouse"
1344 Driver "mousedev"
1345 Option "Device" "/dev/input/mice"
1346 EndSection
1347
1348 * Runtime problems on character terminals
1349
1350 ** The meta key does not work on xterm.
1351 Typing M-x rings the terminal bell, and inserts a string like ";120~".
1352 For recent xterm versions (>= 216), Emacs uses xterm's modifyOtherKeys
1353 feature to generate strings for key combinations that are not
1354 otherwise usable. One circumstance in which this can cause problems
1355 is if you have specified the X resource
1356
1357 xterm*VT100.Translations
1358
1359 to contain translations that use the meta key. Then xterm will not
1360 use meta in modified function-keys, which confuses Emacs. To fix
1361 this, you can remove the X resource or put this in your init file:
1362
1363 (xterm-remove-modify-other-keys)
1364
1365 ** Emacs spontaneously displays "I-search: " at the bottom of the screen.
1366
1367 This means that Control-S/Control-Q (XON/XOFF) "flow control" is being
1368 used. C-s/C-q flow control is bad for Emacs editors because it takes
1369 away C-s and C-q as user commands. Since editors do not output long
1370 streams of text without user commands, there is no need for a
1371 user-issuable "stop output" command in an editor; therefore, a
1372 properly designed flow control mechanism would transmit all possible
1373 input characters without interference. Designing such a mechanism is
1374 easy, for a person with at least half a brain.
1375
1376 There are three possible reasons why flow control could be taking place:
1377
1378 1) Terminal has not been told to disable flow control
1379 2) Insufficient padding for the terminal in use
1380 3) Some sort of terminal concentrator or line switch is responsible
1381
1382 First of all, many terminals have a set-up mode which controls whether
1383 they generate XON/XOFF flow control characters. This must be set to
1384 "no XON/XOFF" in order for Emacs to work. (For example, on a VT220
1385 you may select "No XOFF" in the setup menu.) Sometimes there is an
1386 escape sequence that the computer can send to turn flow control off
1387 and on. If so, perhaps the termcap `ti' string should turn flow
1388 control off, and the `te' string should turn it on.
1389
1390 Once the terminal has been told "no flow control", you may find it
1391 needs more padding. The amount of padding Emacs sends is controlled
1392 by the termcap entry for the terminal in use, and by the output baud
1393 rate as known by the kernel. The shell command `stty' will print
1394 your output baud rate; `stty' with suitable arguments will set it if
1395 it is wrong. Setting to a higher speed causes increased padding. If
1396 the results are wrong for the correct speed, there is probably a
1397 problem in the termcap entry. You must speak to a local Unix wizard
1398 to fix this. Perhaps you are just using the wrong terminal type.
1399
1400 For terminals that lack a "no flow control" mode, sometimes just
1401 giving lots of padding will prevent actual generation of flow control
1402 codes. You might as well try it.
1403
1404 If you are really unlucky, your terminal is connected to the computer
1405 through a concentrator which sends XON/XOFF flow control to the
1406 computer, or it insists on sending flow control itself no matter how
1407 much padding you give it. Unless you can figure out how to turn flow
1408 control off on this concentrator (again, refer to your local wizard),
1409 you are screwed! You should have the terminal or concentrator
1410 replaced with a properly designed one. In the mean time, some drastic
1411 measures can make Emacs semi-work.
1412
1413 You can make Emacs ignore C-s and C-q and let the operating system
1414 handle them. To do this on a per-session basis, just type M-x
1415 enable-flow-control RET. You will see a message that C-\ and C-^ are
1416 now translated to C-s and C-q. (Use the same command M-x
1417 enable-flow-control to turn *off* this special mode. It toggles flow
1418 control handling.)
1419
1420 If C-\ and C-^ are inconvenient for you (for example, if one of them
1421 is the escape character of your terminal concentrator), you can choose
1422 other characters by setting the variables flow-control-c-s-replacement
1423 and flow-control-c-q-replacement. But choose carefully, since all
1424 other control characters are already used by emacs.
1425
1426 IMPORTANT: if you type C-s by accident while flow control is enabled,
1427 Emacs output will freeze, and you will have to remember to type C-q in
1428 order to continue.
1429
1430 If you work in an environment where a majority of terminals of a
1431 certain type are flow control hobbled, you can use the function
1432 `enable-flow-control-on' to turn on this flow control avoidance scheme
1433 automatically. Here is an example:
1434
1435 (enable-flow-control-on "vt200" "vt300" "vt101" "vt131")
1436
1437 If this isn't quite correct (e.g. you have a mixture of flow-control hobbled
1438 and good vt200 terminals), you can still run enable-flow-control
1439 manually.
1440
1441 I have no intention of ever redesigning the Emacs command set for the
1442 assumption that terminals use C-s/C-q flow control. XON/XOFF flow
1443 control technique is a bad design, and terminals that need it are bad
1444 merchandise and should not be purchased. Now that X is becoming
1445 widespread, XON/XOFF seems to be on the way out. If you can get some
1446 use out of GNU Emacs on inferior terminals, more power to you, but I
1447 will not make Emacs worse for properly designed systems for the sake
1448 of inferior systems.
1449
1450 ** Control-S and Control-Q commands are ignored completely.
1451
1452 For some reason, your system is using brain-damaged C-s/C-q flow
1453 control despite Emacs's attempts to turn it off. Perhaps your
1454 terminal is connected to the computer through a concentrator
1455 that wants to use flow control.
1456
1457 You should first try to tell the concentrator not to use flow control.
1458 If you succeed in this, try making the terminal work without
1459 flow control, as described in the preceding section.
1460
1461 If that line of approach is not successful, map some other characters
1462 into C-s and C-q using keyboard-translate-table. The example above
1463 shows how to do this with C-^ and C-\.
1464
1465 ** Screen is updated wrong, but only on one kind of terminal.
1466
1467 This could mean that the termcap entry you are using for that
1468 terminal is wrong, or it could mean that Emacs has a bug handing
1469 the combination of features specified for that terminal.
1470
1471 The first step in tracking this down is to record what characters
1472 Emacs is sending to the terminal. Execute the Lisp expression
1473 (open-termscript "./emacs-script") to make Emacs write all
1474 terminal output into the file ~/emacs-script as well; then do
1475 what makes the screen update wrong, and look at the file
1476 and decode the characters using the manual for the terminal.
1477 There are several possibilities:
1478
1479 1) The characters sent are correct, according to the terminal manual.
1480
1481 In this case, there is no obvious bug in Emacs, and most likely you
1482 need more padding, or possibly the terminal manual is wrong.
1483
1484 2) The characters sent are incorrect, due to an obscure aspect
1485 of the terminal behavior not described in an obvious way by termcap.
1486
1487 This case is hard. It will be necessary to think of a way for
1488 Emacs to distinguish between terminals with this kind of behavior
1489 and other terminals that behave subtly differently but are
1490 classified the same by termcap; or else find an algorithm for
1491 Emacs to use that avoids the difference. Such changes must be
1492 tested on many kinds of terminals.
1493
1494 3) The termcap entry is wrong.
1495
1496 See the file etc/TERMS for information on changes
1497 that are known to be needed in commonly used termcap entries
1498 for certain terminals.
1499
1500 4) The characters sent are incorrect, and clearly cannot be
1501 right for any terminal with the termcap entry you were using.
1502
1503 This is unambiguously an Emacs bug, and can probably be fixed
1504 in termcap.c, tparam.c, term.c, scroll.c, cm.c or dispnew.c.
1505
1506 ** Control-S and Control-Q commands are ignored completely on a net connection.
1507
1508 Some versions of rlogin (and possibly telnet) do not pass flow
1509 control characters to the remote system to which they connect.
1510 On such systems, emacs on the remote system cannot disable flow
1511 control on the local system. Sometimes `rlogin -8' will avoid this problem.
1512
1513 One way to cure this is to disable flow control on the local host
1514 (the one running rlogin, not the one running rlogind) using the
1515 stty command, before starting the rlogin process. On many systems,
1516 "stty start u stop u" will do this. On some systems, use
1517 "stty -ixon" instead.
1518
1519 Some versions of tcsh will prevent even this from working. One way
1520 around this is to start another shell before starting rlogin, and
1521 issue the stty command to disable flow control from that shell.
1522
1523 If none of these methods work, the best solution is to type
1524 M-x enable-flow-control at the beginning of your emacs session, or
1525 if you expect the problem to continue, add a line such as the
1526 following to your .emacs (on the host running rlogind):
1527
1528 (enable-flow-control-on "vt200" "vt300" "vt101" "vt131")
1529
1530 See the entry about spontaneous display of I-search (above) for more info.
1531
1532 ** Output from Control-V is slow.
1533
1534 On many bit-map terminals, scrolling operations are fairly slow.
1535 Often the termcap entry for the type of terminal in use fails
1536 to inform Emacs of this. The two lines at the bottom of the screen
1537 before a Control-V command are supposed to appear at the top after
1538 the Control-V command. If Emacs thinks scrolling the lines is fast,
1539 it will scroll them to the top of the screen.
1540
1541 If scrolling is slow but Emacs thinks it is fast, the usual reason is
1542 that the termcap entry for the terminal you are using does not
1543 specify any padding time for the `al' and `dl' strings. Emacs
1544 concludes that these operations take only as much time as it takes to
1545 send the commands at whatever line speed you are using. You must
1546 fix the termcap entry to specify, for the `al' and `dl', as much
1547 time as the operations really take.
1548
1549 Currently Emacs thinks in terms of serial lines which send characters
1550 at a fixed rate, so that any operation which takes time for the
1551 terminal to execute must also be padded. With bit-map terminals
1552 operated across networks, often the network provides some sort of
1553 flow control so that padding is never needed no matter how slow
1554 an operation is. You must still specify a padding time if you want
1555 Emacs to realize that the operation takes a long time. This will
1556 cause padding characters to be sent unnecessarily, but they do
1557 not really cost much. They will be transmitted while the scrolling
1558 is happening and then discarded quickly by the terminal.
1559
1560 Most bit-map terminals provide commands for inserting or deleting
1561 multiple lines at once. Define the `AL' and `DL' strings in the
1562 termcap entry to say how to do these things, and you will have
1563 fast output without wasted padding characters. These strings should
1564 each contain a single %-spec saying how to send the number of lines
1565 to be scrolled. These %-specs are like those in the termcap
1566 `cm' string.
1567
1568 You should also define the `IC' and `DC' strings if your terminal
1569 has a command to insert or delete multiple characters. These
1570 take the number of positions to insert or delete as an argument.
1571
1572 A `cs' string to set the scrolling region will reduce the amount
1573 of motion you see on the screen when part of the screen is scrolled.
1574
1575 ** You type Control-H (Backspace) expecting to delete characters.
1576
1577 Put `stty dec' in your .login file and your problems will disappear
1578 after a day or two.
1579
1580 The choice of Backspace for erasure was based on confusion, caused by
1581 the fact that backspacing causes erasure (later, when you type another
1582 character) on most display terminals. But it is a mistake. Deletion
1583 of text is not the same thing as backspacing followed by failure to
1584 overprint. I do not wish to propagate this confusion by conforming
1585 to it.
1586
1587 For this reason, I believe `stty dec' is the right mode to use,
1588 and I have designed Emacs to go with that. If there were a thousand
1589 other control characters, I would define Control-h to delete as well;
1590 but there are not very many other control characters, and I think
1591 that providing the most mnemonic possible Help character is more
1592 important than adapting to people who don't use `stty dec'.
1593
1594 If you are obstinate about confusing buggy overprinting with deletion,
1595 you can redefine Backspace in your .emacs file:
1596 (global-set-key "\b" 'delete-backward-char)
1597 You can probably access help-command via f1.
1598
1599 ** Colors are not available on a tty or in xterm.
1600
1601 Emacs 21 supports colors on character terminals and terminal
1602 emulators, but this support relies on the terminfo or termcap database
1603 entry to specify that the display supports color. Emacs looks at the
1604 "Co" capability for the terminal to find out how many colors are
1605 supported; it should be non-zero to activate the color support within
1606 Emacs. (Most color terminals support 8 or 16 colors.) If your system
1607 uses terminfo, the name of the capability equivalent to "Co" is
1608 "colors".
1609
1610 In addition to the "Co" capability, Emacs needs the "op" (for
1611 ``original pair'') capability, which tells how to switch the terminal
1612 back to the default foreground and background colors. Emacs will not
1613 use colors if this capability is not defined. If your terminal entry
1614 doesn't provide such a capability, try using the ANSI standard escape
1615 sequence \E[00m (that is, define a new termcap/terminfo entry and make
1616 it use your current terminal's entry plus \E[00m for the "op"
1617 capability).
1618
1619 Finally, the "NC" capability (terminfo name: "ncv") tells Emacs which
1620 attributes cannot be used with colors. Setting this capability
1621 incorrectly might have the effect of disabling colors; try setting
1622 this capability to `0' (zero) and see if that helps.
1623
1624 Emacs uses the database entry for the terminal whose name is the value
1625 of the environment variable TERM. With `xterm', a common terminal
1626 entry that supports color is `xterm-color', so setting TERM's value to
1627 `xterm-color' might activate the color support on an xterm-compatible
1628 emulator.
1629
1630 Beginning with version 22.1, Emacs supports the --color command-line
1631 option which may be used to force Emacs to use one of a few popular
1632 modes for getting colors on a tty. For example, --color=ansi8 sets up
1633 for using the ANSI-standard escape sequences that support 8 colors.
1634
1635 Some modes do not use colors unless you turn on the Font-lock mode.
1636 Some people have long ago set their `~/.emacs' files to turn on
1637 Font-lock on X only, so they won't see colors on a tty. The
1638 recommended way of turning on Font-lock is by typing "M-x
1639 global-font-lock-mode RET" or by customizing the variable
1640 `global-font-lock-mode'.
1641
1642 * Runtime problems specific to individual Unix variants
1643
1644 ** GNU/Linux
1645
1646 *** GNU/Linux: Process output is corrupted.
1647
1648 There is a bug in Linux kernel 2.6.10 PTYs that can cause emacs to
1649 read corrupted process output.
1650
1651 *** GNU/Linux: Remote access to CVS with SSH causes file corruption.
1652
1653 If you access a remote CVS repository via SSH, files may be corrupted
1654 due to bad interaction between CVS, SSH, and libc.
1655
1656 To fix the problem, save the following script into a file, make it
1657 executable, and set CVS_RSH environment variable to the file name of
1658 the script:
1659
1660 #!/bin/bash
1661 exec 2> >(exec cat >&2 2>/dev/null)
1662 exec ssh "$@"
1663
1664 *** GNU/Linux: On Linux-based GNU systems using libc versions 5.4.19 through
1665 5.4.22, Emacs crashes at startup with a segmentation fault.
1666
1667 This problem happens if libc defines the symbol __malloc_initialized.
1668 One known solution is to upgrade to a newer libc version. 5.4.33 is
1669 known to work.
1670
1671 *** GNU/Linux: After upgrading to a newer version of Emacs,
1672 the Meta key stops working.
1673
1674 This was reported to happen on a GNU/Linux system distributed by
1675 Mandrake. The reason is that the previous version of Emacs was
1676 modified by Mandrake to make the Alt key act as the Meta key, on a
1677 keyboard where the Windows key is the one which produces the Meta
1678 modifier. A user who started using a newer version of Emacs, which
1679 was not hacked by Mandrake, expected the Alt key to continue to act as
1680 Meta, and was astonished when that didn't happen.
1681
1682 The solution is to find out what key on your keyboard produces the Meta
1683 modifier, and use that key instead. Try all of the keys to the left
1684 and to the right of the space bar, together with the `x' key, and see
1685 which combination produces "M-x" in the echo area. You can also use
1686 the `xmodmap' utility to show all the keys which produce a Meta
1687 modifier:
1688
1689 xmodmap -pk | egrep -i "meta|alt"
1690
1691 A more convenient way of finding out which keys produce a Meta modifier
1692 is to use the `xkbprint' utility, if it's available on your system:
1693
1694 xkbprint 0:0 /tmp/k.ps
1695
1696 This produces a PostScript file `/tmp/k.ps' with a picture of your
1697 keyboard; printing that file on a PostScript printer will show what
1698 keys can serve as Meta.
1699
1700 The `xkeycaps' also shows a visual representation of the current
1701 keyboard settings. It also allows to modify them.
1702
1703 *** GNU/Linux: slow startup on Linux-based GNU systems.
1704
1705 People using systems based on the Linux kernel sometimes report that
1706 startup takes 10 to 15 seconds longer than `usual'.
1707
1708 This is because Emacs looks up the host name when it starts.
1709 Normally, this takes negligible time; the extra delay is due to
1710 improper system configuration. This problem can occur for both
1711 networked and non-networked machines.
1712
1713 Here is how to fix the configuration. It requires being root.
1714
1715 **** Networked Case.
1716
1717 First, make sure the files `/etc/hosts' and `/etc/host.conf' both
1718 exist. The first line in the `/etc/hosts' file should look like this
1719 (replace HOSTNAME with your host name):
1720
1721 127.0.0.1 HOSTNAME
1722
1723 Also make sure that the `/etc/host.conf' files contains the following
1724 lines:
1725
1726 order hosts, bind
1727 multi on
1728
1729 Any changes, permanent and temporary, to the host name should be
1730 indicated in the `/etc/hosts' file, since it acts a limited local
1731 database of addresses and names (e.g., some SLIP connections
1732 dynamically allocate ip addresses).
1733
1734 **** Non-Networked Case.
1735
1736 The solution described in the networked case applies here as well.
1737 However, if you never intend to network your machine, you can use a
1738 simpler solution: create an empty `/etc/host.conf' file. The command
1739 `touch /etc/host.conf' suffices to create the file. The `/etc/hosts'
1740 file is not necessary with this approach.
1741
1742 *** GNU/Linux: Emacs on a tty switches the cursor to large blinking block.
1743
1744 This was reported to happen on some GNU/Linux systems which use
1745 ncurses version 5.0, but could be relevant for other versions as well.
1746 These versions of ncurses come with a `linux' terminfo entry, where
1747 the "cvvis" capability (termcap "vs") is defined as "\E[?25h\E[?8c"
1748 (show cursor, change size). This escape sequence switches on a
1749 blinking hardware text-mode cursor whose size is a full character
1750 cell. This blinking cannot be stopped, since a hardware cursor
1751 always blinks.
1752
1753 A work-around is to redefine the "cvvis" capability so that it
1754 enables a *software* cursor. The software cursor works by inverting
1755 the colors of the character at point, so what you see is a block
1756 cursor that doesn't blink. For this to work, you need to redefine
1757 the "cnorm" capability as well, so that it operates on the software
1758 cursor instead of the hardware cursor.
1759
1760 To this end, run "infocmp linux > linux-term", edit the file
1761 `linux-term' to make both the "cnorm" and "cvvis" capabilities send
1762 the sequence "\E[?25h\E[?17;0;64c", and then run "tic linux-term" to
1763 produce a modified terminfo entry.
1764
1765 Alternatively, if you want a blinking underscore as your Emacs cursor,
1766 change the "cvvis" capability to send the "\E[?25h\E[?0c" command.
1767
1768 *** GNU/Linux: Error messages `internal facep []' happen on GNU/Linux systems.
1769
1770 There is a report that replacing libc.so.5.0.9 with libc.so.5.2.16
1771 caused this to start happening. People are not sure why, but the
1772 problem seems unlikely to be in Emacs itself. Some suspect that it
1773 is actually Xlib which won't work with libc.so.5.2.16.
1774
1775 Using the old library version is a workaround.
1776
1777 ** FreeBSD
1778
1779 *** FreeBSD 2.1.5: useless symbolic links remain in /tmp or other
1780 directories that have the +t bit.
1781
1782 This is because of a kernel bug in FreeBSD 2.1.5 (fixed in 2.2).
1783 Emacs uses symbolic links to implement file locks. In a directory
1784 with +t bit, the directory owner becomes the owner of the symbolic
1785 link, so that it cannot be removed by anyone else.
1786
1787 If you don't like those useless links, you can let Emacs not to using
1788 file lock by adding #undef CLASH_DETECTION to config.h.
1789
1790 *** FreeBSD: Getting a Meta key on the console.
1791
1792 By default, neither Alt nor any other key acts as a Meta key on
1793 FreeBSD, but this can be changed using kbdcontrol(1). Dump the
1794 current keymap to a file with the command
1795
1796 $ kbdcontrol -d >emacs.kbd
1797
1798 Edit emacs.kbd, and give the key you want to be the Meta key the
1799 definition `meta'. For instance, if your keyboard has a ``Windows''
1800 key with scan code 105, change the line for scan code 105 in emacs.kbd
1801 to look like this
1802
1803 105 meta meta meta meta meta meta meta meta O
1804
1805 to make the Windows key the Meta key. Load the new keymap with
1806
1807 $ kbdcontrol -l emacs.kbd
1808
1809 ** HP-UX
1810
1811 *** HP/UX : Shell mode gives the message, "`tty`: Ambiguous".
1812
1813 christos@theory.tn.cornell.edu says:
1814
1815 The problem is that in your .cshrc you have something that tries to
1816 execute `tty`. If you are not running the shell on a real tty then
1817 tty will print "not a tty". Csh expects one word in some places,
1818 but tty is giving it back 3.
1819
1820 The solution is to add a pair of quotes around `tty` to make it a single
1821 word:
1822
1823 if (`tty` == "/dev/console")
1824
1825 should be changed to:
1826
1827 if ("`tty`" == "/dev/console")
1828
1829 Even better, move things that set up terminal sections out of .cshrc
1830 and into .login.
1831
1832 *** HP/UX: `Pid xxx killed due to text modification or page I/O error'.
1833
1834 On HP/UX, you can get that error when the Emacs executable is on an NFS
1835 file system. HP/UX responds this way if it tries to swap in a page and
1836 does not get a response from the server within a timeout whose default
1837 value is just ten seconds.
1838
1839 If this happens to you, extend the timeout period.
1840
1841 *** HP/UX: The right Alt key works wrong on German HP keyboards (and perhaps
1842 other non-English HP keyboards too).
1843
1844 This is because HP-UX defines the modifiers wrong in X. Here is a
1845 shell script to fix the problem; be sure that it is run after VUE
1846 configures the X server.
1847
1848 xmodmap 2> /dev/null - << EOF
1849 keysym Alt_L = Meta_L
1850 keysym Alt_R = Meta_R
1851 EOF
1852
1853 xmodmap - << EOF
1854 clear mod1
1855 keysym Mode_switch = NoSymbol
1856 add mod1 = Meta_L
1857 keysym Meta_R = Mode_switch
1858 add mod2 = Mode_switch
1859 EOF
1860
1861 *** HP/UX: "Cannot find callback list" messages from dialog boxes in
1862 Emacs built with Motif.
1863
1864 This problem resulted from a bug in GCC 2.4.5. Newer GCC versions
1865 such as 2.7.0 fix the problem.
1866
1867 *** HP/UX: Emacs does not recognize the AltGr key.
1868
1869 To fix this, set up a file ~/.dt/sessions/sessionetc with executable
1870 rights, containing this text:
1871
1872 --------------------------------
1873 xmodmap 2> /dev/null - << EOF
1874 keysym Alt_L = Meta_L
1875 keysym Alt_R = Meta_R
1876 EOF
1877
1878 xmodmap - << EOF
1879 clear mod1
1880 keysym Mode_switch = NoSymbol
1881 add mod1 = Meta_L
1882 keysym Meta_R = Mode_switch
1883 add mod2 = Mode_switch
1884 EOF
1885 --------------------------------
1886
1887 *** HP/UX 11.0: Emacs makes HP/UX 11.0 crash.
1888
1889 This is a bug in HPUX; HPUX patch PHKL_16260 is said to fix it.
1890
1891 ** AIX
1892
1893 *** AIX: Trouble using ptys.
1894
1895 People often install the pty devices on AIX incorrectly.
1896 Use `smit pty' to reinstall them properly.
1897
1898 *** AIXterm: Your Delete key sends a Backspace to the terminal.
1899
1900 The solution is to include in your .Xdefaults the lines:
1901
1902 *aixterm.Translations: #override <Key>BackSpace: string(0x7f)
1903 aixterm*ttyModes: erase ^?
1904
1905 This makes your Backspace key send DEL (ASCII 127).
1906
1907 *** AIX: If linking fails because libXbsd isn't found, check if you
1908 are compiling with the system's `cc' and CFLAGS containing `-O5'. If
1909 so, you have hit a compiler bug. Please make sure to re-configure
1910 Emacs so that it isn't compiled with `-O5'.
1911
1912 *** AIX 4.3.x or 4.4: Compiling fails.
1913
1914 This could happen if you use /bin/c89 as your compiler, instead of
1915 the default `cc'. /bin/c89 treats certain warnings, such as benign
1916 redefinitions of macros, as errors, and fails the build. A solution
1917 is to use the default compiler `cc'.
1918
1919 *** AIX 4: Some programs fail when run in a Shell buffer
1920 with an error message like No terminfo entry for "unknown".
1921
1922 On AIX, many terminal type definitions are not installed by default.
1923 `unknown' is one of them. Install the "Special Generic Terminal
1924 Definitions" to make them defined.
1925
1926 ** Solaris
1927
1928 We list bugs in current versions here. See also the section on legacy
1929 systems.
1930
1931 *** On Solaris, C-x doesn't get through to Emacs when you use the console.
1932
1933 This is a Solaris feature (at least on Intel x86 cpus). Type C-r
1934 C-r C-t, to toggle whether C-x gets through to Emacs.
1935
1936 *** Problem with remote X server on Suns.
1937
1938 On a Sun, running Emacs on one machine with the X server on another
1939 may not work if you have used the unshared system libraries. This
1940 is because the unshared libraries fail to use YP for host name lookup.
1941 As a result, the host name you specify may not be recognized.
1942
1943 *** Solaris 2.6: Emacs crashes with SIGBUS or SIGSEGV on Solaris after you delete a frame.
1944
1945 We suspect that this is a bug in the X libraries provided by
1946 Sun. There is a report that one of these patches fixes the bug and
1947 makes the problem stop:
1948
1949 105216-01 105393-01 105518-01 105621-01 105665-01 105615-02 105216-02
1950 105667-01 105401-08 105615-03 105621-02 105686-02 105736-01 105755-03
1951 106033-01 105379-01 105786-01 105181-04 105379-03 105786-04 105845-01
1952 105284-05 105669-02 105837-01 105837-02 105558-01 106125-02 105407-01
1953
1954 Another person using a newer system (kernel patch level Generic_105181-06)
1955 suspects that the bug was fixed by one of these more recent patches:
1956
1957 106040-07 SunOS 5.6: X Input & Output Method patch
1958 106222-01 OpenWindows 3.6: filemgr (ff.core) fixes
1959 105284-12 Motif 1.2.7: sparc Runtime library patch
1960
1961 *** Solaris 7 or 8: Emacs reports a BadAtom error (from X)
1962
1963 This happens when Emacs was built on some other version of Solaris.
1964 Rebuild it on Solaris 8.
1965
1966 *** When using M-x dbx with the SparcWorks debugger, the `up' and `down'
1967 commands do not move the arrow in Emacs.
1968
1969 You can fix this by adding the following line to `~/.dbxinit':
1970
1971 dbxenv output_short_file_name off
1972
1973 *** On Solaris, CTRL-t is ignored by Emacs when you use
1974 the fr.ISO-8859-15 locale (and maybe other related locales).
1975
1976 You can fix this by editing the file:
1977
1978 /usr/openwin/lib/locale/iso8859-15/Compose
1979
1980 Near the bottom there is a line that reads:
1981
1982 Ctrl<t> <quotedbl> <Y> : "\276" threequarters
1983
1984 that should read:
1985
1986 Ctrl<T> <quotedbl> <Y> : "\276" threequarters
1987
1988 Note the lower case <t>. Changing this line should make C-t work.
1989
1990 *** On Solaris, Emacs fails to set menu-bar-update-hook on startup, with error
1991 "Error in menu-bar-update-hook: (error Point before start of properties)".
1992 This seems to be a GCC optimization bug that occurs for GCC 4.1.2 (-g
1993 and -g -O2) and GCC 4.2.3 (-g -O and -g -O2). You can fix this by
1994 compiling with GCC 4.2.3 or CC 5.7, with no optimizations.
1995
1996 ** Irix
1997
1998 *** Irix 6.5: Emacs crashes on the SGI R10K, when compiled with GCC.
1999
2000 This seems to be fixed in GCC 2.95.
2001
2002 *** Irix: Trouble using ptys, or running out of ptys.
2003
2004 The program mkpts (which may be in `/usr/adm' or `/usr/sbin') needs to
2005 be set-UID to root, or non-root programs like Emacs will not be able
2006 to allocate ptys reliably.
2007
2008 * Runtime problems specific to MS-Windows
2009
2010 ** PATH can contain unexpanded environment variables
2011
2012 Old releases of TCC (version 9) and 4NT (up to version 8) do not correctly
2013 expand App Paths entries of type REG_EXPAND_SZ. When Emacs is run from TCC
2014 and such an entry exists for emacs.exe, exec-path will contain the
2015 unexpanded entry. This has been fixed in TCC 10. For more information,
2016 see bug#2062.
2017
2018 ** Setting w32-pass-rwindow-to-system and w32-pass-lwindow-to-system to nil
2019 does not prevent the Start menu from popping up when the left or right
2020 ``Windows'' key is pressed.
2021
2022 This was reported to happen when XKeymacs is installed. At least with
2023 XKeymacs Version 3.47, deactivating XKeymacs when Emacs is active is
2024 not enough to avoid its messing with the keyboard input. Exiting
2025 XKeymacs completely is reported to solve the problem.
2026
2027 ** Windows 95 and networking.
2028
2029 To support server sockets, Emacs 22.1 loads ws2_32.dll. If this file
2030 is missing, all Emacs networking features are disabled.
2031
2032 Old versions of Windows 95 may not have the required DLL. To use
2033 Emacs' networking features on Windows 95, you must install the
2034 "Windows Socket 2" update available from MicroSoft's support Web.
2035
2036 ** Emacs exits with "X protocol error" when run with an X server for MS-Windows.
2037
2038 A certain X server for Windows had a bug which caused this.
2039 Supposedly the newer 32-bit version of this server doesn't have the
2040 problem.
2041
2042 ** Emacs crashes when opening a file with a UNC path and rails-mode is loaded.
2043
2044 Loading rails-mode seems to interfere with UNC path handling. This has been
2045 reported as a bug against both Emacs and rails-mode, so look for an updated
2046 rails-mode that avoids this crash, or avoid using UNC paths if using
2047 rails-mode.
2048
2049 ** Known problems with the MS-Windows port of Emacs 22.3
2050
2051 M-x term does not work on MS-Windows. TTY emulation on Windows is
2052 undocumented, and programs such as stty which are used on posix platforms
2053 to control tty emulation do not exist for native windows terminals.
2054
2055 Using create-fontset-from-ascii-font or the --font startup parameter
2056 with a Chinese, Japanese or Korean font leads to display problems.
2057 Use a Latin-only font as your default font. If you want control over
2058 which font is used to display Chinese, Japanese or Korean character,
2059 use create-fontset-from-fontset-spec to define a fontset.
2060
2061 Frames are not refreshed while the File or Font dialog or a pop-up menu
2062 is displayed. This also means help text for pop-up menus is not
2063 displayed at all. This is because message handling under Windows is
2064 synchronous, so we cannot handle repaint (or any other) messages while
2065 waiting for a system function to return the result of the dialog or
2066 pop-up menu interaction.
2067
2068 Windows 95 and Windows NT up to version 4.0 do not support help text
2069 for menus. Help text is only available in later versions of Windows.
2070
2071 When "ClearType" method is selected as the "method to smooth edges of
2072 screen fonts" (in Display Properties, Appearance tab, under
2073 "Effects"), there are various problems related to display of
2074 characters: Bold fonts can be hard to read, small portions of some
2075 characters could appear chopped, etc. This happens because, under
2076 ClearType, characters are drawn outside their advertised bounding box.
2077 Emacs 21 disabled the use of ClearType, whereas Emacs 22 allows it and
2078 has some code to enlarge the width of the bounding box. Apparently,
2079 this display feature needs more changes to get it 100% right. A
2080 workaround is to disable ClearType.
2081
2082 There are problems with display if mouse-tracking is enabled and the
2083 mouse is moved off a frame, over another frame then back over the first
2084 frame. A workaround is to click the left mouse button inside the frame
2085 after moving back into it.
2086
2087 Some minor flickering still persists during mouse-tracking, although
2088 not as severely as in 21.1.
2089
2090 An inactive cursor remains in an active window after the Windows
2091 Manager driven switch of the focus, until a key is pressed.
2092
2093 Windows input methods are not recognized by Emacs. However, some
2094 of these input methods cause the keyboard to send characters encoded
2095 in the appropriate coding system (e.g., ISO 8859-1 for Latin-1
2096 characters, ISO 8859-8 for Hebrew characters, etc.). To make these
2097 input methods work with Emacs, set the keyboard coding system to the
2098 appropriate value after you activate the Windows input method. For
2099 example, if you activate the Hebrew input method, type this:
2100
2101 C-x RET k hebrew-iso-8bit RET
2102
2103 (Emacs ought to recognize the Windows language-change event and set up
2104 the appropriate keyboard encoding automatically, but it doesn't do
2105 that yet.) In addition, to use these Windows input methods, you
2106 should set your "Language for non-Unicode programs" (on Windows XP,
2107 this is on the Advanced tab of Regional Settings) to the language of
2108 the input method.
2109
2110 To bind keys that produce non-ASCII characters with modifiers, you
2111 must specify raw byte codes. For instance, if you want to bind
2112 META-a-grave to a command, you need to specify this in your `~/.emacs':
2113
2114 (global-set-key [?\M-\340] ...)
2115
2116 The above example is for the Latin-1 environment where the byte code
2117 of the encoded a-grave is 340 octal. For other environments, use the
2118 encoding appropriate to that environment.
2119
2120 The %b specifier for format-time-string does not produce abbreviated
2121 month names with consistent widths for some locales on some versions
2122 of Windows. This is caused by a deficiency in the underlying system
2123 library function.
2124
2125 The function set-time-zone-rule gives incorrect results for many
2126 non-US timezones. This is due to over-simplistic handling of
2127 daylight savings switchovers by the Windows libraries.
2128
2129 Files larger than 4GB cause overflow in the size (represented as a
2130 32-bit integer) reported by `file-attributes'. This affects Dired as
2131 well, since the Windows port uses a Lisp emulation of `ls' that relies
2132 on `file-attributes'.
2133
2134 Sound playing is not supported with the `:data DATA' key-value pair.
2135 You _must_ use the `:file FILE' method.
2136
2137 ** Typing Alt-Shift has strange effects on MS-Windows.
2138
2139 This combination of keys is a command to change keyboard layout. If
2140 you proceed to type another non-modifier key before you let go of Alt
2141 and Shift, the Alt and Shift act as modifiers in the usual way. A
2142 more permanent work around is to change it to another key combination,
2143 or disable it in the "Regional and Language Options" applet of the
2144 Control Panel. (The exact sequence of mouse clicks in the "Regional
2145 and Language Options" applet needed to find the key combination that
2146 changes the keyboard layout depends on your Windows version; for XP,
2147 in the Languages tab, click "Details" and then "Key Settings".)
2148
2149 ** Interrupting Cygwin port of Bash from Emacs doesn't work.
2150
2151 Cygwin 1.x builds of the ported Bash cannot be interrupted from the
2152 MS-Windows version of Emacs. This is due to some change in the Bash
2153 port or in the Cygwin library which apparently make Bash ignore the
2154 keyboard interrupt event sent by Emacs to Bash. (Older Cygwin ports
2155 of Bash, up to b20.1, did receive SIGINT from Emacs.)
2156
2157 ** Accessing remote files with ange-ftp hangs the MS-Windows version of Emacs.
2158
2159 If the FTP client is the Cygwin port of GNU `ftp', this appears to be
2160 due to some bug in the Cygwin DLL or some incompatibility between it
2161 and the implementation of asynchronous subprocesses in the Windows
2162 port of Emacs. Specifically, some parts of the FTP server responses
2163 are not flushed out, apparently due to buffering issues, which
2164 confuses ange-ftp.
2165
2166 The solution is to downgrade to an older version of the Cygwin DLL
2167 (version 1.3.2 was reported to solve the problem), or use the stock
2168 Windows FTP client, usually found in the `C:\WINDOWS' or 'C:\WINNT'
2169 directory. To force ange-ftp use the stock Windows client, set the
2170 variable `ange-ftp-ftp-program-name' to the absolute file name of the
2171 client's executable. For example:
2172
2173 (setq ange-ftp-ftp-program-name "c:/windows/ftp.exe")
2174
2175 If you want to stick with the Cygwin FTP client, you can work around
2176 this problem by putting this in your `.emacs' file:
2177
2178 (setq ange-ftp-ftp-program-args '("-i" "-n" "-g" "-v" "--prompt" "")
2179
2180 ** lpr commands don't work on MS-Windows with some cheap printers.
2181
2182 This problem may also strike other platforms, but the solution is
2183 likely to be a global one, and not Emacs specific.
2184
2185 Many cheap inkjet, and even some cheap laser printers, do not
2186 print plain text anymore, they will only print through graphical
2187 printer drivers. A workaround on MS-Windows is to use Windows' basic
2188 built in editor to print (this is possibly the only useful purpose it
2189 has):
2190
2191 (setq printer-name "") ;; notepad takes the default
2192 (setq lpr-command "notepad") ;; notepad
2193 (setq lpr-switches nil) ;; not needed
2194 (setq lpr-printer-switch "/P") ;; run notepad as batch printer
2195
2196 ** Antivirus software interacts badly with the MS-Windows version of Emacs.
2197
2198 The usual manifestation of these problems is that subprocesses don't
2199 work or even wedge the entire system. In particular, "M-x shell RET"
2200 was reported to fail to work. But other commands also sometimes don't
2201 work when an antivirus package is installed.
2202
2203 The solution is to switch the antivirus software to a less aggressive
2204 mode (e.g., disable the ``auto-protect'' feature), or even uninstall
2205 or disable it entirely.
2206
2207 ** Pressing the mouse button on MS-Windows does not give a mouse-2 event.
2208
2209 This is usually a problem with the mouse driver. Because most Windows
2210 programs do not do anything useful with the middle mouse button, many
2211 mouse drivers allow you to define the wheel press to do something
2212 different. Some drivers do not even have the option to generate a
2213 middle button press. In such cases, setting the wheel press to
2214 "scroll" sometimes works if you press the button twice. Trying a
2215 generic mouse driver might help.
2216
2217 ** Scrolling the mouse wheel on MS-Windows always scrolls the top window.
2218
2219 This is another common problem with mouse drivers. Instead of
2220 generating scroll events, some mouse drivers try to fake scroll bar
2221 movement. But they are not intelligent enough to handle multiple
2222 scroll bars within a frame. Trying a generic mouse driver might help.
2223
2224 ** Mail sent through Microsoft Exchange in some encodings appears to be
2225 mangled and is not seen correctly in Rmail or Gnus. We don't know
2226 exactly what happens, but it isn't an Emacs problem in cases we've
2227 seen.
2228
2229 ** On MS-Windows, you cannot use the right-hand ALT key and the left-hand
2230 CTRL key together to type a Control-Meta character.
2231
2232 This is a consequence of a misfeature beyond Emacs's control.
2233
2234 Under Windows, the AltGr key on international keyboards generates key
2235 events with the modifiers Right-Alt and Left-Ctrl. Since Emacs cannot
2236 distinguish AltGr from an explicit Right-Alt and Left-Ctrl
2237 combination, whenever it sees Right-Alt and Left-Ctrl it assumes that
2238 AltGr has been pressed. The variable `w32-recognize-altgr' can be set
2239 to nil to tell Emacs that AltGr is really Ctrl and Alt.
2240
2241 ** Under some X-servers running on MS-Windows, Emacs' display is incorrect.
2242
2243 The symptoms are that Emacs does not completely erase blank areas of the
2244 screen during scrolling or some other screen operations (e.g., selective
2245 display or when killing a region). M-x recenter will cause the screen
2246 to be completely redisplayed and the "extra" characters will disappear.
2247
2248 This is known to occur under Exceed 6, and possibly earlier versions
2249 as well; it is reportedly solved in version 6.2.0.16 and later. The
2250 problem lies in the X-server settings.
2251
2252 There are reports that you can solve the problem with Exceed by
2253 running `Xconfig' from within NT, choosing "X selection", then
2254 un-checking the boxes "auto-copy X selection" and "auto-paste to X
2255 selection".
2256
2257 Of this does not work, please inform bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org. Then
2258 please call support for your X-server and see if you can get a fix.
2259 If you do, please send it to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org so we can list it here.
2260
2261 * Build-time problems
2262
2263 ** Configuration
2264
2265 *** The `configure' script doesn't find the jpeg library.
2266
2267 There are reports that this happens on some systems because the linker
2268 by default only looks for shared libraries, but jpeg distribution by
2269 default only installs a nonshared version of the library, `libjpeg.a'.
2270
2271 If this is the problem, you can configure the jpeg library with the
2272 `--enable-shared' option and then rebuild libjpeg. This produces a
2273 shared version of libjpeg, which you need to install. Finally, rerun
2274 the Emacs configure script, which should now find the jpeg library.
2275 Alternatively, modify the generated src/Makefile to link the .a file
2276 explicitly, and edit src/config.h to define HAVE_JPEG.
2277
2278 *** `configure' warns ``accepted by the compiler, rejected by the preprocessor''.
2279
2280 This indicates a mismatch between the C compiler and preprocessor that
2281 configure is using. For example, on Solaris 10 trying to use
2282 CC=/opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc (the Sun Studio compiler) together with
2283 CPP=/usr/ccs/lib/cpp can result in errors of this form (you may also
2284 see the error ``"/usr/include/sys/isa_defs.h", line 500: undefined control'').
2285
2286 The solution is to tell configure to use the correct C preprocessor
2287 for your C compiler (CPP="/opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc -E" in the above
2288 example).
2289
2290 ** Compilation
2291
2292 *** Building Emacs over NFS fails with ``Text file busy''.
2293
2294 This was reported to happen when building Emacs on a GNU/Linux system
2295 (Red Hat Linux 6.2) using a build directory automounted from Solaris
2296 (SunOS 5.6) file server, but it might not be limited to that
2297 configuration alone. Presumably, the NFS server doesn't commit the
2298 files' data to disk quickly enough, and the Emacs executable file is
2299 left ``busy'' for several seconds after Emacs has finished dumping
2300 itself. This causes the subsequent commands which invoke the dumped
2301 Emacs executable to fail with the above message.
2302
2303 In some of these cases, a time skew between the NFS server and the
2304 machine where Emacs is built is detected and reported by GNU Make
2305 (it says that some of the files have modification time in the future).
2306 This might be a symptom of NFS-related problems.
2307
2308 If the NFS server runs on Solaris, apply the Solaris patch 105379-05
2309 (Sunos 5.6: /kernel/misc/nfssrv patch). If that doesn't work, or if
2310 you have a different version of the OS or the NFS server, you can
2311 force the NFS server to use 1KB blocks, which was reported to fix the
2312 problem albeit at a price of slowing down file I/O. You can force 1KB
2313 blocks by specifying the "-o rsize=1024,wsize=1024" options to the
2314 `mount' command, or by adding ",rsize=1024,wsize=1024" to the mount
2315 options in the appropriate system configuration file, such as
2316 `/etc/auto.home'.
2317
2318 Alternatively, when Make fails due to this problem, you could wait for
2319 a few seconds and then invoke Make again. In one particular case,
2320 waiting for 10 or more seconds between the two Make invocations seemed
2321 to work around the problem.
2322
2323 Similar problems can happen if your machine NFS-mounts a directory
2324 onto itself. Suppose the Emacs sources live in `/usr/local/src' and
2325 you are working on the host called `marvin'. Then an entry in the
2326 `/etc/fstab' file like the following is asking for trouble:
2327
2328 marvin:/usr/local/src /usr/local/src ...options.omitted...
2329
2330 The solution is to remove this line from `etc/fstab'.
2331
2332 *** Building a 32-bit executable on a 64-bit GNU/Linux architecture.
2333
2334 First ensure that the necessary 32-bit system libraries and include
2335 files are installed. Then use:
2336
2337 env CC="gcc -m32" ./configure --build=i386-linux-gnu \
2338 --x-libraries=/usr/X11R6/lib
2339
2340 (using the location of the 32-bit X libraries on your system).
2341
2342 *** Building Emacs for Cygwin can fail with GCC 3
2343
2344 As of Emacs 22.1, there have been stability problems with Cygwin
2345 builds of Emacs using GCC 3. Cygwin users are advised to use GCC 4.
2346
2347 *** Building the native MS-Windows port fails due to unresolved externals
2348
2349 The linker error messages look like this:
2350
2351 oo-spd/i386/ctags.o:ctags.c:(.text+0x156e): undefined reference to `_imp__re_set_syntax'
2352 collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
2353
2354 This happens because GCC finds an incompatible header regex.h
2355 somewhere on the include path, before the version of regex.h supplied
2356 with Emacs. One such incompatible version of regex.h is part of the
2357 GnuWin32 Regex package.
2358
2359 The solution is to remove the incompatible regex.h from the include
2360 path, when compiling Emacs. Alternatively, re-run the configure.bat
2361 script with the "-isystem C:/GnuWin32/include" switch (adapt for your
2362 system's place where you keep the GnuWin32 include files) -- this will
2363 cause the compiler to search headers in the directories specified by
2364 the Emacs Makefile _before_ it looks in the GnuWin32 include
2365 directories.
2366
2367 *** Building the native MS-Windows port with Cygwin GCC can fail.
2368
2369 Emacs may not build using some Cygwin builds of GCC, such as Cygwin
2370 version 1.1.8, using the default configure settings. It appears to be
2371 necessary to specify the -mwin32 flag when compiling, and define
2372 __MSVCRT__, like so:
2373
2374 configure --with-gcc --cflags -mwin32 --cflags -D__MSVCRT__
2375
2376 *** Building the MS-Windows port fails with a CreateProcess failure.
2377
2378 Some versions of mingw32 make on some versions of Windows do not seem
2379 to detect the shell correctly. Try "make SHELL=cmd.exe", or if that
2380 fails, try running make from Cygwin bash instead.
2381
2382 *** Building `ctags' for MS-Windows with the MinGW port of GCC fails.
2383
2384 This might happen due to a bug in the MinGW header assert.h, which
2385 defines the `assert' macro with a trailing semi-colon. The following
2386 patch to assert.h should solve this:
2387
2388 *** include/assert.h.orig Sun Nov 7 02:41:36 1999
2389 --- include/assert.h Mon Jan 29 11:49:10 2001
2390 ***************
2391 *** 41,47 ****
2392 /*
2393 * If not debugging, assert does nothing.
2394 */
2395 ! #define assert(x) ((void)0);
2396
2397 #else /* debugging enabled */
2398
2399 --- 41,47 ----
2400 /*
2401 * If not debugging, assert does nothing.
2402 */
2403 ! #define assert(x) ((void)0)
2404
2405 #else /* debugging enabled */
2406
2407
2408 *** Building the MS-Windows port with Visual Studio 2005 fails.
2409
2410 Microsoft no longer ships the single threaded version of the C library
2411 with their compiler, and the multithreaded static library is missing
2412 some functions that Microsoft have deemed non-threadsafe. The
2413 dynamically linked C library has all the functions, but there is a
2414 conflict between the versions of malloc in the DLL and in Emacs, which
2415 is not resolvable due to the way Windows does dynamic linking.
2416
2417 We recommend the use of the MinGW port of GCC for compiling Emacs, as
2418 not only does it not suffer these problems, but it is also Free
2419 software like Emacs.
2420
2421 *** Building the MS-Windows port with Visual Studio fails compiling emacs.rc
2422
2423 If the build fails with the following message then the problem
2424 described here most likely applies:
2425
2426 ../nt/emacs.rc(1) : error RC2176 : old DIB in icons\emacs.ico; pass it
2427 through SDKPAINT
2428
2429 The Emacs icon contains a high resolution PNG icon for Vista, which is
2430 not recognized by older versions of the resource compiler. There are
2431 several workarounds for this problem:
2432 1. Use Free MinGW tools to compile, which do not have this problem.
2433 2. Install the latest Windows SDK.
2434 3. Replace emacs.ico with an older or edited icon.
2435
2436 ** Linking
2437
2438 *** Building Emacs with a system compiler fails to link because of an
2439 undefined symbol such as __eprintf which does not appear in Emacs.
2440
2441 This can happen if some of the libraries linked into Emacs were built
2442 with GCC, but Emacs itself is being linked with a compiler other than
2443 GCC. Object files compiled with GCC might need some helper functions
2444 from libgcc.a, the library which comes with GCC, but the system
2445 compiler does not instruct the linker to search libgcc.a during the
2446 link stage.
2447
2448 A solution is to link with GCC, like this:
2449
2450 make CC=gcc
2451
2452 Since the .o object files already exist, this will not recompile Emacs
2453 with GCC, but just restart by trying again to link temacs.
2454
2455 *** Sun with acc: Link failure when using acc on a Sun.
2456
2457 To use acc, you need additional options just before the libraries, such as
2458
2459 /usr/lang/SC2.0.1/values-Xt.o -L/usr/lang/SC2.0.1/cg87 -L/usr/lang/SC2.0.1
2460
2461 and you need to add -lansi just before -lc.
2462
2463 The precise file names depend on the compiler version, so we
2464 cannot easily arrange to supply them.
2465
2466 *** Linking says that the functions insque and remque are undefined.
2467
2468 Change oldXMenu/Makefile by adding insque.o to the variable OBJS.
2469
2470 *** `tparam' reported as a multiply-defined symbol when linking with ncurses.
2471
2472 This problem results from an incompatible change in ncurses, in
2473 version 1.9.9e approximately. This version is unable to provide a
2474 definition of tparm without also defining tparam. This is also
2475 incompatible with Terminfo; as a result, the Emacs Terminfo support
2476 does not work with this version of ncurses.
2477
2478 The fix is to install a newer version of ncurses, such as version 4.2.
2479
2480 ** Bootstrapping
2481
2482 Bootstrapping (compiling the .el files) is normally only necessary
2483 with development builds, since the .elc files are pre-compiled in releases.
2484
2485 *** "No rule to make target" with Ubuntu 8.04 make 3.81-3build1
2486
2487 Compiling the lisp files fails at random places, complaining:
2488 "No rule to make target `/path/to/some/lisp.elc'".
2489 The causes of this problem are not understood. Using GNU make 3.81 compiled
2490 from source, rather than the Ubuntu version, worked. See Bug#327,821.
2491
2492 ** Dumping
2493
2494 *** Linux: Segfault during `make bootstrap' under certain recent versions of the Linux kernel.
2495
2496 With certain recent Linux kernels (like the one of Red Hat Fedora Core
2497 1 and newer), the new "Exec-shield" functionality is enabled by default, which
2498 creates a different memory layout that breaks the emacs dumper. Emacs tries
2499 to handle this at build time, but if the workaround used fails, these
2500 instructions can be useful.
2501 The work-around explained here is not enough on Fedora Core 4 (and possible
2502 newer). Read the next item.
2503
2504 Configure can overcome the problem of exec-shield if the architecture is
2505 x86 and the program setarch is present. On other architectures no
2506 workaround is known.
2507
2508 You can check the Exec-shield state like this:
2509
2510 cat /proc/sys/kernel/exec-shield
2511
2512 It returns non-zero when Exec-shield is enabled, 0 otherwise. Please
2513 read your system documentation for more details on Exec-shield and
2514 associated commands. Exec-shield can be turned off with this command:
2515
2516 echo "0" > /proc/sys/kernel/exec-shield
2517
2518 When Exec-shield is enabled, building Emacs will segfault during the
2519 execution of this command:
2520
2521 ./temacs --batch --load loadup [dump|bootstrap]
2522
2523 To work around this problem, it is necessary to temporarily disable
2524 Exec-shield while building Emacs, or, on x86, by using the `setarch'
2525 command when running temacs like this:
2526
2527 setarch i386 ./temacs --batch --load loadup [dump|bootstrap]
2528
2529
2530 *** Fedora Core 4 GNU/Linux: Segfault during dumping.
2531
2532 In addition to exec-shield explained above "Linux: Segfault during
2533 `make bootstrap' under certain recent versions of the Linux kernel"
2534 item, Linux kernel shipped with Fedora Core 4 randomizes the virtual
2535 address space of a process. As the result dumping may fail even if
2536 you turn off exec-shield. In this case, use the -R option to the setarch
2537 command:
2538
2539 setarch i386 -R ./temacs --batch --load loadup [dump|bootstrap]
2540
2541 or
2542
2543 setarch i386 -R make bootstrap
2544
2545 *** Fatal signal in the command temacs -l loadup inc dump.
2546
2547 This command is the final stage of building Emacs. It is run by the
2548 Makefile in the src subdirectory.
2549
2550 It has been known to get fatal errors due to insufficient swapping
2551 space available on the machine.
2552
2553 On 68000s, it has also happened because of bugs in the
2554 subroutine `alloca'. Verify that `alloca' works right, even
2555 for large blocks (many pages).
2556
2557 *** test-distrib says that the distribution has been clobbered.
2558 *** or, temacs prints "Command key out of range 0-127".
2559 *** or, temacs runs and dumps emacs, but emacs totally fails to work.
2560 *** or, temacs gets errors dumping emacs.
2561
2562 This can be because the .elc files have been garbled. Do not be
2563 fooled by the fact that most of a .elc file is text: these are
2564 binary files and can contain all 256 byte values.
2565
2566 In particular `shar' cannot be used for transmitting GNU Emacs.
2567 It typically truncates "lines". What appear to be "lines" in
2568 a binary file can of course be of any length. Even once `shar'
2569 itself is made to work correctly, `sh' discards null characters
2570 when unpacking the shell archive.
2571
2572 I have also seen character \177 changed into \377. I do not know
2573 what transfer means caused this problem. Various network
2574 file transfer programs are suspected of clobbering the high bit.
2575
2576 If you have a copy of Emacs that has been damaged in its
2577 nonprinting characters, you can fix them:
2578
2579 1) Record the names of all the .elc files.
2580 2) Delete all the .elc files.
2581 3) Recompile alloc.c with a value of PURESIZE twice as large.
2582 (See puresize.h.) You might as well save the old alloc.o.
2583 4) Remake emacs. It should work now.
2584 5) Running emacs, do Meta-x byte-compile-file repeatedly
2585 to recreate all the .elc files that used to exist.
2586 You may need to increase the value of the variable
2587 max-lisp-eval-depth to succeed in running the compiler interpreted
2588 on certain .el files. 400 was sufficient as of last report.
2589 6) Reinstall the old alloc.o (undoing changes to alloc.c if any)
2590 and remake temacs.
2591 7) Remake emacs. It should work now, with valid .elc files.
2592
2593 *** temacs prints "Pure Lisp storage exhausted".
2594
2595 This means that the Lisp code loaded from the .elc and .el files
2596 during temacs -l loadup inc dump took up more space than was allocated.
2597
2598 This could be caused by
2599 1) adding code to the preloaded Lisp files
2600 2) adding more preloaded files in loadup.el
2601 3) having a site-init.el or site-load.el which loads files.
2602 Note that ANY site-init.el or site-load.el is nonstandard;
2603 if you have received Emacs from some other site and it contains a
2604 site-init.el or site-load.el file, consider deleting that file.
2605 4) getting the wrong .el or .elc files
2606 (not from the directory you expected).
2607 5) deleting some .elc files that are supposed to exist.
2608 This would cause the source files (.el files) to be
2609 loaded instead. They take up more room, so you lose.
2610 6) a bug in the Emacs distribution which underestimates the space required.
2611
2612 If the need for more space is legitimate, change the definition
2613 of PURESIZE in puresize.h.
2614
2615 But in some of the cases listed above, this problem is a consequence
2616 of something else that is wrong. Be sure to check and fix the real problem.
2617
2618 *** Linux: Emacs crashes when dumping itself on Mac PPC running Yellow Dog GNU/Linux.
2619
2620 The crashes happen inside the function Fmake_symbol; here's a typical
2621 C backtrace printed by GDB:
2622
2623 0x190c0c0 in Fmake_symbol ()
2624 (gdb) where
2625 #0 0x190c0c0 in Fmake_symbol ()
2626 #1 0x1942ca4 in init_obarray ()
2627 #2 0x18b3500 in main ()
2628 #3 0x114371c in __libc_start_main (argc=5, argv=0x7ffff5b4, envp=0x7ffff5cc,
2629
2630 This could happen because GCC version 2.95 and later changed the base
2631 of the load address to 0x10000000. Emacs needs to be told about this,
2632 but we currently cannot do that automatically, because that breaks
2633 other versions of GNU/Linux on the MacPPC. Until we find a way to
2634 distinguish between the Yellow Dog and the other varieties of
2635 GNU/Linux systems on the PPC, you will have to manually uncomment the
2636 following section near the end of the file src/m/macppc.h in the Emacs
2637 distribution:
2638
2639 #if 0 /* This breaks things on PPC GNU/Linux except for Yellowdog,
2640 even with identical GCC, as, ld. Let's take it out until we
2641 know what's really going on here. */
2642 /* GCC 2.95 and newer on GNU/Linux PPC changed the load address to
2643 0x10000000. */
2644 #if defined __linux__
2645 #if __GNUC__ > 2 || (__GNUC__ == 2 && __GNUC_MINOR__ >= 95)
2646 #define DATA_SEG_BITS 0x10000000
2647 #endif
2648 #endif
2649 #endif /* 0 */
2650
2651 Remove the "#if 0" and "#endif" directives which surround this, save
2652 the file, and then reconfigure and rebuild Emacs. The dumping process
2653 should now succeed.
2654
2655 *** OpenBSD 4.0 macppc: Segfault during dumping.
2656
2657 The build aborts with signal 11 when the command `./temacs --batch
2658 --load loadup bootstrap' tries to load files.el. A workaround seems
2659 to be to reduce the level of compiler optimization used during the
2660 build (from -O2 to -O1). It is possible this is an OpenBSD
2661 GCC problem specific to the macppc architecture, possibly only
2662 occurring with older versions of GCC (e.g. 3.3.5).
2663
2664 *** openSUSE 10.3: Segfault in bcopy during dumping.
2665
2666 This is due to a bug in the bcopy implementation in openSUSE 10.3.
2667 It is/will be fixed in an openSUSE update.
2668
2669 ** Installation
2670
2671 *** Installing Emacs gets an error running `install-info'.
2672
2673 You need to install a recent version of Texinfo; that package
2674 supplies the `install-info' command.
2675
2676 *** Installing to a directory with spaces in the name fails.
2677
2678 For example, if you call configure with a directory-related option
2679 with spaces in the value, eg --enable-locallisppath='/path/with\ spaces'.
2680 Using directory paths with spaces is not supported at this time: you
2681 must re-configure without using spaces.
2682
2683 *** Installing to a directory with non-ASCII characters in the name fails.
2684
2685 Installation may fail, or the Emacs executable may not start
2686 correctly, if a directory name containing non-ASCII characters is used
2687 as a `configure' argument (e.g. `--prefix'). The problem can also
2688 occur if a non-ASCII directory is specified in the EMACSLOADPATH
2689 envvar.
2690
2691 *** On Solaris, use GNU Make when installing an out-of-tree build
2692
2693 The Emacs configuration process allows you to configure the
2694 build environment so that you can build emacs in a directory
2695 outside of the distribution tree. When installing Emacs from an
2696 out-of-tree build directory on Solaris, you may need to use GNU
2697 make. The make programs bundled with Solaris support the VPATH
2698 macro but use it differently from the way the VPATH macro is
2699 used by GNU make. The differences will cause the "make install"
2700 step to fail, leaving you with an incomplete emacs
2701 installation. GNU make is available in /usr/sfw/bin on Solaris
2702 10 and can be installed as /opt/sfw/bin/gmake from the Solaris 9
2703 Software Companion CDROM.
2704
2705 The problems due to the VPATH processing differences affect only
2706 out of tree builds so, if you are on a Solaris installation
2707 without GNU make, you can install Emacs completely by installing
2708 from a build environment using the original emacs distribution tree.
2709
2710 ** First execution
2711
2712 *** Emacs binary is not in executable format, and cannot be run.
2713
2714 This was reported to happen when Emacs is built in a directory mounted
2715 via NFS, for some combinations of NFS client and NFS server.
2716 Usually, the file `emacs' produced in these cases is full of
2717 binary null characters, and the `file' utility says:
2718
2719 emacs: ASCII text, with no line terminators
2720
2721 We don't know what exactly causes this failure. A work-around is to
2722 build Emacs in a directory on a local disk.
2723
2724 *** The dumped Emacs crashes when run, trying to write pure data.
2725
2726 Two causes have been seen for such problems.
2727
2728 1) On a system where getpagesize is not a system call, it is defined
2729 as a macro. If the definition (in both unexec.c and malloc.c) is wrong,
2730 it can cause problems like this. You might be able to find the correct
2731 value in the man page for a.out (5).
2732
2733 2) Some systems allocate variables declared static among the
2734 initialized variables. Emacs makes all initialized variables in most
2735 of its files pure after dumping, but the variables declared static and
2736 not initialized are not supposed to be pure. On these systems you
2737 may need to add "#define static" to the m- or the s- file.
2738
2739 * Runtime problems on legacy systems
2740
2741 This section covers bugs reported on very old hardware or software.
2742 If you are using hardware and an operating system shipped after 2000,
2743 it is unlikely you will see any of these.
2744
2745 *** OPENSTEP 4.2: Compiling syntax.c with gcc 2.7.2.1 fails.
2746
2747 The compiler was reported to crash while compiling syntax.c with the
2748 following message:
2749
2750 cc: Internal compiler error: program cc1obj got fatal signal 11
2751
2752 To work around this, replace the macros UPDATE_SYNTAX_TABLE_FORWARD,
2753 INC_BOTH, and INC_FROM with functions. To this end, first define 3
2754 functions, one each for every macro. Here's an example:
2755
2756 static int update_syntax_table_forward(int from)
2757 {
2758 return(UPDATE_SYNTAX_TABLE_FORWARD(from));
2759 }/*update_syntax_table_forward*/
2760
2761 Then replace all references to UPDATE_SYNTAX_TABLE_FORWARD in syntax.c
2762 with a call to the function update_syntax_table_forward.
2763
2764 *** Solaris 2.x
2765
2766 **** Strange results from format %d in a few cases, on a Sun.
2767
2768 Sun compiler version SC3.0 has been found to miscompile part of
2769 editfns.c. The workaround is to compile with some other compiler such
2770 as GCC.
2771
2772 **** On Solaris, Emacs dumps core if lisp-complete-symbol is called.
2773
2774 If you compile Emacs with the -fast or -xO4 option with version 3.0.2
2775 of the Sun C compiler, Emacs dumps core when lisp-complete-symbol is
2776 called. The problem does not happen if you compile with GCC.
2777
2778 **** On Solaris, Emacs crashes if you use (display-time).
2779
2780 This can happen if you configure Emacs without specifying the precise
2781 version of Solaris that you are using.
2782
2783 **** Solaris 2.x: GCC complains "64 bit integer types not supported".
2784
2785 This suggests that GCC is not installed correctly. Most likely you
2786 are using GCC 2.7.2.3 (or earlier) on Solaris 2.6 (or later); this
2787 does not work without patching. To run GCC 2.7.2.3 on Solaris 2.6 or
2788 later, you must patch fixinc.svr4 and reinstall GCC from scratch as
2789 described in the Solaris FAQ
2790 <http://www.wins.uva.nl/pub/solaris/solaris2.html>. A better fix is
2791 to upgrade to GCC 2.8.1 or later.
2792
2793 **** Solaris 2.7: Building Emacs with WorkShop Compilers 5.0 98/12/15
2794 C 5.0 failed, apparently with non-default CFLAGS, most probably due to
2795 compiler bugs. Using Sun Solaris 2.7 Sun WorkShop 6 update 1 C
2796 release was reported to work without problems. It worked OK on
2797 another system with Solaris 8 using apparently the same 5.0 compiler
2798 and the default CFLAGS.
2799
2800 **** Solaris 2.x: Emacs dumps core when built with Motif.
2801
2802 The Solaris Motif libraries are buggy, at least up through Solaris 2.5.1.
2803 Install the current Motif runtime library patch appropriate for your host.
2804 (Make sure the patch is current; some older patch versions still have the bug.)
2805 You should install the other patches recommended by Sun for your host, too.
2806 You can obtain Sun patches from ftp://sunsolve.sun.com/pub/patches/;
2807 look for files with names ending in `.PatchReport' to see which patches
2808 are currently recommended for your host.
2809
2810 On Solaris 2.6, Emacs is said to work with Motif when Solaris patch
2811 105284-12 is installed, but fail when 105284-15 is installed.
2812 105284-18 might fix it again.
2813
2814 **** Solaris 2.6 and 7: the Compose key does not work.
2815
2816 This is a bug in Motif in Solaris. Supposedly it has been fixed for
2817 the next major release of Solaris. However, if someone with Sun
2818 support complains to Sun about the bug, they may release a patch.
2819 If you do this, mention Sun bug #4188711.
2820
2821 One workaround is to use a locale that allows non-ASCII characters.
2822 For example, before invoking emacs, set the LC_ALL environment
2823 variable to "en_US" (American English). The directory /usr/lib/locale
2824 lists the supported locales; any locale other than "C" or "POSIX"
2825 should do.
2826
2827 pen@lysator.liu.se says (Feb 1998) that the Compose key does work
2828 if you link with the MIT X11 libraries instead of the Solaris X11 libraries.
2829
2830 *** HP/UX 10: Large file support is disabled.
2831 (HP/UX 10 was end-of-lifed in May 1999.)
2832 See the comments in src/s/hpux10-20.h.
2833
2834 *** HP/UX: Emacs is slow using X11R5.
2835
2836 This happens if you use the MIT versions of the X libraries--it
2837 doesn't run as fast as HP's version. People sometimes use the version
2838 because they see the HP version doesn't have the libraries libXaw.a,
2839 libXmu.a, libXext.a and others. HP/UX normally doesn't come with
2840 those libraries installed. To get good performance, you need to
2841 install them and rebuild Emacs.
2842
2843 *** UnixWare 2.1: Error 12 (virtual memory exceeded) when dumping Emacs.
2844
2845 Paul Abrahams (abrahams@acm.org) reports that with the installed
2846 virtual memory settings for UnixWare 2.1.2, an Error 12 occurs during
2847 the "make" that builds Emacs, when running temacs to dump emacs. That
2848 error indicates that the per-process virtual memory limit has been
2849 exceeded. The default limit is probably 32MB. Raising the virtual
2850 memory limit to 40MB should make it possible to finish building Emacs.
2851
2852 You can do this with the command `ulimit' (sh) or `limit' (csh).
2853 But you have to be root to do it.
2854
2855 According to Martin Sohnius, you can also retune this in the kernel:
2856
2857 # /etc/conf/bin/idtune SDATLIM 33554432 ## soft data size limit
2858 # /etc/conf/bin/idtune HDATLIM 33554432 ## hard "
2859 # /etc/conf/bin/idtune SVMMSIZE unlimited ## soft process size limit
2860 # /etc/conf/bin/idtune HVMMSIZE unlimited ## hard "
2861 # /etc/conf/bin/idbuild -B
2862
2863 (He recommends you not change the stack limit, though.)
2864 These changes take effect when you reboot.
2865
2866 ** MS-Windows 95, 98, ME, and NT
2867
2868 *** MS-Windows NT/95: Problems running Perl under Emacs
2869
2870 `perl -de 0' just hangs when executed in an Emacs subshell.
2871 The fault lies with Perl (indirectly with Windows NT/95).
2872
2873 The problem is that the Perl debugger explicitly opens a connection to
2874 "CON", which is the DOS/NT equivalent of "/dev/tty", for interacting
2875 with the user.
2876
2877 On Unix, this is okay, because Emacs (or the shell?) creates a
2878 pseudo-tty so that /dev/tty is really the pipe Emacs is using to
2879 communicate with the subprocess.
2880
2881 On NT, this fails because CON always refers to the handle for the
2882 relevant console (approximately equivalent to a tty), and cannot be
2883 redirected to refer to the pipe Emacs assigned to the subprocess as
2884 stdin.
2885
2886 A workaround is to modify perldb.pl to use STDIN/STDOUT instead of CON.
2887
2888 For Perl 4:
2889
2890 *** PERL/LIB/PERLDB.PL.orig Wed May 26 08:24:18 1993
2891 --- PERL/LIB/PERLDB.PL Mon Jul 01 15:28:16 1996
2892 ***************
2893 *** 68,74 ****
2894 $rcfile=".perldb";
2895 }
2896 else {
2897 ! $console = "con";
2898 $rcfile="perldb.ini";
2899 }
2900
2901 --- 68,74 ----
2902 $rcfile=".perldb";
2903 }
2904 else {
2905 ! $console = "";
2906 $rcfile="perldb.ini";
2907 }
2908
2909
2910 For Perl 5:
2911 *** perl/5.001/lib/perl5db.pl.orig Sun Jun 04 21:13:40 1995
2912 --- perl/5.001/lib/perl5db.pl Mon Jul 01 17:00:08 1996
2913 ***************
2914 *** 22,28 ****
2915 $rcfile=".perldb";
2916 }
2917 elsif (-e "con") {
2918 ! $console = "con";
2919 $rcfile="perldb.ini";
2920 }
2921 else {
2922 --- 22,28 ----
2923 $rcfile=".perldb";
2924 }
2925 elsif (-e "con") {
2926 ! $console = "";
2927 $rcfile="perldb.ini";
2928 }
2929 else {
2930
2931 *** MS-Windows 95: Alt-f6 does not get through to Emacs.
2932
2933 This character seems to be trapped by the kernel in Windows 95.
2934 You can enter M-f6 by typing ESC f6.
2935
2936 *** MS-Windows 95/98/ME: subprocesses do not terminate properly.
2937
2938 This is a limitation of the Operating System, and can cause problems
2939 when shutting down Windows. Ensure that all subprocesses are exited
2940 cleanly before exiting Emacs. For more details, see the FAQ at
2941 http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/windows/.
2942
2943 *** MS-Windows 95/98/ME: crashes when Emacs invokes non-existent programs.
2944
2945 When a program you are trying to run is not found on the PATH,
2946 Windows might respond by crashing or locking up your system. In
2947 particular, this has been reported when trying to compile a Java
2948 program in JDEE when javac.exe is installed, but not on the system PATH.
2949
2950 ** MS-DOS
2951
2952 *** When compiling with DJGPP on MS-Windows NT or later, "config msdos" fails.
2953
2954 If the error message is "VDM has been already loaded", this is because
2955 Windows has a program called `redir.exe' that is incompatible with a
2956 program by the same name supplied with DJGPP, which is used by
2957 config.bat. To resolve this, move the DJGPP's `bin' subdirectory to
2958 the front of your PATH environment variable.
2959
2960 *** When Emacs compiled with DJGPP runs on Windows 2000 and later, it cannot
2961 find your HOME directory.
2962
2963 This was reported to happen when you click on "Save for future
2964 sessions" button in a Customize buffer. You might see an error
2965 message like this one:
2966
2967 basic-save-buffer-2: c:/FOO/BAR/~dosuser/: no such directory
2968
2969 (The telltale sign is the "~USER" part at the end of the directory
2970 Emacs complains about, where USER is your username or the literal
2971 string "dosuser", which is the default username set up by the DJGPP
2972 startup file DJGPP.ENV.)
2973
2974 This happens when the functions `user-login-name' and
2975 `user-real-login-name' return different strings for your username as
2976 Emacs sees it. To correct this, make sure both USER and USERNAME
2977 environment variables are set to the same value. Windows 2000 and
2978 later sets USERNAME, so if you want to keep that, make sure USER is
2979 set to the same value. If you don't want to set USER globally, you
2980 can do it in the [emacs] section of your DJGPP.ENV file.
2981
2982 *** When Emacs compiled with DJGPP runs on Vista, it runs out of memory.
2983
2984 If Emacs running on Vista displays "!MEM FULL!" in the mode line, you
2985 are hitting the memory allocation bugs in the Vista DPMI server. See
2986 msdos/INSTALL for how to work around these bugs (search for "Vista").
2987
2988 *** When compiling with DJGPP on MS-Windows 95, Make fails for some targets
2989 like make-docfile.
2990
2991 This can happen if long file name support (the setting of environment
2992 variable LFN) when Emacs distribution was unpacked and during
2993 compilation are not the same. See msdos/INSTALL for the explanation
2994 of how to avoid this problem.
2995
2996 *** Emacs compiled with DJGPP complains at startup:
2997
2998 "Wrong type of argument: internal-facep, msdos-menu-active-face"
2999
3000 This can happen if you define an environment variable `TERM'. Emacs
3001 on MSDOS uses an internal terminal emulator which is disabled if the
3002 value of `TERM' is anything but the string "internal". Emacs then
3003 works as if its terminal were a dumb glass teletype that doesn't
3004 support faces. To work around this, arrange for `TERM' to be
3005 undefined when Emacs runs. The best way to do that is to add an
3006 [emacs] section to the DJGPP.ENV file which defines an empty value for
3007 `TERM'; this way, only Emacs gets the empty value, while the rest of
3008 your system works as before.
3009
3010 *** MS-DOS: Emacs crashes at startup.
3011
3012 Some users report that Emacs 19.29 requires dpmi memory management,
3013 and crashes on startup if the system does not have it. We don't
3014 know why this happens--perhaps these machines don't have enough real
3015 memory, or perhaps something is wrong in Emacs or the compiler.
3016 However, arranging to use dpmi support is a workaround.
3017
3018 You can find out if you have a dpmi host by running go32 without
3019 arguments; it will tell you if it uses dpmi memory. For more
3020 information about dpmi memory, consult the djgpp FAQ. (djgpp
3021 is the GNU C compiler as packaged for MSDOS.)
3022
3023 Compiling Emacs under MSDOS is extremely sensitive for proper memory
3024 configuration. If you experience problems during compilation, consider
3025 removing some or all memory resident programs (notably disk caches)
3026 and make sure that your memory managers are properly configured. See
3027 the djgpp faq for configuration hints.
3028
3029 *** Emacs compiled with DJGPP for MS-DOS/MS-Windows cannot access files
3030 in the directory with the special name `dev' under the root of any
3031 drive, e.g. `c:/dev'.
3032
3033 This is an unfortunate side-effect of the support for Unix-style
3034 device names such as /dev/null in the DJGPP runtime library. A
3035 work-around is to rename the problem directory to another name.
3036
3037 *** MS-DOS+DJGPP: Problems on MS-DOS if DJGPP v2.0 is used to compile Emacs.
3038
3039 There are two DJGPP library bugs which cause problems:
3040
3041 * Running `shell-command' (or `compile', or `grep') you get
3042 `Searching for program: permission denied (EACCES), c:/command.com';
3043 * After you shell to DOS, Ctrl-Break kills Emacs.
3044
3045 To work around these bugs, you can use two files in the msdos
3046 subdirectory: `is_exec.c' and `sigaction.c'. Compile them and link
3047 them into the Emacs executable `temacs'; then they will replace the
3048 incorrect library functions.
3049
3050 *** MS-DOS: Emacs compiled for MSDOS cannot find some Lisp files, or other
3051 run-time support files, when long filename support is enabled.
3052
3053 Usually, this problem will manifest itself when Emacs exits
3054 immediately after flashing the startup screen, because it cannot find
3055 the Lisp files it needs to load at startup. Redirect Emacs stdout
3056 and stderr to a file to see the error message printed by Emacs.
3057
3058 Another manifestation of this problem is that Emacs is unable to load
3059 the support for editing program sources in languages such as C and Lisp.
3060
3061 This can happen if the Emacs distribution was unzipped without LFN
3062 support, thus causing long filenames to be truncated to the first 6
3063 characters and a numeric tail that Windows 95 normally attaches to it.
3064 You should unzip the files again with a utility that supports long
3065 filenames (such as djtar from DJGPP or InfoZip's UnZip program
3066 compiled with DJGPP v2). The file msdos/INSTALL explains this issue
3067 in more detail.
3068
3069 Another possible reason for such failures is that Emacs compiled for
3070 MSDOS is used on Windows NT, where long file names are not supported
3071 by this version of Emacs, but the distribution was unpacked by an
3072 unzip program that preserved the long file names instead of truncating
3073 them to DOS 8+3 limits. To be useful on NT, the MSDOS port of Emacs
3074 must be unzipped by a DOS utility, so that long file names are
3075 properly truncated.
3076
3077 ** Archaic window managers and toolkits
3078
3079 *** OpenLook: Under OpenLook, the Emacs window disappears when you type M-q.
3080
3081 Some versions of the Open Look window manager interpret M-q as a quit
3082 command for whatever window you are typing at. If you want to use
3083 Emacs with that window manager, you should try to configure the window
3084 manager to use some other command. You can disable the
3085 shortcut keys entirely by adding this line to ~/.OWdefaults:
3086
3087 OpenWindows.WindowMenuAccelerators: False
3088
3089 *** twm: A position you specified in .Xdefaults is ignored, using twm.
3090
3091 twm normally ignores "program-specified" positions.
3092 You can tell it to obey them with this command in your `.twmrc' file:
3093
3094 UsePPosition "on" #allow clients to request a position
3095
3096 ** Bugs related to old DEC hardware
3097
3098 *** The Compose key on a DEC keyboard does not work as Meta key.
3099
3100 This shell command should fix it:
3101
3102 xmodmap -e 'keycode 0xb1 = Meta_L'
3103
3104 *** Keyboard input gets confused after a beep when using a DECserver
3105 as a concentrator.
3106
3107 This problem seems to be a matter of configuring the DECserver to use
3108 7 bit characters rather than 8 bit characters.
3109
3110 * Build problems on legacy systems
3111
3112 ** SunOS: Emacs gets error message from linker on Sun.
3113
3114 If the error message says that a symbol such as `f68881_used' or
3115 `ffpa_used' or `start_float' is undefined, this probably indicates
3116 that you have compiled some libraries, such as the X libraries,
3117 with a floating point option other than the default.
3118
3119 It's not terribly hard to make this work with small changes in
3120 crt0.c together with linking with Fcrt1.o, Wcrt1.o or Mcrt1.o.
3121 However, the easiest approach is to build Xlib with the default
3122 floating point option: -fsoft.
3123
3124 ** HPUX 10.20: Emacs crashes during dumping on the HPPA machine.
3125
3126 This seems to be due to a GCC bug; it is fixed in GCC 2.8.1.
3127
3128 ** Vax C compiler bugs affecting Emacs.
3129
3130 You may get one of these problems compiling Emacs:
3131
3132 foo.c line nnn: compiler error: no table entry for op STASG
3133 foo.c: fatal error in /lib/ccom
3134
3135 These are due to bugs in the C compiler; the code is valid C.
3136 Unfortunately, the bugs are unpredictable: the same construct
3137 may compile properly or trigger one of these bugs, depending
3138 on what else is in the source file being compiled. Even changes
3139 in header files that should not affect the file being compiled
3140 can affect whether the bug happens. In addition, sometimes files
3141 that compile correctly on one machine get this bug on another machine.
3142
3143 As a result, it is hard for me to make sure this bug will not affect
3144 you. I have attempted to find and alter these constructs, but more
3145 can always appear. However, I can tell you how to deal with it if it
3146 should happen. The bug comes from having an indexed reference to an
3147 array of Lisp_Objects, as an argument in a function call:
3148 Lisp_Object *args;
3149 ...
3150 ... foo (5, args[i], ...)...
3151 putting the argument into a temporary variable first, as in
3152 Lisp_Object *args;
3153 Lisp_Object tem;
3154 ...
3155 tem = args[i];
3156 ... foo (r, tem, ...)...
3157 causes the problem to go away.
3158 The `contents' field of a Lisp vector is an array of Lisp_Objects,
3159 so you may see the problem happening with indexed references to that.
3160
3161 ** 68000 C compiler problems
3162
3163 Various 68000 compilers have different problems.
3164 These are some that have been observed.
3165
3166 *** Using value of assignment expression on union type loses.
3167 This means that x = y = z; or foo (x = z); does not work
3168 if x is of type Lisp_Object.
3169
3170 *** "cannot reclaim" error.
3171
3172 This means that an expression is too complicated. You get the correct
3173 line number in the error message. The code must be rewritten with
3174 simpler expressions.
3175
3176 *** XCONS, XSTRING, etc macros produce incorrect code.
3177
3178 If temacs fails to run at all, this may be the cause.
3179 Compile this test program and look at the assembler code:
3180
3181 struct foo { char x; unsigned int y : 24; };
3182
3183 lose (arg)
3184 struct foo arg;
3185 {
3186 test ((int *) arg.y);
3187 }
3188
3189 If the code is incorrect, your compiler has this problem.
3190 In the XCONS, etc., macros in lisp.h you must replace (a).u.val with
3191 ((a).u.val + coercedummy) where coercedummy is declared as int.
3192
3193 This problem will only happen if USE_LISP_UNION_TYPE is manually
3194 defined in lisp.h.
3195
3196 ** C compilers lose on returning unions.
3197
3198 I hear that some C compilers cannot handle returning a union type.
3199 Most of the functions in GNU Emacs return type Lisp_Object, which is
3200 defined as a union on some rare architectures.
3201
3202 This problem will only happen if USE_LISP_UNION_TYPE is manually
3203 defined in lisp.h.
3204
3205 \f
3206 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
3207
3208 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
3209 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
3210 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
3211 (at your option) any later version.
3212
3213 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
3214 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
3215 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
3216 GNU General Public License for more details.
3217
3218 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
3219 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
3220
3221 \f
3222 Local variables:
3223 mode: outline
3224 paragraph-separate: "[ \f]*$"
3225 end:
3226
3227 arch-tag: 49fc0d95-88cb-4715-b21c-f27fb5a4764a