PROBLEMS 134 KB

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  1. Known Problems with GNU Emacs
  2. Copyright (C) 1987-1989, 1993-1999, 2001-2012
  3. Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  4. See the end of the file for license conditions.
  5. This file describes various problems that have been encountered
  6. in compiling, installing and running GNU Emacs. Try doing C-c C-t
  7. and browsing through the outline headers. (See C-h m for help on
  8. Outline mode.) Information about systems that are no longer supported,
  9. and old Emacs releases, has been removed. Consult older versions of
  10. this file if you are interested in that information.
  11. * Mule-UCS doesn't work in Emacs 23.
  12. It's completely redundant now, as far as we know.
  13. * Emacs startup failures
  14. ** Emacs fails to start, complaining about missing fonts.
  15. A typical error message might be something like
  16. No fonts match `-*-fixed-medium-r-*--6-*-*-*-*-*-iso8859-1'
  17. This happens because some X resource specifies a bad font family for
  18. Emacs to use. The possible places where this specification might be
  19. are:
  20. - in your ~/.Xdefaults file
  21. - client-side X resource file, such as ~/Emacs or
  22. /usr/X11R6/lib/app-defaults/Emacs or
  23. /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/app-defaults/Emacs
  24. One of these files might have bad or malformed specification of a
  25. fontset that Emacs should use. To fix the problem, you need to find
  26. the problematic line(s) and correct them.
  27. ** Emacs aborts while starting up, only when run without X.
  28. This problem often results from compiling Emacs with GCC when GCC was
  29. installed incorrectly. The usual error in installing GCC is to
  30. specify --includedir=/usr/include. Installation of GCC makes
  31. corrected copies of the system header files. GCC is supposed to use
  32. the corrected copies in preference to the original system headers.
  33. Specifying --includedir=/usr/include causes the original system header
  34. files to be used. On some systems, the definition of ioctl in the
  35. original system header files is invalid for ANSI C and causes Emacs
  36. not to work.
  37. The fix is to reinstall GCC, and this time do not specify --includedir
  38. when you configure it. Then recompile Emacs. Specifying --includedir
  39. is appropriate only in very special cases and it should *never* be the
  40. same directory where system header files are kept.
  41. ** Emacs does not start, complaining that it cannot open termcap database file.
  42. If your system uses Terminfo rather than termcap (most modern
  43. systems do), this could happen if the proper version of
  44. ncurses is not visible to the Emacs configure script (i.e. it
  45. cannot be found along the usual path the linker looks for
  46. libraries). It can happen because your version of ncurses is
  47. obsolete, or is available only in form of binaries.
  48. The solution is to install an up-to-date version of ncurses in
  49. the developer's form (header files, static libraries and
  50. symbolic links); in some GNU/Linux distributions (e.g. Debian)
  51. it constitutes a separate package.
  52. ** Emacs 20 and later fails to load Lisp files at startup.
  53. The typical error message might be like this:
  54. "Cannot open load file: fontset"
  55. This could happen if you compress the file lisp/subdirs.el. That file
  56. tells Emacs what are the directories where it should look for Lisp
  57. files. Emacs cannot work with subdirs.el compressed, since the
  58. Auto-compress mode it needs for this will not be loaded until later,
  59. when your .emacs file is processed. (The package `fontset.el' is
  60. required to set up fonts used to display text on window systems, and
  61. it's loaded very early in the startup procedure.)
  62. Similarly, any other .el file for which there's no corresponding .elc
  63. file could fail to load if it is compressed.
  64. The solution is to uncompress all .el files that don't have a .elc file.
  65. Another possible reason for such failures is stale *.elc files
  66. lurking somewhere on your load-path -- see the next section.
  67. ** Emacs prints an error at startup after upgrading from an earlier version.
  68. An example of such an error is:
  69. x-complement-fontset-spec: "Wrong type argument: stringp, nil"
  70. This can be another symptom of stale *.elc files in your load-path.
  71. The following command will print any duplicate Lisp files that are
  72. present in load-path:
  73. emacs -batch -f list-load-path-shadows
  74. If this command prints any file names, some of these files are stale,
  75. and should be deleted or their directories removed from your
  76. load-path.
  77. ** With X11R6.4, public-patch-3, Emacs crashes at startup.
  78. Reportedly this patch in X fixes the problem.
  79. --- xc/lib/X11/imInt.c~ Wed Jun 30 13:31:56 1999
  80. +++ xc/lib/X11/imInt.c Thu Jul 1 15:10:27 1999
  81. @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
  82. -/* $TOG: imInt.c /main/5 1998/05/30 21:11:16 kaleb $ */
  83. +/* $TOG: imInt.c /main/5 1998/05/30 21:11:16 kaleb $ */
  84. /******************************************************************
  85. Copyright 1992, 1993, 1994 by FUJITSU LIMITED
  86. @@ -166,8 +166,8 @@
  87. _XimMakeImName(lcd)
  88. XLCd lcd;
  89. {
  90. - char* begin;
  91. - char* end;
  92. + char* begin = NULL;
  93. + char* end = NULL;
  94. char* ret;
  95. int i = 0;
  96. char* ximmodifier = XIMMODIFIER;
  97. @@ -182,7 +182,11 @@
  98. }
  99. ret = Xmalloc(end - begin + 2);
  100. if (ret != NULL) {
  101. - (void)strncpy(ret, begin, end - begin + 1);
  102. + if (begin != NULL) {
  103. + (void)strncpy(ret, begin, end - begin + 1);
  104. + } else {
  105. + ret[0] = '\0';
  106. + }
  107. ret[end - begin + 1] = '\0';
  108. }
  109. return ret;
  110. ** Emacs crashes on startup after a glibc upgrade.
  111. This is caused by a binary incompatible change to the malloc
  112. implementation in glibc 2.5.90-22. As a result, Emacs binaries built
  113. using prior versions of glibc crash when run under 2.5.90-22.
  114. This problem was first seen in pre-release versions of Fedora 7, and
  115. may be fixed in the final Fedora 7 release. To stop the crash from
  116. happening, first try upgrading to the newest version of glibc; if this
  117. does not work, rebuild Emacs with the same version of glibc that you
  118. will run it under. For details, see
  119. https://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=239344
  120. * Crash bugs
  121. ** Emacs crashes when running in a terminal, if compiled with GCC 4.5.0
  122. This version of GCC is buggy: see
  123. http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=6031
  124. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=43904
  125. You can work around this error in gcc-4.5 by omitting sibling call
  126. optimization. To do this, configure Emacs with
  127. CFLAGS="-g -O2 -fno-optimize-sibling-calls" ./configure
  128. ** Emacs compiled with GCC 4.6.1 crashes on MS-Windows when C-g is pressed
  129. This is known to happen when Emacs is compiled with MinGW GCC 4.6.1
  130. with the -O2 option (which is the default in the Windows build). The
  131. reason is a bug in MinGW GCC 4.6.1; to work around, either add the
  132. `-fno-omit-frame-pointer' switch to GCC or compile without
  133. optimizations (`--no-opt' switch to the configure.bat script).
  134. ** Emacs crashes in x-popup-dialog.
  135. This can happen if the dialog widget cannot find the font it wants to
  136. use. You can work around the problem by specifying another font with
  137. an X resource--for example, `Emacs.dialog*.font: 9x15' (or any font that
  138. happens to exist on your X server).
  139. ** Emacs crashes when you use Bibtex mode.
  140. This happens if your system puts a small limit on stack size. You can
  141. prevent the problem by using a suitable shell command (often `ulimit')
  142. to raise the stack size limit before you run Emacs.
  143. Patches to raise the stack size limit automatically in `main'
  144. (src/emacs.c) on various systems would be greatly appreciated.
  145. ** Error message `Symbol's value as variable is void: x', followed by
  146. a segmentation fault and core dump.
  147. This has been tracked to a bug in tar! People report that tar erroneously
  148. added a line like this at the beginning of files of Lisp code:
  149. x FILENAME, N bytes, B tape blocks
  150. If your tar has this problem, install GNU tar--if you can manage to
  151. untar it :-).
  152. ** Crashes when displaying GIF images in Emacs built with version
  153. libungif-4.1.0 are resolved by using version libungif-4.1.0b1.
  154. Configure checks for the correct version, but this problem could occur
  155. if a binary built against a shared libungif is run on a system with an
  156. older version.
  157. ** Emacs aborts inside the function `tparam1'.
  158. This can happen if Emacs was built without terminfo support, but the
  159. terminal's capabilities use format that is only supported by terminfo.
  160. If your system has ncurses installed, this might happen if your
  161. version of ncurses is broken; upgrading to a newer version of ncurses
  162. and reconfiguring and rebuilding Emacs should solve this.
  163. All modern systems support terminfo, so even if ncurses is not the
  164. problem, you should look for a way to configure Emacs so that it uses
  165. terminfo when built.
  166. ** Emacs crashes when using some version of the Exceed X server.
  167. Upgrading to a newer version of Exceed has been reported to prevent
  168. these crashes. You should consider switching to a free X server, such
  169. as Xming or Cygwin/X.
  170. ** Emacs crashes with SIGSEGV in XtInitializeWidgetClass.
  171. It crashes on X, but runs fine when called with option "-nw".
  172. This has been observed when Emacs is linked with GNU ld but without passing
  173. the -z nocombreloc flag. Emacs normally knows to pass the -z nocombreloc
  174. flag when needed, so if you come across a situation where the flag is
  175. necessary but missing, please report it via M-x report-emacs-bug.
  176. On platforms such as Solaris, you can also work around this problem by
  177. configuring your compiler to use the native linker instead of GNU ld.
  178. ** When Emacs is compiled with Gtk+, closing a display kills Emacs.
  179. There is a long-standing bug in GTK that prevents it from recovering
  180. from disconnects: http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=85715.
  181. Thus, for instance, when Emacs is run as a server on a text terminal,
  182. and an X frame is created, and the X server for that frame crashes or
  183. exits unexpectedly, Emacs must exit to prevent a GTK error that would
  184. result in an endless loop.
  185. If you need Emacs to be able to recover from closing displays, compile
  186. it with the Lucid toolkit instead of GTK.
  187. ** Emacs crashes when you try to view a file with complex characters.
  188. For example, the etc/HELLO file (as shown by C-h h).
  189. The message "symbol lookup error: /usr/bin/emacs: undefined symbol: OTF_open"
  190. is shown in the terminal from which you launched Emacs.
  191. This problem only happens when you use a graphical display (ie not
  192. with -nw) and compiled Emacs with the "libotf" library for complex
  193. text handling.
  194. This problem occurs because unfortunately there are two libraries
  195. called "libotf". One is the library for handling OpenType fonts,
  196. http://www.m17n.org/libotf/, which is the one that Emacs expects.
  197. The other is a library for Open Trace Format, and is used by some
  198. versions of the MPI message passing interface for parallel
  199. programming.
  200. For example, on RHEL6 GNU/Linux, the OpenMPI rpm provides a version
  201. of "libotf.so" in /usr/lib/openmpi/lib. This directory is not
  202. normally in the ld search path, but if you want to use OpenMPI,
  203. you must issue the command "module load openmpi". This adds
  204. /usr/lib/openmpi/lib to LD_LIBRARY_PATH. If you then start Emacs from
  205. the same shell, you will encounter this crash.
  206. Ref: <URL:https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=806031>
  207. There is no good solution to this problem if you need to use both
  208. OpenMPI and Emacs with libotf support. The best you can do is use a
  209. wrapper shell script (or function) "emacs" that removes the offending
  210. element from LD_LIBRARY_PATH before starting emacs proper.
  211. Or you could recompile Emacs with an -Wl,-rpath option that
  212. gives the location of the correct libotf.
  213. * General runtime problems
  214. ** Lisp problems
  215. *** Changes made to .el files do not take effect.
  216. You may have forgotten to recompile them into .elc files.
  217. Then the old .elc files will be loaded, and your changes
  218. will not be seen. To fix this, do M-x byte-recompile-directory
  219. and specify the directory that contains the Lisp files.
  220. Emacs should print a warning when loading a .elc file which is older
  221. than the corresponding .el file.
  222. *** Watch out for .emacs files and EMACSLOADPATH environment vars.
  223. These control the actions of Emacs.
  224. ~/.emacs is your Emacs init file.
  225. EMACSLOADPATH overrides which directories the function "load" will search.
  226. If you observe strange problems, check for these and get rid
  227. of them, then try again.
  228. *** Using epop3.el package causes Emacs to signal an error.
  229. The error message might be something like this:
  230. "Lisp nesting exceeds max-lisp-eval-depth"
  231. This happens because epop3 redefines the function gethash, which is a
  232. built-in primitive beginning with Emacs 21.1. We don't have a patch
  233. for epop3 that fixes this, but perhaps a newer version of epop3
  234. corrects that.
  235. *** Buffers from `with-output-to-temp-buffer' get set up in Help mode.
  236. Changes in Emacs 20.4 to the hooks used by that function cause
  237. problems for some packages, specifically BBDB. See the function's
  238. documentation for the hooks involved. BBDB 2.00.06 fixes the problem.
  239. *** The Hyperbole package causes *Help* buffers not to be displayed in
  240. Help mode due to setting `temp-buffer-show-hook' rather than using
  241. `add-hook'. Using `(add-hook 'temp-buffer-show-hook
  242. 'help-mode-maybe)' after loading Hyperbole should fix this.
  243. ** Keyboard problems
  244. *** Unable to enter the M-| key on some German keyboards.
  245. Some users have reported that M-| suffers from "keyboard ghosting".
  246. This can't be fixed by Emacs, as the keypress never gets passed to it
  247. at all (as can be verified using "xev"). You can work around this by
  248. typing `ESC |' instead.
  249. *** "Compose Character" key does strange things when used as a Meta key.
  250. If you define one key to serve as both Meta and Compose Character, you
  251. will get strange results. In previous Emacs versions, this "worked"
  252. in that the key acted as Meta--that's because the older Emacs versions
  253. did not try to support Compose Character. Now Emacs tries to do
  254. character composition in the standard X way. This means that you
  255. must pick one meaning or the other for any given key.
  256. You can use both functions (Meta, and Compose Character) if you assign
  257. them to two different keys.
  258. *** C-z just refreshes the screen instead of suspending Emacs.
  259. You are probably using a shell that doesn't support job control, even
  260. though the system itself is capable of it. Either use a different shell,
  261. or set the variable `cannot-suspend' to a non-nil value.
  262. *** With M-x enable-flow-control, you need to type C-\ twice
  263. to do incremental search--a single C-\ gets no response.
  264. This has been traced to communicating with your machine via kermit,
  265. with C-\ as the kermit escape character. One solution is to use
  266. another escape character in kermit. One user did
  267. set escape-character 17
  268. in his .kermrc file, to make C-q the kermit escape character.
  269. ** Mailers and other helper programs
  270. *** movemail compiled with POP support can't connect to the POP server.
  271. Make sure that the `pop' entry in /etc/services, or in the services
  272. NIS map if your machine uses NIS, has the same port number as the
  273. entry on the POP server. A common error is for the POP server to be
  274. listening on port 110, the assigned port for the POP3 protocol, while
  275. the client is trying to connect on port 109, the assigned port for the
  276. old POP protocol.
  277. *** RMAIL gets error getting new mail.
  278. RMAIL gets new mail from /usr/spool/mail/$USER using a program
  279. called `movemail'. This program interlocks with /bin/mail using
  280. the protocol defined by /bin/mail.
  281. There are two different protocols in general use. One of them uses
  282. the `flock' system call. The other involves creating a lock file;
  283. `movemail' must be able to write in /usr/spool/mail in order to do
  284. this. You control which one is used by defining, or not defining,
  285. the macro MAIL_USE_FLOCK in config.h or the m/ or s/ file it includes.
  286. IF YOU DON'T USE THE FORM OF INTERLOCKING THAT IS NORMAL ON YOUR
  287. SYSTEM, YOU CAN LOSE MAIL!
  288. If your system uses the lock file protocol, and fascist restrictions
  289. prevent ordinary users from writing the lock files in /usr/spool/mail,
  290. you may need to make `movemail' setgid to a suitable group such as
  291. `mail'. To do this, use the following commands (as root) after doing the
  292. make install.
  293. chgrp mail movemail
  294. chmod 2755 movemail
  295. Installation normally copies movemail from the build directory to an
  296. installation directory which is usually under /usr/local/lib. The
  297. installed copy of movemail is usually in the directory
  298. /usr/local/lib/emacs/VERSION/TARGET. You must change the group and
  299. mode of the installed copy; changing the group and mode of the build
  300. directory copy is ineffective.
  301. *** rcs2log gives you the awk error message "too many fields".
  302. This is due to an arbitrary limit in certain versions of awk.
  303. The solution is to use gawk (GNU awk).
  304. ** Problems with hostname resolution
  305. *** Emacs fails to understand most Internet host names, even though
  306. the names work properly with other programs on the same system.
  307. *** Emacs won't work with X-windows if the value of DISPLAY is HOSTNAME:0.
  308. *** Gnus can't make contact with the specified host for nntp.
  309. This typically happens on Suns and other systems that use shared
  310. libraries. The cause is that the site has installed a version of the
  311. shared library which uses a name server--but has not installed a
  312. similar version of the unshared library which Emacs uses.
  313. The result is that most programs, using the shared library, work with
  314. the nameserver, but Emacs does not.
  315. The fix is to install an unshared library that corresponds to what you
  316. installed in the shared library, and then relink Emacs.
  317. If you have already installed the name resolver in the file libresolv.a,
  318. then you need to compile Emacs to use that library. The easiest way to
  319. do this is to add to config.h a definition of LIBS_SYSTEM, LIBS_MACHINE
  320. or LIB_STANDARD which uses -lresolv. Watch out! If you redefine a macro
  321. that is already in use in your configuration to supply some other libraries,
  322. be careful not to lose the others.
  323. Thus, you could start by adding this to config.h:
  324. #define LIBS_SYSTEM -lresolv
  325. Then if this gives you an error for redefining a macro, and you see that
  326. the s- file defines LIBS_SYSTEM as -lfoo -lbar, you could change config.h
  327. again to say this:
  328. #define LIBS_SYSTEM -lresolv -lfoo -lbar
  329. *** Emacs does not know your host's fully-qualified domain name.
  330. For example, (system-name) returns some variation on
  331. "localhost.localdomain", rather the name you were expecting.
  332. You need to configure your machine with a fully qualified domain name,
  333. (i.e. a name with at least one ".") either in /etc/hosts,
  334. /etc/hostname, the NIS, or wherever your system calls for specifying this.
  335. If you cannot fix the configuration, you can set the Lisp variable
  336. mail-host-address to the value you want.
  337. ** NFS and RFS
  338. *** Emacs says it has saved a file, but the file does not actually
  339. appear on disk.
  340. This can happen on certain systems when you are using NFS, if the
  341. remote disk is full. It is due to a bug in NFS (or certain NFS
  342. implementations), and there is apparently nothing Emacs can do to
  343. detect the problem. Emacs checks the failure codes of all the system
  344. calls involved in writing a file, including `close'; but in the case
  345. where the problem occurs, none of those system calls fails.
  346. *** Editing files through RFS gives spurious "file has changed" warnings.
  347. It is possible that a change in Emacs 18.37 gets around this problem,
  348. but in case not, here is a description of how to fix the RFS bug that
  349. causes it.
  350. There was a serious pair of bugs in the handling of the fsync() system
  351. call in the RFS server.
  352. The first is that the fsync() call is handled as another name for the
  353. close() system call (!!). It appears that fsync() is not used by very
  354. many programs; Emacs version 18 does an fsync() before closing files
  355. to make sure that the bits are on the disk.
  356. This is fixed by the enclosed patch to the RFS server.
  357. The second, more serious problem, is that fsync() is treated as a
  358. non-blocking system call (i.e., it's implemented as a message that
  359. gets sent to the remote system without waiting for a reply). Fsync is
  360. a useful tool for building atomic file transactions. Implementing it
  361. as a non-blocking RPC call (when the local call blocks until the sync
  362. is done) is a bad idea; unfortunately, changing it will break the RFS
  363. protocol. No fix was supplied for this problem.
  364. (as always, your line numbers may vary)
  365. % rcsdiff -c -r1.2 serversyscall.c
  366. RCS file: RCS/serversyscall.c,v
  367. retrieving revision 1.2
  368. diff -c -r1.2 serversyscall.c
  369. *** /tmp/,RCSt1003677 Wed Jan 28 15:15:02 1987
  370. --- serversyscall.c Wed Jan 28 15:14:48 1987
  371. ***************
  372. *** 163,169 ****
  373. /*
  374. * No return sent for close or fsync!
  375. */
  376. ! if (syscall == RSYS_close || syscall == RSYS_fsync)
  377. proc->p_returnval = deallocate_fd(proc, msg->m_args[0]);
  378. else
  379. {
  380. --- 166,172 ----
  381. /*
  382. * No return sent for close or fsync!
  383. */
  384. ! if (syscall == RSYS_close)
  385. proc->p_returnval = deallocate_fd(proc, msg->m_args[0]);
  386. else
  387. {
  388. ** PSGML conflicts with sgml-mode.
  389. PSGML package uses the same names of some variables (like keymap)
  390. as built-in sgml-mode.el because it was created as a replacement
  391. of that package. The conflict will be shown if you load
  392. sgml-mode.el before psgml.el. E.g. this could happen if you edit
  393. HTML page and then start to work with SGML or XML file. html-mode
  394. (from sgml-mode.el) is used for HTML file and loading of psgml.el
  395. (for sgml-mode or xml-mode) will cause an error.
  396. ** PCL-CVS
  397. *** Lines are not updated or new lines are added in the buffer upon commit.
  398. When committing files located higher in the hierarchy than the examined
  399. directory, some versions of the CVS program return an ambiguous message
  400. from which PCL-CVS cannot extract the full location of the committed
  401. files. As a result, the corresponding lines in the PCL-CVS buffer are
  402. not updated with the new revision of these files, and new lines are
  403. added to the top-level directory.
  404. This can happen with CVS versions 1.12.8 and 1.12.9. Upgrade to CVS
  405. 1.12.10 or newer to fix this problem.
  406. ** Miscellaneous problems
  407. *** Editing files with very long lines is slow.
  408. For example, simply moving through a file that contains hundreds of
  409. thousands of characters per line is slow, and consumes a lot of CPU.
  410. This is a known limitation of Emacs with no solution at this time.
  411. *** Emacs uses 100% of CPU time
  412. This is a known problem with some versions of the Semantic package.
  413. The solution is to upgrade Semantic to version 2.0pre4 (distributed
  414. with CEDET 1.0pre4) or later.
  415. *** Self-documentation messages are garbled.
  416. This means that the file `etc/DOC-...' doesn't properly correspond
  417. with the Emacs executable. Redumping Emacs and then installing the
  418. corresponding pair of files should fix the problem.
  419. *** Programs running under terminal emulator do not recognize `emacs'
  420. terminal type.
  421. The cause of this is a shell startup file that sets the TERMCAP
  422. environment variable. The terminal emulator uses that variable to
  423. provide the information on the special terminal type that Emacs emulates.
  424. Rewrite your shell startup file so that it does not change TERMCAP
  425. in such a case. You could use the following conditional which sets
  426. it only if it is undefined.
  427. if ( ! ${?TERMCAP} ) setenv TERMCAP ~/my-termcap-file
  428. Or you could set TERMCAP only when you set TERM--which should not
  429. happen in a non-login shell.
  430. *** In Shell mode, you get a ^M at the end of every line.
  431. This happens to people who use tcsh, because it is trying to be too
  432. smart. It sees that the Shell uses terminal type `unknown' and turns
  433. on the flag to output ^M at the end of each line. You can fix the
  434. problem by adding this to your .cshrc file:
  435. if ($?EMACS) then
  436. if ("$EMACS" =~ /*) then
  437. unset edit
  438. stty -icrnl -onlcr -echo susp ^Z
  439. endif
  440. endif
  441. *** Emacs startup on GNU/Linux systems (and possibly other systems) is slow.
  442. This can happen if the system is misconfigured and Emacs can't get the
  443. full qualified domain name, FQDN. You should have your FQDN in the
  444. /etc/hosts file, something like this:
  445. 127.0.0.1 localhost
  446. 129.187.137.82 nuc04.t30.physik.tu-muenchen.de nuc04
  447. The way to set this up may vary on non-GNU systems.
  448. *** Attempting to visit remote files via ange-ftp fails.
  449. If the error message is "ange-ftp-file-modtime: Specified time is not
  450. representable", then this could happen when `lukemftp' is used as the
  451. ftp client. This was reported to happen on Debian GNU/Linux, kernel
  452. version 2.4.3, with `lukemftp' 1.5-5, but might happen on other
  453. systems as well. To avoid this problem, switch to using the standard
  454. ftp client. On a Debian system, type
  455. update-alternatives --config ftp
  456. and then choose /usr/bin/netkit-ftp.
  457. *** JPEG images aren't displayed.
  458. This has been reported when Emacs is built with jpeg-6a library.
  459. Upgrading to jpeg-6b solves the problem. Configure checks for the
  460. correct version, but this problem could occur if a binary built
  461. against a shared libjpeg is run on a system with an older version.
  462. *** Dired is very slow.
  463. This could happen if invocation of the `df' program takes a long
  464. time. Possible reasons for this include:
  465. - ClearCase mounted filesystems (VOBs) that sometimes make `df'
  466. response time extremely slow (dozens of seconds);
  467. - slow automounters on some old versions of Unix;
  468. - slow operation of some versions of `df'.
  469. To work around the problem, you could either (a) set the variable
  470. `directory-free-space-program' to nil, and thus prevent Emacs from
  471. invoking `df'; (b) use `df' from the GNU Fileutils package; or
  472. (c) use CVS, which is Free Software, instead of ClearCase.
  473. *** ps-print commands fail to find prologue files ps-prin*.ps.
  474. This can happen if you use an old version of X-Symbol package: it
  475. defines compatibility functions which trick ps-print into thinking it
  476. runs in XEmacs, and look for the prologue files in a wrong directory.
  477. The solution is to upgrade X-Symbol to a later version.
  478. *** On systems with shared libraries you might encounter run-time errors
  479. from the dynamic linker telling you that it is unable to find some
  480. shared libraries, for instance those for Xaw3d or image support.
  481. These errors mean Emacs has been linked with a library whose shared
  482. library is not in the default search path of the dynamic linker.
  483. Similar problems could prevent Emacs from building, since the build
  484. process invokes Emacs several times.
  485. On many systems, it is possible to set LD_LIBRARY_PATH in your
  486. environment to specify additional directories where shared libraries
  487. can be found.
  488. Other systems allow to set LD_RUN_PATH in a similar way, but before
  489. Emacs is linked. With LD_RUN_PATH set, the linker will include a
  490. specified run-time search path in the executable.
  491. On some systems, Emacs can crash due to problems with dynamic
  492. linking. Specifically, on SGI Irix 6.5, crashes were reported with
  493. backtraces like this:
  494. (dbx) where
  495. 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]
  496. 1 general_find_symbol(0xf49239d, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0xf0000000, 0xf4923aa, 0x0, 0x492ddb2)
  497. ["/comp2/mtibuild/v73/workarea/v7.3/rld/rld.c":2140, 0xfb65a98]
  498. 2 resolve_symbol(0xf49239d, 0x4031184, 0x0, 0xfbdd438, 0x0, 0xf4923aa, 0x0, 0x492ddb2)
  499. ["/comp2/mtibuild/v73/workarea/v7.3/rld/rld.c":1947, 0xfb657e4]
  500. 3 lazy_text_resolve(0xd18, 0x1a3, 0x40302b4, 0x12, 0xf0000000, 0xf4923aa, 0x0, 0x492ddb2)
  501. ["/comp2/mtibuild/v73/workarea/v7.3/rld/rld.c":997, 0xfb64d44]
  502. 4 _rld_text_resolve(0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0, 0x0)
  503. ["/comp2/mtibuild/v73/workarea/v7.3/rld/rld_bridge.s":175, 0xfb6032c]
  504. (`rld' is the dynamic linker.) We don't know yet why this
  505. happens, but setting the environment variable LD_BIND_NOW to 1 (which
  506. forces the dynamic linker to bind all shared objects early on) seems
  507. to work around the problem.
  508. Please refer to the documentation of your dynamic linker for details.
  509. *** You request inverse video, and the first Emacs frame is in inverse
  510. video, but later frames are not in inverse video.
  511. This can happen if you have an old version of the custom library in
  512. your search path for Lisp packages. Use M-x list-load-path-shadows to
  513. check whether this is true. If it is, delete the old custom library.
  514. *** When you run Ispell from Emacs, it reports a "misalignment" error.
  515. This can happen if you compiled the Ispell program to use ASCII
  516. characters only and then try to use it from Emacs with non-ASCII
  517. characters, like Latin-1. The solution is to recompile Ispell with
  518. support for 8-bit characters.
  519. To see whether your Ispell program supports 8-bit characters, type
  520. this at your shell's prompt:
  521. ispell -vv
  522. and look in the output for the string "NO8BIT". If Ispell says
  523. "!NO8BIT (8BIT)", your speller supports 8-bit characters; otherwise it
  524. does not.
  525. To rebuild Ispell with 8-bit character support, edit the local.h file
  526. in the Ispell distribution and make sure it does _not_ define NO8BIT.
  527. Then rebuild the speller.
  528. Another possible cause for "misalignment" error messages is that the
  529. version of Ispell installed on your machine is old. Upgrade.
  530. Yet another possibility is that you are trying to spell-check a word
  531. in a language that doesn't fit the dictionary you choose for use by
  532. Ispell. (Ispell can only spell-check one language at a time, because
  533. it uses a single dictionary.) Make sure that the text you are
  534. spelling and the dictionary used by Ispell conform to each other.
  535. If your spell-checking program is Aspell, it has been reported that if
  536. you have a personal configuration file (normally ~/.aspell.conf), it
  537. can cause this error. Remove that file, execute `ispell-kill-ispell'
  538. in Emacs, and then try spell-checking again.
  539. * Runtime problems related to font handling
  540. ** Characters are displayed as empty boxes or with wrong font under X.
  541. *** This can occur when two different versions of FontConfig are used.
  542. For example, XFree86 4.3.0 has one version and Gnome usually comes
  543. with a newer version. Emacs compiled with Gtk+ will then use the
  544. newer version. In most cases the problem can be temporarily fixed by
  545. stopping the application that has the error (it can be Emacs or any
  546. other application), removing ~/.fonts.cache-1, and then start the
  547. application again. If removing ~/.fonts.cache-1 and restarting
  548. doesn't help, the application with problem must be recompiled with the
  549. same version of FontConfig as the rest of the system uses. For KDE,
  550. it is sufficient to recompile Qt.
  551. *** Some fonts have a missing glyph and no default character. This is
  552. known to occur for character number 160 (no-break space) in some
  553. fonts, such as Lucida but Emacs sets the display table for the unibyte
  554. and Latin-1 version of this character to display a space.
  555. *** Some of the fonts called for in your fontset may not exist on your
  556. X server.
  557. Each X11 font covers just a fraction of the characters that Emacs
  558. supports. To display the whole range of Emacs characters requires
  559. many different fonts, collected into a fontset. You can remedy the
  560. problem by installing additional fonts.
  561. The intlfonts distribution includes a full spectrum of fonts that can
  562. display all the characters Emacs supports. The etl-unicode collection
  563. of fonts (available from <URL:ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib/fonts/> and
  564. <URL:ftp://ftp.xfree86.org/pub/mirror/X.Org/contrib/fonts/>) includes
  565. fonts that can display many Unicode characters; they can also be used
  566. by ps-print and ps-mule to print Unicode characters.
  567. ** Under X11, some characters appear improperly aligned in their lines.
  568. You may have bad X11 fonts; try installing the intlfonts distribution
  569. or the etl-unicode collection (see above).
  570. ** Under X, an unexpected monospace font is used as the default font.
  571. When compiled with XFT, Emacs tries to use a default font named
  572. "monospace". This is a "virtual font", which the operating system
  573. (Fontconfig) redirects to a suitable font such as DejaVu Sans Mono.
  574. On some systems, there exists a font that is actually named Monospace,
  575. which takes over the virtual font. This is considered an operating
  576. system bug; see
  577. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2008-10/msg00696.html
  578. If you encounter this problem, set the default font to a specific font
  579. in your .Xresources or initialization file. For instance, you can put
  580. the following in your .Xresources:
  581. Emacs.font: DejaVu Sans Mono 12
  582. ** Certain fonts make each line take one pixel more than it should.
  583. This is because these fonts contain characters a little taller than
  584. the font's nominal height. Emacs needs to make sure that lines do not
  585. overlap.
  586. ** Loading fonts is very slow.
  587. You might be getting scalable fonts instead of precomputed bitmaps.
  588. Known scalable font directories are "Type1" and "Speedo". A font
  589. directory contains scalable fonts if it contains the file
  590. "fonts.scale".
  591. If this is so, re-order your X windows font path to put the scalable
  592. font directories last. See the documentation of `xset' for details.
  593. With some X servers, it may be necessary to take the scalable font
  594. directories out of your path entirely, at least for Emacs 19.26.
  595. Changes in the future may make this unnecessary.
  596. ** Font Lock displays portions of the buffer in incorrect faces.
  597. By far the most frequent cause of this is a parenthesis `(' or a brace
  598. `{' in column zero. Font Lock assumes that such a paren is outside of
  599. any comment or string. This is of course not true in general, but the
  600. vast majority of well-formatted program source files don't have such
  601. parens, and therefore this assumption is used to allow optimizations
  602. in Font Lock's syntactical analysis. These optimizations avoid some
  603. pathological cases where jit-lock, the Just-in-Time fontification
  604. introduced with Emacs 21.1, could significantly slow down scrolling
  605. through the buffer, especially scrolling backwards, and also jumping
  606. to the end of a very large buffer.
  607. Beginning with version 22.1, a parenthesis or a brace in column zero
  608. is highlighted in bold-red face if it is inside a string or a comment,
  609. to indicate that it could interfere with Font Lock (and also with
  610. indentation) and should be moved or escaped with a backslash.
  611. If you don't use large buffers, or have a very fast machine which
  612. makes the delays insignificant, you can avoid the incorrect
  613. fontification by setting the variable
  614. `font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function' to a nil value. (This must
  615. be done _after_ turning on Font Lock.)
  616. Another alternative is to avoid a paren in column zero. For example,
  617. in a Lisp string you could precede the paren with a backslash.
  618. ** With certain fonts, when the cursor appears on a character, the
  619. character doesn't appear--you get a solid box instead.
  620. One user on a Linux-based GNU system reported that this problem went
  621. away with installation of a new X server. The failing server was
  622. XFree86 3.1.1. XFree86 3.1.2 works.
  623. ** Emacs pauses for several seconds when changing the default font.
  624. This has been reported for fvwm 2.2.5 and the window manager of KDE
  625. 2.1. The reason for the pause is Xt waiting for a ConfigureNotify
  626. event from the window manager, which the window manager doesn't send.
  627. Xt stops waiting after a default timeout of usually 5 seconds.
  628. A workaround for this is to add something like
  629. emacs.waitForWM: false
  630. to your X resources. Alternatively, add `(wait-for-wm . nil)' to a
  631. frame's parameter list, like this:
  632. (modify-frame-parameters nil '((wait-for-wm . nil)))
  633. (this should go into your `.emacs' file).
  634. ** Underlines appear at the wrong position.
  635. This is caused by fonts having a wrong UNDERLINE_POSITION property.
  636. Examples are the font 7x13 on XFree prior to version 4.1, or the jmk
  637. neep font from the Debian xfonts-jmk package prior to version 3.0.17.
  638. To circumvent this problem, set x-use-underline-position-properties
  639. to nil in your `.emacs'.
  640. To see what is the value of UNDERLINE_POSITION defined by the font,
  641. type `xlsfonts -lll FONT' and look at the font's UNDERLINE_POSITION property.
  642. ** When using Exceed, fonts sometimes appear too tall.
  643. When the display is set to an Exceed X-server and fonts are specified
  644. (either explicitly with the -fn option or implicitly with X resources)
  645. then the fonts may appear "too tall". The actual character sizes are
  646. correct but there is too much vertical spacing between rows, which
  647. gives the appearance of "double spacing".
  648. To prevent this, turn off the Exceed's "automatic font substitution"
  649. feature (in the font part of the configuration window).
  650. ** Subscript/superscript text in TeX is hard to read.
  651. If `tex-fontify-script' is non-nil, tex-mode displays
  652. subscript/superscript text in the faces subscript/superscript, which
  653. are smaller than the normal font and lowered/raised. With some fonts,
  654. nested superscripts (say) can be hard to read. Switching to a
  655. different font, or changing your antialiasing setting (on an LCD
  656. screen), can both make the problem disappear. Alternatively, customize
  657. the following variables: tex-font-script-display (how much to
  658. lower/raise); tex-suscript-height-ratio (how much smaller than
  659. normal); tex-suscript-height-minimum (minimum height).
  660. * Internationalization problems
  661. ** M-{ does not work on a Spanish PC keyboard.
  662. Many Spanish keyboards seem to ignore that combination. Emacs can't
  663. do anything about it.
  664. ** International characters aren't displayed under X.
  665. *** Missing X fonts
  666. XFree86 4 contains many fonts in iso10646-1 encoding which have
  667. minimal character repertoires (whereas the encoding part of the font
  668. name is meant to be a reasonable indication of the repertoire
  669. according to the XLFD spec). Emacs may choose one of these to display
  670. characters from the mule-unicode charsets and then typically won't be
  671. able to find the glyphs to display many characters. (Check with C-u
  672. C-x = .) To avoid this, you may need to use a fontset which sets the
  673. font for the mule-unicode sets explicitly. E.g. to use GNU unifont,
  674. include in the fontset spec:
  675. mule-unicode-2500-33ff:-gnu-unifont-*-iso10646-1,\
  676. mule-unicode-e000-ffff:-gnu-unifont-*-iso10646-1,\
  677. mule-unicode-0100-24ff:-gnu-unifont-*-iso10646-1
  678. ** The UTF-8/16/7 coding systems don't encode CJK (Far Eastern) characters.
  679. Emacs directly supports the Unicode BMP whose code points are in the
  680. ranges 0000-33ff and e000-ffff, and indirectly supports the parts of
  681. CJK characters belonging to these legacy charsets:
  682. GB2312, Big5, JISX0208, JISX0212, JISX0213-1, JISX0213-2, KSC5601
  683. The latter support is done in Utf-Translate-Cjk mode (turned on by
  684. default). Which Unicode CJK characters are decoded into which Emacs
  685. charset is decided by the current language environment. For instance,
  686. in Chinese-GB, most of them are decoded into chinese-gb2312.
  687. If you read UTF-8 data with code points outside these ranges, the
  688. characters appear in the buffer as raw bytes of the original UTF-8
  689. (composed into a single quasi-character) and they will be written back
  690. correctly as UTF-8, assuming you don't break the composed sequences.
  691. If you read such characters from UTF-16 or UTF-7 data, they are
  692. substituted with the Unicode `replacement character', and you lose
  693. information.
  694. ** Accented ISO-8859-1 characters are displayed as | or _.
  695. Try other font set sizes (S-mouse-1). If the problem persists with
  696. other sizes as well, your text is corrupted, probably through software
  697. that is not 8-bit clean. If the problem goes away with another font
  698. size, it's probably because some fonts pretend to be ISO-8859-1 fonts
  699. when they are really ASCII fonts. In particular the schumacher-clean
  700. fonts have this bug in some versions of X.
  701. To see what glyphs are included in a font, use `xfd', like this:
  702. xfd -fn -schumacher-clean-medium-r-normal--12-120-75-75-c-60-iso8859-1
  703. If this shows only ASCII glyphs, the font is indeed the source of the problem.
  704. The solution is to remove the corresponding lines from the appropriate
  705. `fonts.alias' file, then run `mkfontdir' in that directory, and then run
  706. `xset fp rehash'.
  707. ** The `oc-unicode' package doesn't work with Emacs 21.
  708. This package tries to define more private charsets than there are free
  709. slots now. The current built-in Unicode support is actually more
  710. flexible. (Use option `utf-translate-cjk-mode' if you need CJK
  711. support.) Files encoded as emacs-mule using oc-unicode aren't
  712. generally read correctly by Emacs 21.
  713. ** After a while, Emacs slips into unibyte mode.
  714. The VM mail package, which is not part of Emacs, sometimes does
  715. (standard-display-european t)
  716. That should be changed to
  717. (standard-display-european 1 t)
  718. * X runtime problems
  719. ** X keyboard problems
  720. *** You "lose characters" after typing Compose Character key.
  721. This is because the Compose Character key is defined as the keysym
  722. Multi_key, and Emacs (seeing that) does the proper X11
  723. character-composition processing. If you don't want your Compose key
  724. to do that, you can redefine it with xmodmap.
  725. For example, here's one way to turn it into a Meta key:
  726. xmodmap -e "keysym Multi_key = Meta_L"
  727. If all users at your site of a particular keyboard prefer Meta to
  728. Compose, you can make the remapping happen automatically by adding the
  729. xmodmap command to the xdm setup script for that display.
  730. *** Using X Windows, control-shift-leftbutton makes Emacs hang.
  731. Use the shell command `xset bc' to make the old X Menu package work.
  732. *** C-SPC fails to work on Fedora GNU/Linux (or with fcitx input method).
  733. Fedora Core 4 steals the C-SPC key by default for the `iiimx' program
  734. which is the input method for some languages. It blocks Emacs users
  735. from using the C-SPC key for `set-mark-command'.
  736. One solutions is to remove the `<Ctrl>space' from the `Iiimx' file
  737. which can be found in the `/usr/lib/X11/app-defaults' directory.
  738. However, that requires root access.
  739. Another is to specify `Emacs*useXIM: false' in your X resources.
  740. Another is to build Emacs with the `--without-xim' configure option.
  741. The same problem happens on any other system if you are using fcitx
  742. (Chinese input method) which by default use C-SPC for toggling. If
  743. you want to use fcitx with Emacs, you have two choices. Toggle fcitx
  744. by another key (e.g. C-\) by modifying ~/.fcitx/config, or be
  745. accustomed to use C-@ for `set-mark-command'.
  746. *** M-SPC seems to be ignored as input.
  747. See if your X server is set up to use this as a command
  748. for character composition.
  749. *** The S-C-t key combination doesn't get passed to Emacs on X.
  750. This happens because some X configurations assign the Ctrl-Shift-t
  751. combination the same meaning as the Multi_key. The offending
  752. definition is in the file `...lib/X11/locale/iso8859-1/Compose'; there
  753. might be other similar combinations which are grabbed by X for similar
  754. purposes.
  755. We think that this can be countermanded with the `xmodmap' utility, if
  756. you want to be able to bind one of these key sequences within Emacs.
  757. *** Under X, C-v and/or other keys don't work.
  758. These may have been intercepted by your window manager. In
  759. particular, AfterStep 1.6 is reported to steal C-v in its default
  760. configuration. Various Meta keys are also likely to be taken by the
  761. configuration of the `feel'. See the WM's documentation for how to
  762. change this.
  763. *** Clicking C-mouse-2 in the scroll bar doesn't split the window.
  764. This currently doesn't work with scroll-bar widgets (and we don't know
  765. a good way of implementing it with widgets). If Emacs is configured
  766. --without-toolkit-scroll-bars, C-mouse-2 on the scroll bar does work.
  767. *** Inability to send an Alt-modified key, when Emacs is communicating
  768. directly with an X server.
  769. If you have tried to bind an Alt-modified key as a command, and it
  770. does not work to type the command, the first thing you should check is
  771. whether the key is getting through to Emacs. To do this, type C-h c
  772. followed by the Alt-modified key. C-h c should say what kind of event
  773. it read. If it says it read an Alt-modified key, then make sure you
  774. have made the key binding correctly.
  775. If C-h c reports an event that doesn't have the Alt modifier, it may
  776. be because your X server has no key for the Alt modifier. The X
  777. server that comes from MIT does not set up the Alt modifier by default.
  778. If your keyboard has keys named Alt, you can enable them as follows:
  779. xmodmap -e 'add mod2 = Alt_L'
  780. xmodmap -e 'add mod2 = Alt_R'
  781. If the keyboard has just one key named Alt, then only one of those
  782. commands is needed. The modifier `mod2' is a reasonable choice if you
  783. are using an unmodified MIT version of X. Otherwise, choose any
  784. modifier bit not otherwise used.
  785. If your keyboard does not have keys named Alt, you can use some other
  786. keys. Use the keysym command in xmodmap to turn a function key (or
  787. some other 'spare' key) into Alt_L or into Alt_R, and then use the
  788. commands show above to make them modifier keys.
  789. Note that if you have Alt keys but no Meta keys, Emacs translates Alt
  790. into Meta. This is because of the great importance of Meta in Emacs.
  791. ** Window-manager and toolkit-related problems
  792. *** Metacity: Resizing Emacs or ALT-Tab causes X to be unresponsive.
  793. This happens sometimes when using Metacity. Resizing Emacs or ALT-Tab:bing
  794. makes the system unresponsive to the mouse or the keyboard. Killing Emacs
  795. or shifting out from X11 and back again usually cures it (i.e. Ctrl-Alt-F1
  796. and then Alt-F7). A bug for it is here:
  797. https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/metacity/+bug/231034.
  798. Note that a permanent fix seems to be to disable "assistive technologies".
  799. *** Gnome: Emacs receives input directly from the keyboard, bypassing XIM.
  800. This seems to happen when gnome-settings-daemon version 2.12 or later
  801. is running. If gnome-settings-daemon is not running, Emacs receives
  802. input through XIM without any problem. Furthermore, this seems only
  803. to happen in *.UTF-8 locales; zh_CN.GB2312 and zh_CN.GBK locales, for
  804. example, work fine. A bug report has been filed in the Gnome
  805. bugzilla: http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=357032
  806. *** Gnome: Emacs' xterm-mouse-mode doesn't work on the Gnome terminal.
  807. A symptom of this bug is that double-clicks insert a control sequence
  808. into the buffer. The reason this happens is an apparent
  809. incompatibility of the Gnome terminal with Xterm, which also affects
  810. other programs using the Xterm mouse interface. A problem report has
  811. been filed.
  812. *** KDE: When running on KDE, colors or fonts are not as specified for Emacs,
  813. or messed up.
  814. For example, you could see background you set for Emacs only in the
  815. empty portions of the Emacs display, while characters have some other
  816. background.
  817. This happens because KDE's defaults apply its color and font
  818. definitions even to applications that weren't compiled for KDE. The
  819. solution is to uncheck the "Apply fonts and colors to non-KDE apps"
  820. option in Preferences->Look&Feel->Style (KDE 2). In KDE 3, this option
  821. is in the "Colors" section, rather than "Style".
  822. Alternatively, if you do want the KDE defaults to apply to other
  823. applications, but not to Emacs, you could modify the file `Emacs.ad'
  824. (should be in the `/usr/share/apps/kdisplay/app-defaults/' directory)
  825. so that it doesn't set the default background and foreground only for
  826. Emacs. For example, make sure the following resources are either not
  827. present or commented out:
  828. Emacs.default.attributeForeground
  829. Emacs.default.attributeBackground
  830. Emacs*Foreground
  831. Emacs*Background
  832. It is also reported that a bug in the gtk-engines-qt engine can cause this if
  833. Emacs is compiled with Gtk+.
  834. The bug is fixed in version 0.7 or newer of gtk-engines-qt.
  835. *** KDE: Emacs hangs on KDE when a large portion of text is killed.
  836. This is caused by a bug in the KDE applet `klipper' which periodically
  837. requests the X clipboard contents from applications. Early versions
  838. of klipper don't implement the ICCCM protocol for large selections,
  839. which leads to Emacs being flooded with selection requests. After a
  840. while, Emacs may print a message:
  841. Timed out waiting for property-notify event
  842. A workaround is to not use `klipper'. An upgrade to the `klipper' that
  843. comes with KDE 3.3 or later also solves the problem.
  844. *** CDE: Frames may cover dialogs they created when using CDE.
  845. This can happen if you have "Allow Primary Windows On Top" enabled which
  846. seems to be the default in the Common Desktop Environment.
  847. To change, go in to "Desktop Controls" -> "Window Style Manager"
  848. and uncheck "Allow Primary Windows On Top".
  849. *** Xaw3d : When using Xaw3d scroll bars without arrows, the very first mouse
  850. click in a scroll bar might be ignored by the scroll bar widget. This
  851. is probably a bug in Xaw3d; when Xaw3d is compiled with arrows, the
  852. problem disappears.
  853. *** Xaw: There are known binary incompatibilities between Xaw, Xaw3d, neXtaw,
  854. XawM and the few other derivatives of Xaw. So when you compile with
  855. one of these, it may not work to dynamically link with another one.
  856. For example, strange problems, such as Emacs exiting when you type
  857. "C-x 1", were reported when Emacs compiled with Xaw3d and libXaw was
  858. used with neXtaw at run time.
  859. The solution is to rebuild Emacs with the toolkit version you actually
  860. want to use, or set LD_PRELOAD to preload the same toolkit version you
  861. built Emacs with.
  862. *** Open Motif: Problems with file dialogs in Emacs built with Open Motif.
  863. When Emacs 21 is built with Open Motif 2.1, it can happen that the
  864. graphical file dialog boxes do not work properly. The "OK", "Filter"
  865. and "Cancel" buttons do not respond to mouse clicks. Dragging the
  866. file dialog window usually causes the buttons to work again.
  867. The solution is to use LessTif instead. LessTif is a free replacement
  868. for Motif. See the file INSTALL for information on how to do this.
  869. Another workaround is not to use the mouse to trigger file prompts,
  870. but to use the keyboard. This way, you will be prompted for a file in
  871. the minibuffer instead of a graphical file dialog.
  872. *** LessTif: Problems in Emacs built with LessTif.
  873. The problems seem to depend on the version of LessTif and the Motif
  874. emulation for which it is set up.
  875. Only the Motif 1.2 emulation seems to be stable enough in LessTif.
  876. LessTif 0.92-17's Motif 1.2 emulation seems to work okay on FreeBSD.
  877. On GNU/Linux systems, lesstif-0.92.6 configured with "./configure
  878. --enable-build-12 --enable-default-12" is reported to be the most
  879. successful. The binary GNU/Linux package
  880. lesstif-devel-0.92.0-1.i386.rpm was reported to have problems with
  881. menu placement.
  882. On some systems, even with Motif 1.2 emulation, Emacs occasionally
  883. locks up, grabbing all mouse and keyboard events. We still don't know
  884. what causes these problems; they are not reproducible by Emacs developers.
  885. *** Motif: The Motif version of Emacs paints the screen a solid color.
  886. This has been observed to result from the following X resource:
  887. Emacs*default.attributeFont: -*-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-140-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
  888. That the resource has this effect indicates a bug in something, but we
  889. do not yet know what. If it is an Emacs bug, we hope someone can
  890. explain what the bug is so we can fix it. In the mean time, removing
  891. the resource prevents the problem.
  892. ** General X problems
  893. *** Redisplay using X11 is much slower than previous Emacs versions.
  894. We've noticed that certain X servers draw the text much slower when
  895. scroll bars are on the left. We don't know why this happens. If this
  896. happens to you, you can work around it by putting the scroll bars
  897. on the right (as they were in Emacs 19).
  898. Here's how to do this:
  899. (set-scroll-bar-mode 'right)
  900. If you're not sure whether (or how much) this problem affects you,
  901. try that and see how much difference it makes. To set things back
  902. to normal, do
  903. (set-scroll-bar-mode 'left)
  904. *** Error messages about undefined colors on X.
  905. The messages might say something like this:
  906. Unable to load color "grey95"
  907. (typically, in the `*Messages*' buffer), or something like this:
  908. Error while displaying tooltip: (error Undefined color lightyellow)
  909. These problems could happen if some other X program has used up too
  910. many colors of the X palette, leaving Emacs with insufficient system
  911. resources to load all the colors it needs.
  912. A solution is to exit the offending X programs before starting Emacs.
  913. "undefined color" messages can also occur if the RgbPath entry in the
  914. X configuration file is incorrect, or the rgb.txt file is not where
  915. X expects to find it.
  916. *** Improving performance with slow X connections.
  917. There are several ways to improve this performance, any subset of which can
  918. be carried out at the same time:
  919. 1) If you don't need X Input Methods (XIM) for entering text in some
  920. language you use, you can improve performance on WAN links by using
  921. the X resource useXIM to turn off use of XIM. This does not affect
  922. the use of Emacs' own input methods, which are part of the Leim
  923. package.
  924. 2) If the connection is very slow, you might also want to consider
  925. switching off scroll bars, menu bar, and tool bar. Adding the
  926. following forms to your .emacs file will accomplish that, but only
  927. after the initial frame is displayed:
  928. (scroll-bar-mode -1)
  929. (menu-bar-mode -1)
  930. (tool-bar-mode -1)
  931. For still quicker startup, put these X resources in your .Xdefaults
  932. file:
  933. Emacs.verticalScrollBars: off
  934. Emacs.menuBar: off
  935. Emacs.toolBar: off
  936. 3) Use ssh to forward the X connection, and enable compression on this
  937. forwarded X connection (ssh -XC remotehostname emacs ...).
  938. 4) Use lbxproxy on the remote end of the connection. This is an interface
  939. to the low bandwidth X extension in most modern X servers, which
  940. improves performance dramatically, at the slight expense of correctness
  941. of the X protocol. lbxproxy achieves the performance gain by grouping
  942. several X requests in one TCP packet and sending them off together,
  943. instead of requiring a round-trip for each X request in a separate
  944. packet. The switches that seem to work best for emacs are:
  945. -noatomsfile -nowinattr -cheaterrors -cheatevents
  946. Note that the -nograbcmap option is known to cause problems.
  947. For more about lbxproxy, see:
  948. http://www.xfree86.org/4.3.0/lbxproxy.1.html
  949. 5) If copying and killing is slow, try to disable the interaction with the
  950. native system's clipboard by adding these lines to your .emacs file:
  951. (setq interprogram-cut-function nil)
  952. (setq interprogram-paste-function nil)
  953. *** Emacs gives the error, Couldn't find per display information.
  954. This can result if the X server runs out of memory because Emacs uses
  955. a large number of fonts. On systems where this happens, C-h h is
  956. likely to cause it.
  957. We do not know of a way to prevent the problem.
  958. *** Emacs does not notice when you release the mouse.
  959. There are reports that this happened with (some) Microsoft mice and
  960. that replacing the mouse made it stop.
  961. *** You can't select from submenus (in the X toolkit version).
  962. On certain systems, mouse-tracking and selection in top-level menus
  963. works properly with the X toolkit, but neither of them works when you
  964. bring up a submenu (such as Bookmarks or Compare or Apply Patch, in
  965. the Files menu).
  966. This works on most systems. There is speculation that the failure is
  967. due to bugs in old versions of X toolkit libraries, but no one really
  968. knows. If someone debugs this and finds the precise cause, perhaps a
  969. workaround can be found.
  970. *** An error message such as `X protocol error: BadMatch (invalid
  971. parameter attributes) on protocol request 93'.
  972. This comes from having an invalid X resource, such as
  973. emacs*Cursor: black
  974. (which is invalid because it specifies a color name for something
  975. that isn't a color.)
  976. The fix is to correct your X resources.
  977. *** Slow startup on X11R6 with X windows.
  978. If Emacs takes two minutes to start up on X11R6, see if your X
  979. resources specify any Adobe fonts. That causes the type-1 font
  980. renderer to start up, even if the font you asked for is not a type-1
  981. font.
  982. One way to avoid this problem is to eliminate the type-1 fonts from
  983. your font path, like this:
  984. xset -fp /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Type1/
  985. *** Pull-down menus appear in the wrong place, in the toolkit version of Emacs.
  986. An X resource of this form can cause the problem:
  987. Emacs*geometry: 80x55+0+0
  988. This resource is supposed to apply, and does apply, to the menus
  989. individually as well as to Emacs frames. If that is not what you
  990. want, rewrite the resource.
  991. To check thoroughly for such resource specifications, use `xrdb
  992. -query' to see what resources the X server records, and also look at
  993. the user's ~/.Xdefaults and ~/.Xdefaults-* files.
  994. *** Emacs running under X Windows does not handle mouse clicks.
  995. *** `emacs -geometry 80x20' finds a file named `80x20'.
  996. One cause of such problems is having (setq term-file-prefix nil) in
  997. your .emacs file. Another cause is a bad value of EMACSLOADPATH in
  998. the environment.
  999. *** X Windows doesn't work if DISPLAY uses a hostname.
  1000. People have reported kernel bugs in certain systems that cause Emacs
  1001. not to work with X Windows if DISPLAY is set using a host name. But
  1002. the problem does not occur if DISPLAY is set to `unix:0.0'. I think
  1003. the bug has to do with SIGIO or FIONREAD.
  1004. You may be able to compensate for the bug by doing (set-input-mode nil nil).
  1005. However, that has the disadvantage of turning off interrupts, so that
  1006. you are unable to quit out of a Lisp program by typing C-g.
  1007. *** Prevent double pastes in X
  1008. The problem: a region, such as a command, is pasted twice when you copy
  1009. it with your mouse from GNU Emacs to an xterm or an RXVT shell in X.
  1010. The solution: try the following in your X configuration file,
  1011. /etc/X11/xorg.conf This should enable both PS/2 and USB mice for
  1012. single copies. You do not need any other drivers or options.
  1013. Section "InputDevice"
  1014. Identifier "Generic Mouse"
  1015. Driver "mousedev"
  1016. Option "Device" "/dev/input/mice"
  1017. EndSection
  1018. *** Emacs is slow to exit in X
  1019. After you use e.g. C-x C-c to exit, it takes many seconds before the
  1020. Emacs window disappears. If Emacs was started from a terminal, you
  1021. see the message:
  1022. Error saving to X clipboard manager.
  1023. If the problem persists, set `x-select-enable-clipboard-manager' to nil.
  1024. As the message suggests, this problem occurs when Emacs thinks you
  1025. have a clipboard manager program running, but has trouble contacting it.
  1026. If you don't want to use a clipboard manager, you can set the
  1027. suggested variable. Or you can make Emacs not wait so long by
  1028. reducing the value of `x-selection-timeout', either in .emacs or with
  1029. X resources.
  1030. Sometimes this problem is due to a bug in your clipboard manager.
  1031. Updating to the latest version of the manager can help.
  1032. For example, in the Xfce 4.8 desktop environment, the clipboard
  1033. manager in versions of xfce4-settings-helper before 4.8.2 is buggy;
  1034. https://bugzilla.xfce.org/show_bug.cgi?id=7588 .
  1035. * Runtime problems on character terminals
  1036. ** The meta key does not work on xterm.
  1037. Typing M-x rings the terminal bell, and inserts a string like ";120~".
  1038. For recent xterm versions (>= 216), Emacs uses xterm's modifyOtherKeys
  1039. feature to generate strings for key combinations that are not
  1040. otherwise usable. One circumstance in which this can cause problems
  1041. is if you have specified the X resource
  1042. xterm*VT100.Translations
  1043. to contain translations that use the meta key. Then xterm will not
  1044. use meta in modified function-keys, which confuses Emacs. To fix
  1045. this, you can remove the X resource or put this in your init file:
  1046. (xterm-remove-modify-other-keys)
  1047. ** Emacs spontaneously displays "I-search: " at the bottom of the screen.
  1048. This means that Control-S/Control-Q (XON/XOFF) "flow control" is being
  1049. used. C-s/C-q flow control is bad for Emacs editors because it takes
  1050. away C-s and C-q as user commands. Since editors do not output long
  1051. streams of text without user commands, there is no need for a
  1052. user-issuable "stop output" command in an editor; therefore, a
  1053. properly designed flow control mechanism would transmit all possible
  1054. input characters without interference. Designing such a mechanism is
  1055. easy, for a person with at least half a brain.
  1056. There are three possible reasons why flow control could be taking place:
  1057. 1) Terminal has not been told to disable flow control
  1058. 2) Insufficient padding for the terminal in use
  1059. 3) Some sort of terminal concentrator or line switch is responsible
  1060. First of all, many terminals have a set-up mode which controls whether
  1061. they generate XON/XOFF flow control characters. This must be set to
  1062. "no XON/XOFF" in order for Emacs to work. (For example, on a VT220
  1063. you may select "No XOFF" in the setup menu.) Sometimes there is an
  1064. escape sequence that the computer can send to turn flow control off
  1065. and on. If so, perhaps the termcap `ti' string should turn flow
  1066. control off, and the `te' string should turn it on.
  1067. Once the terminal has been told "no flow control", you may find it
  1068. needs more padding. The amount of padding Emacs sends is controlled
  1069. by the termcap entry for the terminal in use, and by the output baud
  1070. rate as known by the kernel. The shell command `stty' will print
  1071. your output baud rate; `stty' with suitable arguments will set it if
  1072. it is wrong. Setting to a higher speed causes increased padding. If
  1073. the results are wrong for the correct speed, there is probably a
  1074. problem in the termcap entry. You must speak to a local Unix wizard
  1075. to fix this. Perhaps you are just using the wrong terminal type.
  1076. For terminals that lack a "no flow control" mode, sometimes just
  1077. giving lots of padding will prevent actual generation of flow control
  1078. codes. You might as well try it.
  1079. If you are really unlucky, your terminal is connected to the computer
  1080. through a concentrator which sends XON/XOFF flow control to the
  1081. computer, or it insists on sending flow control itself no matter how
  1082. much padding you give it. Unless you can figure out how to turn flow
  1083. control off on this concentrator (again, refer to your local wizard),
  1084. you are screwed! You should have the terminal or concentrator
  1085. replaced with a properly designed one. In the mean time, some drastic
  1086. measures can make Emacs semi-work.
  1087. You can make Emacs ignore C-s and C-q and let the operating system
  1088. handle them. To do this on a per-session basis, just type M-x
  1089. enable-flow-control RET. You will see a message that C-\ and C-^ are
  1090. now translated to C-s and C-q. (Use the same command M-x
  1091. enable-flow-control to turn *off* this special mode. It toggles flow
  1092. control handling.)
  1093. If C-\ and C-^ are inconvenient for you (for example, if one of them
  1094. is the escape character of your terminal concentrator), you can choose
  1095. other characters by setting the variables flow-control-c-s-replacement
  1096. and flow-control-c-q-replacement. But choose carefully, since all
  1097. other control characters are already used by emacs.
  1098. IMPORTANT: if you type C-s by accident while flow control is enabled,
  1099. Emacs output will freeze, and you will have to remember to type C-q in
  1100. order to continue.
  1101. If you work in an environment where a majority of terminals of a
  1102. certain type are flow control hobbled, you can use the function
  1103. `enable-flow-control-on' to turn on this flow control avoidance scheme
  1104. automatically. Here is an example:
  1105. (enable-flow-control-on "vt200" "vt300" "vt101" "vt131")
  1106. If this isn't quite correct (e.g. you have a mixture of flow-control hobbled
  1107. and good vt200 terminals), you can still run enable-flow-control
  1108. manually.
  1109. I have no intention of ever redesigning the Emacs command set for the
  1110. assumption that terminals use C-s/C-q flow control. XON/XOFF flow
  1111. control technique is a bad design, and terminals that need it are bad
  1112. merchandise and should not be purchased. Now that X is becoming
  1113. widespread, XON/XOFF seems to be on the way out. If you can get some
  1114. use out of GNU Emacs on inferior terminals, more power to you, but I
  1115. will not make Emacs worse for properly designed systems for the sake
  1116. of inferior systems.
  1117. ** Control-S and Control-Q commands are ignored completely.
  1118. For some reason, your system is using brain-damaged C-s/C-q flow
  1119. control despite Emacs's attempts to turn it off. Perhaps your
  1120. terminal is connected to the computer through a concentrator
  1121. that wants to use flow control.
  1122. You should first try to tell the concentrator not to use flow control.
  1123. If you succeed in this, try making the terminal work without
  1124. flow control, as described in the preceding section.
  1125. If that line of approach is not successful, map some other characters
  1126. into C-s and C-q using keyboard-translate-table. The example above
  1127. shows how to do this with C-^ and C-\.
  1128. ** Screen is updated wrong, but only on one kind of terminal.
  1129. This could mean that the termcap entry you are using for that
  1130. terminal is wrong, or it could mean that Emacs has a bug handing
  1131. the combination of features specified for that terminal.
  1132. The first step in tracking this down is to record what characters
  1133. Emacs is sending to the terminal. Execute the Lisp expression
  1134. (open-termscript "./emacs-script") to make Emacs write all
  1135. terminal output into the file ~/emacs-script as well; then do
  1136. what makes the screen update wrong, and look at the file
  1137. and decode the characters using the manual for the terminal.
  1138. There are several possibilities:
  1139. 1) The characters sent are correct, according to the terminal manual.
  1140. In this case, there is no obvious bug in Emacs, and most likely you
  1141. need more padding, or possibly the terminal manual is wrong.
  1142. 2) The characters sent are incorrect, due to an obscure aspect
  1143. of the terminal behavior not described in an obvious way by termcap.
  1144. This case is hard. It will be necessary to think of a way for
  1145. Emacs to distinguish between terminals with this kind of behavior
  1146. and other terminals that behave subtly differently but are
  1147. classified the same by termcap; or else find an algorithm for
  1148. Emacs to use that avoids the difference. Such changes must be
  1149. tested on many kinds of terminals.
  1150. 3) The termcap entry is wrong.
  1151. See the file etc/TERMS for information on changes
  1152. that are known to be needed in commonly used termcap entries
  1153. for certain terminals.
  1154. 4) The characters sent are incorrect, and clearly cannot be
  1155. right for any terminal with the termcap entry you were using.
  1156. This is unambiguously an Emacs bug, and can probably be fixed
  1157. in termcap.c, tparam.c, term.c, scroll.c, cm.c or dispnew.c.
  1158. ** Control-S and Control-Q commands are ignored completely on a net connection.
  1159. Some versions of rlogin (and possibly telnet) do not pass flow
  1160. control characters to the remote system to which they connect.
  1161. On such systems, emacs on the remote system cannot disable flow
  1162. control on the local system. Sometimes `rlogin -8' will avoid this problem.
  1163. One way to cure this is to disable flow control on the local host
  1164. (the one running rlogin, not the one running rlogind) using the
  1165. stty command, before starting the rlogin process. On many systems,
  1166. "stty start u stop u" will do this. On some systems, use
  1167. "stty -ixon" instead.
  1168. Some versions of tcsh will prevent even this from working. One way
  1169. around this is to start another shell before starting rlogin, and
  1170. issue the stty command to disable flow control from that shell.
  1171. If none of these methods work, the best solution is to type
  1172. M-x enable-flow-control at the beginning of your emacs session, or
  1173. if you expect the problem to continue, add a line such as the
  1174. following to your .emacs (on the host running rlogind):
  1175. (enable-flow-control-on "vt200" "vt300" "vt101" "vt131")
  1176. See the entry about spontaneous display of I-search (above) for more info.
  1177. ** Output from Control-V is slow.
  1178. On many bit-map terminals, scrolling operations are fairly slow.
  1179. Often the termcap entry for the type of terminal in use fails
  1180. to inform Emacs of this. The two lines at the bottom of the screen
  1181. before a Control-V command are supposed to appear at the top after
  1182. the Control-V command. If Emacs thinks scrolling the lines is fast,
  1183. it will scroll them to the top of the screen.
  1184. If scrolling is slow but Emacs thinks it is fast, the usual reason is
  1185. that the termcap entry for the terminal you are using does not
  1186. specify any padding time for the `al' and `dl' strings. Emacs
  1187. concludes that these operations take only as much time as it takes to
  1188. send the commands at whatever line speed you are using. You must
  1189. fix the termcap entry to specify, for the `al' and `dl', as much
  1190. time as the operations really take.
  1191. Currently Emacs thinks in terms of serial lines which send characters
  1192. at a fixed rate, so that any operation which takes time for the
  1193. terminal to execute must also be padded. With bit-map terminals
  1194. operated across networks, often the network provides some sort of
  1195. flow control so that padding is never needed no matter how slow
  1196. an operation is. You must still specify a padding time if you want
  1197. Emacs to realize that the operation takes a long time. This will
  1198. cause padding characters to be sent unnecessarily, but they do
  1199. not really cost much. They will be transmitted while the scrolling
  1200. is happening and then discarded quickly by the terminal.
  1201. Most bit-map terminals provide commands for inserting or deleting
  1202. multiple lines at once. Define the `AL' and `DL' strings in the
  1203. termcap entry to say how to do these things, and you will have
  1204. fast output without wasted padding characters. These strings should
  1205. each contain a single %-spec saying how to send the number of lines
  1206. to be scrolled. These %-specs are like those in the termcap
  1207. `cm' string.
  1208. You should also define the `IC' and `DC' strings if your terminal
  1209. has a command to insert or delete multiple characters. These
  1210. take the number of positions to insert or delete as an argument.
  1211. A `cs' string to set the scrolling region will reduce the amount
  1212. of motion you see on the screen when part of the screen is scrolled.
  1213. ** You type Control-H (Backspace) expecting to delete characters.
  1214. Put `stty dec' in your .login file and your problems will disappear
  1215. after a day or two.
  1216. The choice of Backspace for erasure was based on confusion, caused by
  1217. the fact that backspacing causes erasure (later, when you type another
  1218. character) on most display terminals. But it is a mistake. Deletion
  1219. of text is not the same thing as backspacing followed by failure to
  1220. overprint. I do not wish to propagate this confusion by conforming
  1221. to it.
  1222. For this reason, I believe `stty dec' is the right mode to use,
  1223. and I have designed Emacs to go with that. If there were a thousand
  1224. other control characters, I would define Control-h to delete as well;
  1225. but there are not very many other control characters, and I think
  1226. that providing the most mnemonic possible Help character is more
  1227. important than adapting to people who don't use `stty dec'.
  1228. If you are obstinate about confusing buggy overprinting with deletion,
  1229. you can redefine Backspace in your .emacs file:
  1230. (global-set-key "\b" 'delete-backward-char)
  1231. You can probably access help-command via f1.
  1232. ** Colors are not available on a tty or in xterm.
  1233. Emacs 21 supports colors on character terminals and terminal
  1234. emulators, but this support relies on the terminfo or termcap database
  1235. entry to specify that the display supports color. Emacs looks at the
  1236. "Co" capability for the terminal to find out how many colors are
  1237. supported; it should be non-zero to activate the color support within
  1238. Emacs. (Most color terminals support 8 or 16 colors.) If your system
  1239. uses terminfo, the name of the capability equivalent to "Co" is
  1240. "colors".
  1241. In addition to the "Co" capability, Emacs needs the "op" (for
  1242. ``original pair'') capability, which tells how to switch the terminal
  1243. back to the default foreground and background colors. Emacs will not
  1244. use colors if this capability is not defined. If your terminal entry
  1245. doesn't provide such a capability, try using the ANSI standard escape
  1246. sequence \E[00m (that is, define a new termcap/terminfo entry and make
  1247. it use your current terminal's entry plus \E[00m for the "op"
  1248. capability).
  1249. Finally, the "NC" capability (terminfo name: "ncv") tells Emacs which
  1250. attributes cannot be used with colors. Setting this capability
  1251. incorrectly might have the effect of disabling colors; try setting
  1252. this capability to `0' (zero) and see if that helps.
  1253. Emacs uses the database entry for the terminal whose name is the value
  1254. of the environment variable TERM. With `xterm', a common terminal
  1255. entry that supports color is `xterm-color', so setting TERM's value to
  1256. `xterm-color' might activate the color support on an xterm-compatible
  1257. emulator.
  1258. Beginning with version 22.1, Emacs supports the --color command-line
  1259. option which may be used to force Emacs to use one of a few popular
  1260. modes for getting colors on a tty. For example, --color=ansi8 sets up
  1261. for using the ANSI-standard escape sequences that support 8 colors.
  1262. Some modes do not use colors unless you turn on the Font-lock mode.
  1263. Some people have long ago set their `~/.emacs' files to turn on
  1264. Font-lock on X only, so they won't see colors on a tty. The
  1265. recommended way of turning on Font-lock is by typing "M-x
  1266. global-font-lock-mode RET" or by customizing the variable
  1267. `global-font-lock-mode'.
  1268. ** Unexpected characters inserted into the buffer when you start Emacs.
  1269. See eg http://debbugs.gnu.org/11129
  1270. This can happen when you start Emacs in -nw mode in an Xterm.
  1271. For example, in the *scratch* buffer, you might see something like:
  1272. 0;276;0c
  1273. This is more likely to happen if you are using Emacs over a slow
  1274. connection, and begin typing before Emacs is ready to respond.
  1275. This occurs when Emacs tries to query the terminal to see what
  1276. capabilities it supports, and gets confused by the answer.
  1277. To avoid it, set xterm-extra-capabilities to a value other than
  1278. `check' (the default). See that variable's documentation (in
  1279. term/xterm.el) for more details.
  1280. * Runtime problems specific to individual Unix variants
  1281. ** GNU/Linux
  1282. *** GNU/Linux: Process output is corrupted.
  1283. There is a bug in Linux kernel 2.6.10 PTYs that can cause emacs to
  1284. read corrupted process output.
  1285. *** GNU/Linux: Remote access to CVS with SSH causes file corruption.
  1286. If you access a remote CVS repository via SSH, files may be corrupted
  1287. due to bad interaction between CVS, SSH, and libc.
  1288. To fix the problem, save the following script into a file, make it
  1289. executable, and set CVS_RSH environment variable to the file name of
  1290. the script:
  1291. #!/bin/bash
  1292. exec 2> >(exec cat >&2 2>/dev/null)
  1293. exec ssh "$@"
  1294. *** GNU/Linux: Truncated svn annotate output with SSH.
  1295. http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=7791
  1296. The symptoms are: you are accessing a svn repository over SSH.
  1297. You use vc-annotate on a large (several thousand line) file, and the
  1298. result is truncated around the 1000 line mark. It works fine with
  1299. other access methods (eg http), or from outside Emacs.
  1300. This may be a similar libc/SSH issue to the one mentioned above for CVS.
  1301. A similar workaround seems to be effective: create a script with the
  1302. same contents as the one used above for CVS_RSH, and set the SVN_SSH
  1303. environment variable to point to it.
  1304. *** GNU/Linux: On Linux-based GNU systems using libc versions 5.4.19 through
  1305. 5.4.22, Emacs crashes at startup with a segmentation fault.
  1306. This problem happens if libc defines the symbol __malloc_initialized.
  1307. One known solution is to upgrade to a newer libc version. 5.4.33 is
  1308. known to work.
  1309. *** GNU/Linux: After upgrading to a newer version of Emacs,
  1310. the Meta key stops working.
  1311. This was reported to happen on a GNU/Linux system distributed by
  1312. Mandrake. The reason is that the previous version of Emacs was
  1313. modified by Mandrake to make the Alt key act as the Meta key, on a
  1314. keyboard where the Windows key is the one which produces the Meta
  1315. modifier. A user who started using a newer version of Emacs, which
  1316. was not hacked by Mandrake, expected the Alt key to continue to act as
  1317. Meta, and was astonished when that didn't happen.
  1318. The solution is to find out what key on your keyboard produces the Meta
  1319. modifier, and use that key instead. Try all of the keys to the left
  1320. and to the right of the space bar, together with the `x' key, and see
  1321. which combination produces "M-x" in the echo area. You can also use
  1322. the `xmodmap' utility to show all the keys which produce a Meta
  1323. modifier:
  1324. xmodmap -pk | egrep -i "meta|alt"
  1325. A more convenient way of finding out which keys produce a Meta modifier
  1326. is to use the `xkbprint' utility, if it's available on your system:
  1327. xkbprint 0:0 /tmp/k.ps
  1328. This produces a PostScript file `/tmp/k.ps' with a picture of your
  1329. keyboard; printing that file on a PostScript printer will show what
  1330. keys can serve as Meta.
  1331. The `xkeycaps' also shows a visual representation of the current
  1332. keyboard settings. It also allows to modify them.
  1333. *** GNU/Linux: slow startup on Linux-based GNU systems.
  1334. People using systems based on the Linux kernel sometimes report that
  1335. startup takes 10 to 15 seconds longer than `usual'.
  1336. This is because Emacs looks up the host name when it starts.
  1337. Normally, this takes negligible time; the extra delay is due to
  1338. improper system configuration. This problem can occur for both
  1339. networked and non-networked machines.
  1340. Here is how to fix the configuration. It requires being root.
  1341. **** Networked Case.
  1342. First, make sure the files `/etc/hosts' and `/etc/host.conf' both
  1343. exist. The first line in the `/etc/hosts' file should look like this
  1344. (replace HOSTNAME with your host name):
  1345. 127.0.0.1 HOSTNAME
  1346. Also make sure that the `/etc/host.conf' files contains the following
  1347. lines:
  1348. order hosts, bind
  1349. multi on
  1350. Any changes, permanent and temporary, to the host name should be
  1351. indicated in the `/etc/hosts' file, since it acts a limited local
  1352. database of addresses and names (e.g., some SLIP connections
  1353. dynamically allocate ip addresses).
  1354. **** Non-Networked Case.
  1355. The solution described in the networked case applies here as well.
  1356. However, if you never intend to network your machine, you can use a
  1357. simpler solution: create an empty `/etc/host.conf' file. The command
  1358. `touch /etc/host.conf' suffices to create the file. The `/etc/hosts'
  1359. file is not necessary with this approach.
  1360. *** GNU/Linux: Emacs on a tty switches the cursor to large blinking block.
  1361. This was reported to happen on some GNU/Linux systems which use
  1362. ncurses version 5.0, but could be relevant for other versions as well.
  1363. These versions of ncurses come with a `linux' terminfo entry, where
  1364. the "cvvis" capability (termcap "vs") is defined as "\E[?25h\E[?8c"
  1365. (show cursor, change size). This escape sequence switches on a
  1366. blinking hardware text-mode cursor whose size is a full character
  1367. cell. This blinking cannot be stopped, since a hardware cursor
  1368. always blinks.
  1369. A work-around is to redefine the "cvvis" capability so that it
  1370. enables a *software* cursor. The software cursor works by inverting
  1371. the colors of the character at point, so what you see is a block
  1372. cursor that doesn't blink. For this to work, you need to redefine
  1373. the "cnorm" capability as well, so that it operates on the software
  1374. cursor instead of the hardware cursor.
  1375. To this end, run "infocmp linux > linux-term", edit the file
  1376. `linux-term' to make both the "cnorm" and "cvvis" capabilities send
  1377. the sequence "\E[?25h\E[?17;0;64c", and then run "tic linux-term" to
  1378. produce a modified terminfo entry.
  1379. Alternatively, if you want a blinking underscore as your Emacs cursor,
  1380. change the "cvvis" capability to send the "\E[?25h\E[?0c" command.
  1381. *** GNU/Linux: Error messages `internal facep []' happen on GNU/Linux systems.
  1382. There is a report that replacing libc.so.5.0.9 with libc.so.5.2.16
  1383. caused this to start happening. People are not sure why, but the
  1384. problem seems unlikely to be in Emacs itself. Some suspect that it
  1385. is actually Xlib which won't work with libc.so.5.2.16.
  1386. Using the old library version is a workaround.
  1387. ** FreeBSD
  1388. *** FreeBSD 2.1.5: useless symbolic links remain in /tmp or other
  1389. directories that have the +t bit.
  1390. This is because of a kernel bug in FreeBSD 2.1.5 (fixed in 2.2).
  1391. Emacs uses symbolic links to implement file locks. In a directory
  1392. with +t bit, the directory owner becomes the owner of the symbolic
  1393. link, so that it cannot be removed by anyone else.
  1394. If you don't like those useless links, you can let Emacs not to using
  1395. file lock by adding #undef CLASH_DETECTION to config.h.
  1396. *** FreeBSD: Getting a Meta key on the console.
  1397. By default, neither Alt nor any other key acts as a Meta key on
  1398. FreeBSD, but this can be changed using kbdcontrol(1). Dump the
  1399. current keymap to a file with the command
  1400. $ kbdcontrol -d >emacs.kbd
  1401. Edit emacs.kbd, and give the key you want to be the Meta key the
  1402. definition `meta'. For instance, if your keyboard has a ``Windows''
  1403. key with scan code 105, change the line for scan code 105 in emacs.kbd
  1404. to look like this
  1405. 105 meta meta meta meta meta meta meta meta O
  1406. to make the Windows key the Meta key. Load the new keymap with
  1407. $ kbdcontrol -l emacs.kbd
  1408. ** HP-UX
  1409. *** HP/UX : Shell mode gives the message, "`tty`: Ambiguous".
  1410. christos@theory.tn.cornell.edu says:
  1411. The problem is that in your .cshrc you have something that tries to
  1412. execute `tty`. If you are not running the shell on a real tty then
  1413. tty will print "not a tty". Csh expects one word in some places,
  1414. but tty is giving it back 3.
  1415. The solution is to add a pair of quotes around `tty` to make it a single
  1416. word:
  1417. if (`tty` == "/dev/console")
  1418. should be changed to:
  1419. if ("`tty`" == "/dev/console")
  1420. Even better, move things that set up terminal sections out of .cshrc
  1421. and into .login.
  1422. *** HP/UX: `Pid xxx killed due to text modification or page I/O error'.
  1423. On HP/UX, you can get that error when the Emacs executable is on an NFS
  1424. file system. HP/UX responds this way if it tries to swap in a page and
  1425. does not get a response from the server within a timeout whose default
  1426. value is just ten seconds.
  1427. If this happens to you, extend the timeout period.
  1428. *** HP/UX: The right Alt key works wrong on German HP keyboards (and perhaps
  1429. other non-English HP keyboards too).
  1430. This is because HP-UX defines the modifiers wrong in X. Here is a
  1431. shell script to fix the problem; be sure that it is run after VUE
  1432. configures the X server.
  1433. xmodmap 2> /dev/null - << EOF
  1434. keysym Alt_L = Meta_L
  1435. keysym Alt_R = Meta_R
  1436. EOF
  1437. xmodmap - << EOF
  1438. clear mod1
  1439. keysym Mode_switch = NoSymbol
  1440. add mod1 = Meta_L
  1441. keysym Meta_R = Mode_switch
  1442. add mod2 = Mode_switch
  1443. EOF
  1444. *** HP/UX: "Cannot find callback list" messages from dialog boxes in
  1445. Emacs built with Motif.
  1446. This problem resulted from a bug in GCC 2.4.5. Newer GCC versions
  1447. such as 2.7.0 fix the problem.
  1448. *** HP/UX: Emacs does not recognize the AltGr key.
  1449. To fix this, set up a file ~/.dt/sessions/sessionetc with executable
  1450. rights, containing this text:
  1451. --------------------------------
  1452. xmodmap 2> /dev/null - << EOF
  1453. keysym Alt_L = Meta_L
  1454. keysym Alt_R = Meta_R
  1455. EOF
  1456. xmodmap - << EOF
  1457. clear mod1
  1458. keysym Mode_switch = NoSymbol
  1459. add mod1 = Meta_L
  1460. keysym Meta_R = Mode_switch
  1461. add mod2 = Mode_switch
  1462. EOF
  1463. --------------------------------
  1464. *** HP/UX 11.0: Emacs makes HP/UX 11.0 crash.
  1465. This is a bug in HPUX; HPUX patch PHKL_16260 is said to fix it.
  1466. ** AIX
  1467. *** AIX: Trouble using ptys.
  1468. People often install the pty devices on AIX incorrectly.
  1469. Use `smit pty' to reinstall them properly.
  1470. *** AIXterm: Your Delete key sends a Backspace to the terminal.
  1471. The solution is to include in your .Xdefaults the lines:
  1472. *aixterm.Translations: #override <Key>BackSpace: string(0x7f)
  1473. aixterm*ttyModes: erase ^?
  1474. This makes your Backspace key send DEL (ASCII 127).
  1475. *** AIX: If linking fails because libXbsd isn't found, check if you
  1476. are compiling with the system's `cc' and CFLAGS containing `-O5'. If
  1477. so, you have hit a compiler bug. Please make sure to re-configure
  1478. Emacs so that it isn't compiled with `-O5'.
  1479. *** AIX 4.3.x or 4.4: Compiling fails.
  1480. This could happen if you use /bin/c89 as your compiler, instead of
  1481. the default `cc'. /bin/c89 treats certain warnings, such as benign
  1482. redefinitions of macros, as errors, and fails the build. A solution
  1483. is to use the default compiler `cc'.
  1484. *** AIX 4: Some programs fail when run in a Shell buffer
  1485. with an error message like No terminfo entry for "unknown".
  1486. On AIX, many terminal type definitions are not installed by default.
  1487. `unknown' is one of them. Install the "Special Generic Terminal
  1488. Definitions" to make them defined.
  1489. ** Solaris
  1490. We list bugs in current versions here. See also the section on legacy
  1491. systems.
  1492. *** On Solaris, C-x doesn't get through to Emacs when you use the console.
  1493. This is a Solaris feature (at least on Intel x86 cpus). Type C-r
  1494. C-r C-t, to toggle whether C-x gets through to Emacs.
  1495. *** Problem with remote X server on Suns.
  1496. On a Sun, running Emacs on one machine with the X server on another
  1497. may not work if you have used the unshared system libraries. This
  1498. is because the unshared libraries fail to use YP for host name lookup.
  1499. As a result, the host name you specify may not be recognized.
  1500. *** Solaris 2.6: Emacs crashes with SIGBUS or SIGSEGV on Solaris after you delete a frame.
  1501. We suspect that this is a bug in the X libraries provided by
  1502. Sun. There is a report that one of these patches fixes the bug and
  1503. makes the problem stop:
  1504. 105216-01 105393-01 105518-01 105621-01 105665-01 105615-02 105216-02
  1505. 105667-01 105401-08 105615-03 105621-02 105686-02 105736-01 105755-03
  1506. 106033-01 105379-01 105786-01 105181-04 105379-03 105786-04 105845-01
  1507. 105284-05 105669-02 105837-01 105837-02 105558-01 106125-02 105407-01
  1508. Another person using a newer system (kernel patch level Generic_105181-06)
  1509. suspects that the bug was fixed by one of these more recent patches:
  1510. 106040-07 SunOS 5.6: X Input & Output Method patch
  1511. 106222-01 OpenWindows 3.6: filemgr (ff.core) fixes
  1512. 105284-12 Motif 1.2.7: sparc Runtime library patch
  1513. *** Solaris 7 or 8: Emacs reports a BadAtom error (from X)
  1514. This happens when Emacs was built on some other version of Solaris.
  1515. Rebuild it on Solaris 8.
  1516. *** When using M-x dbx with the SparcWorks debugger, the `up' and `down'
  1517. commands do not move the arrow in Emacs.
  1518. You can fix this by adding the following line to `~/.dbxinit':
  1519. dbxenv output_short_file_name off
  1520. *** On Solaris, CTRL-t is ignored by Emacs when you use
  1521. the fr.ISO-8859-15 locale (and maybe other related locales).
  1522. You can fix this by editing the file:
  1523. /usr/openwin/lib/locale/iso8859-15/Compose
  1524. Near the bottom there is a line that reads:
  1525. Ctrl<t> <quotedbl> <Y> : "\276" threequarters
  1526. that should read:
  1527. Ctrl<T> <quotedbl> <Y> : "\276" threequarters
  1528. Note the lower case <t>. Changing this line should make C-t work.
  1529. *** On Solaris, Emacs fails to set menu-bar-update-hook on startup, with error
  1530. "Error in menu-bar-update-hook: (error Point before start of properties)".
  1531. This seems to be a GCC optimization bug that occurs for GCC 4.1.2 (-g
  1532. and -g -O2) and GCC 4.2.3 (-g -O and -g -O2). You can fix this by
  1533. compiling with GCC 4.2.3 or CC 5.7, with no optimizations.
  1534. ** Irix
  1535. *** Irix 6.5: Emacs crashes on the SGI R10K, when compiled with GCC.
  1536. This seems to be fixed in GCC 2.95.
  1537. *** Irix: Trouble using ptys, or running out of ptys.
  1538. The program mkpts (which may be in `/usr/adm' or `/usr/sbin') needs to
  1539. be set-UID to root, or non-root programs like Emacs will not be able
  1540. to allocate ptys reliably.
  1541. * Runtime problems specific to MS-Windows
  1542. ** PATH can contain unexpanded environment variables
  1543. Old releases of TCC (version 9) and 4NT (up to version 8) do not correctly
  1544. expand App Paths entries of type REG_EXPAND_SZ. When Emacs is run from TCC
  1545. and such an entry exists for emacs.exe, exec-path will contain the
  1546. unexpanded entry. This has been fixed in TCC 10. For more information,
  1547. see bug#2062.
  1548. ** Setting w32-pass-rwindow-to-system and w32-pass-lwindow-to-system to nil
  1549. does not prevent the Start menu from popping up when the left or right
  1550. ``Windows'' key is pressed.
  1551. This was reported to happen when XKeymacs is installed. At least with
  1552. XKeymacs Version 3.47, deactivating XKeymacs when Emacs is active is
  1553. not enough to avoid its messing with the keyboard input. Exiting
  1554. XKeymacs completely is reported to solve the problem.
  1555. ** Windows 95 and networking.
  1556. To support server sockets, Emacs 22.1 loads ws2_32.dll. If this file
  1557. is missing, all Emacs networking features are disabled.
  1558. Old versions of Windows 95 may not have the required DLL. To use
  1559. Emacs' networking features on Windows 95, you must install the
  1560. "Windows Socket 2" update available from MicroSoft's support Web.
  1561. ** Emacs exits with "X protocol error" when run with an X server for MS-Windows.
  1562. A certain X server for Windows had a bug which caused this.
  1563. Supposedly the newer 32-bit version of this server doesn't have the
  1564. problem.
  1565. ** Emacs crashes when opening a file with a UNC path and rails-mode is loaded.
  1566. Loading rails-mode seems to interfere with UNC path handling. This has been
  1567. reported as a bug against both Emacs and rails-mode, so look for an updated
  1568. rails-mode that avoids this crash, or avoid using UNC paths if using
  1569. rails-mode.
  1570. ** Known problems with the MS-Windows port of Emacs 22.3
  1571. M-x term does not work on MS-Windows. TTY emulation on Windows is
  1572. undocumented, and programs such as stty which are used on posix platforms
  1573. to control tty emulation do not exist for native windows terminals.
  1574. Using create-fontset-from-ascii-font or the --font startup parameter
  1575. with a Chinese, Japanese or Korean font leads to display problems.
  1576. Use a Latin-only font as your default font. If you want control over
  1577. which font is used to display Chinese, Japanese or Korean character,
  1578. use create-fontset-from-fontset-spec to define a fontset.
  1579. Frames are not refreshed while the File or Font dialog or a pop-up menu
  1580. is displayed. This also means help text for pop-up menus is not
  1581. displayed at all. This is because message handling under Windows is
  1582. synchronous, so we cannot handle repaint (or any other) messages while
  1583. waiting for a system function to return the result of the dialog or
  1584. pop-up menu interaction.
  1585. Windows 95 and Windows NT up to version 4.0 do not support help text
  1586. for menus. Help text is only available in later versions of Windows.
  1587. When "ClearType" method is selected as the "method to smooth edges of
  1588. screen fonts" (in Display Properties, Appearance tab, under
  1589. "Effects"), there are various problems related to display of
  1590. characters: Bold fonts can be hard to read, small portions of some
  1591. characters could appear chopped, etc. This happens because, under
  1592. ClearType, characters are drawn outside their advertised bounding box.
  1593. Emacs 21 disabled the use of ClearType, whereas Emacs 22 allows it and
  1594. has some code to enlarge the width of the bounding box. Apparently,
  1595. this display feature needs more changes to get it 100% right. A
  1596. workaround is to disable ClearType.
  1597. There are problems with display if mouse-tracking is enabled and the
  1598. mouse is moved off a frame, over another frame then back over the first
  1599. frame. A workaround is to click the left mouse button inside the frame
  1600. after moving back into it.
  1601. Some minor flickering still persists during mouse-tracking, although
  1602. not as severely as in 21.1.
  1603. An inactive cursor remains in an active window after the Windows
  1604. Manager driven switch of the focus, until a key is pressed.
  1605. Windows input methods are not recognized by Emacs. However, some
  1606. of these input methods cause the keyboard to send characters encoded
  1607. in the appropriate coding system (e.g., ISO 8859-1 for Latin-1
  1608. characters, ISO 8859-8 for Hebrew characters, etc.). To make these
  1609. input methods work with Emacs, set the keyboard coding system to the
  1610. appropriate value after you activate the Windows input method. For
  1611. example, if you activate the Hebrew input method, type this:
  1612. C-x RET k hebrew-iso-8bit RET
  1613. (Emacs ought to recognize the Windows language-change event and set up
  1614. the appropriate keyboard encoding automatically, but it doesn't do
  1615. that yet.) In addition, to use these Windows input methods, you
  1616. should set your "Language for non-Unicode programs" (on Windows XP,
  1617. this is on the Advanced tab of Regional Settings) to the language of
  1618. the input method.
  1619. To bind keys that produce non-ASCII characters with modifiers, you
  1620. must specify raw byte codes. For instance, if you want to bind
  1621. META-a-grave to a command, you need to specify this in your `~/.emacs':
  1622. (global-set-key [?\M-\340] ...)
  1623. The above example is for the Latin-1 environment where the byte code
  1624. of the encoded a-grave is 340 octal. For other environments, use the
  1625. encoding appropriate to that environment.
  1626. The %b specifier for format-time-string does not produce abbreviated
  1627. month names with consistent widths for some locales on some versions
  1628. of Windows. This is caused by a deficiency in the underlying system
  1629. library function.
  1630. The function set-time-zone-rule gives incorrect results for many
  1631. non-US timezones. This is due to over-simplistic handling of
  1632. daylight savings switchovers by the Windows libraries.
  1633. Files larger than 4GB cause overflow in the size (represented as a
  1634. 32-bit integer) reported by `file-attributes'. This affects Dired as
  1635. well, since the Windows port uses a Lisp emulation of `ls' that relies
  1636. on `file-attributes'.
  1637. Sound playing is not supported with the `:data DATA' key-value pair.
  1638. You _must_ use the `:file FILE' method.
  1639. ** Typing Alt-Shift has strange effects on MS-Windows.
  1640. This combination of keys is a command to change keyboard layout. If
  1641. you proceed to type another non-modifier key before you let go of Alt
  1642. and Shift, the Alt and Shift act as modifiers in the usual way. A
  1643. more permanent work around is to change it to another key combination,
  1644. or disable it in the "Regional and Language Options" applet of the
  1645. Control Panel. (The exact sequence of mouse clicks in the "Regional
  1646. and Language Options" applet needed to find the key combination that
  1647. changes the keyboard layout depends on your Windows version; for XP,
  1648. in the Languages tab, click "Details" and then "Key Settings".)
  1649. ** Interrupting Cygwin port of Bash from Emacs doesn't work.
  1650. Cygwin 1.x builds of the ported Bash cannot be interrupted from the
  1651. MS-Windows version of Emacs. This is due to some change in the Bash
  1652. port or in the Cygwin library which apparently make Bash ignore the
  1653. keyboard interrupt event sent by Emacs to Bash. (Older Cygwin ports
  1654. of Bash, up to b20.1, did receive SIGINT from Emacs.)
  1655. ** Accessing remote files with ange-ftp hangs the MS-Windows version of Emacs.
  1656. If the FTP client is the Cygwin port of GNU `ftp', this appears to be
  1657. due to some bug in the Cygwin DLL or some incompatibility between it
  1658. and the implementation of asynchronous subprocesses in the Windows
  1659. port of Emacs. Specifically, some parts of the FTP server responses
  1660. are not flushed out, apparently due to buffering issues, which
  1661. confuses ange-ftp.
  1662. The solution is to downgrade to an older version of the Cygwin DLL
  1663. (version 1.3.2 was reported to solve the problem), or use the stock
  1664. Windows FTP client, usually found in the `C:\WINDOWS' or 'C:\WINNT'
  1665. directory. To force ange-ftp use the stock Windows client, set the
  1666. variable `ange-ftp-ftp-program-name' to the absolute file name of the
  1667. client's executable. For example:
  1668. (setq ange-ftp-ftp-program-name "c:/windows/ftp.exe")
  1669. If you want to stick with the Cygwin FTP client, you can work around
  1670. this problem by putting this in your `.emacs' file:
  1671. (setq ange-ftp-ftp-program-args '("-i" "-n" "-g" "-v" "--prompt" "")
  1672. ** lpr commands don't work on MS-Windows with some cheap printers.
  1673. This problem may also strike other platforms, but the solution is
  1674. likely to be a global one, and not Emacs specific.
  1675. Many cheap inkjet, and even some cheap laser printers, do not
  1676. print plain text anymore, they will only print through graphical
  1677. printer drivers. A workaround on MS-Windows is to use Windows' basic
  1678. built in editor to print (this is possibly the only useful purpose it
  1679. has):
  1680. (setq printer-name "") ; notepad takes the default
  1681. (setq lpr-command "notepad") ; notepad
  1682. (setq lpr-switches nil) ; not needed
  1683. (setq lpr-printer-switch "/P") ; run notepad as batch printer
  1684. ** Antivirus software interacts badly with the MS-Windows version of Emacs.
  1685. The usual manifestation of these problems is that subprocesses don't
  1686. work or even wedge the entire system. In particular, "M-x shell RET"
  1687. was reported to fail to work. But other commands also sometimes don't
  1688. work when an antivirus package is installed.
  1689. The solution is to switch the antivirus software to a less aggressive
  1690. mode (e.g., disable the ``auto-protect'' feature), or even uninstall
  1691. or disable it entirely.
  1692. ** Pressing the mouse button on MS-Windows does not give a mouse-2 event.
  1693. This is usually a problem with the mouse driver. Because most Windows
  1694. programs do not do anything useful with the middle mouse button, many
  1695. mouse drivers allow you to define the wheel press to do something
  1696. different. Some drivers do not even have the option to generate a
  1697. middle button press. In such cases, setting the wheel press to
  1698. "scroll" sometimes works if you press the button twice. Trying a
  1699. generic mouse driver might help.
  1700. ** Scrolling the mouse wheel on MS-Windows always scrolls the top window.
  1701. This is another common problem with mouse drivers. Instead of
  1702. generating scroll events, some mouse drivers try to fake scroll bar
  1703. movement. But they are not intelligent enough to handle multiple
  1704. scroll bars within a frame. Trying a generic mouse driver might help.
  1705. ** Mail sent through Microsoft Exchange in some encodings appears to be
  1706. mangled and is not seen correctly in Rmail or Gnus. We don't know
  1707. exactly what happens, but it isn't an Emacs problem in cases we've
  1708. seen.
  1709. ** On MS-Windows, you cannot use the right-hand ALT key and the left-hand
  1710. CTRL key together to type a Control-Meta character.
  1711. This is a consequence of a misfeature beyond Emacs's control.
  1712. Under Windows, the AltGr key on international keyboards generates key
  1713. events with the modifiers Right-Alt and Left-Ctrl. Since Emacs cannot
  1714. distinguish AltGr from an explicit Right-Alt and Left-Ctrl
  1715. combination, whenever it sees Right-Alt and Left-Ctrl it assumes that
  1716. AltGr has been pressed. The variable `w32-recognize-altgr' can be set
  1717. to nil to tell Emacs that AltGr is really Ctrl and Alt.
  1718. ** Under some X-servers running on MS-Windows, Emacs' display is incorrect.
  1719. The symptoms are that Emacs does not completely erase blank areas of the
  1720. screen during scrolling or some other screen operations (e.g., selective
  1721. display or when killing a region). M-x recenter will cause the screen
  1722. to be completely redisplayed and the "extra" characters will disappear.
  1723. This is known to occur under Exceed 6, and possibly earlier versions
  1724. as well; it is reportedly solved in version 6.2.0.16 and later. The
  1725. problem lies in the X-server settings.
  1726. There are reports that you can solve the problem with Exceed by
  1727. running `Xconfig' from within NT, choosing "X selection", then
  1728. un-checking the boxes "auto-copy X selection" and "auto-paste to X
  1729. selection".
  1730. Of this does not work, please inform bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org. Then
  1731. please call support for your X-server and see if you can get a fix.
  1732. If you do, please send it to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org so we can list it here.
  1733. * Build-time problems
  1734. ** Configuration
  1735. *** The `configure' script doesn't find the jpeg library.
  1736. There are reports that this happens on some systems because the linker
  1737. by default only looks for shared libraries, but jpeg distribution by
  1738. default only installs a nonshared version of the library, `libjpeg.a'.
  1739. If this is the problem, you can configure the jpeg library with the
  1740. `--enable-shared' option and then rebuild libjpeg. This produces a
  1741. shared version of libjpeg, which you need to install. Finally, rerun
  1742. the Emacs configure script, which should now find the jpeg library.
  1743. Alternatively, modify the generated src/Makefile to link the .a file
  1744. explicitly, and edit src/config.h to define HAVE_JPEG.
  1745. *** `configure' warns ``accepted by the compiler, rejected by the preprocessor''.
  1746. This indicates a mismatch between the C compiler and preprocessor that
  1747. configure is using. For example, on Solaris 10 trying to use
  1748. CC=/opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc (the Sun Studio compiler) together with
  1749. CPP=/usr/ccs/lib/cpp can result in errors of this form (you may also
  1750. see the error ``"/usr/include/sys/isa_defs.h", line 500: undefined control'').
  1751. The solution is to tell configure to use the correct C preprocessor
  1752. for your C compiler (CPP="/opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc -E" in the above
  1753. example).
  1754. ** Compilation
  1755. *** Building Emacs over NFS fails with ``Text file busy''.
  1756. This was reported to happen when building Emacs on a GNU/Linux system
  1757. (Red Hat Linux 6.2) using a build directory automounted from Solaris
  1758. (SunOS 5.6) file server, but it might not be limited to that
  1759. configuration alone. Presumably, the NFS server doesn't commit the
  1760. files' data to disk quickly enough, and the Emacs executable file is
  1761. left ``busy'' for several seconds after Emacs has finished dumping
  1762. itself. This causes the subsequent commands which invoke the dumped
  1763. Emacs executable to fail with the above message.
  1764. In some of these cases, a time skew between the NFS server and the
  1765. machine where Emacs is built is detected and reported by GNU Make
  1766. (it says that some of the files have modification time in the future).
  1767. This might be a symptom of NFS-related problems.
  1768. If the NFS server runs on Solaris, apply the Solaris patch 105379-05
  1769. (Sunos 5.6: /kernel/misc/nfssrv patch). If that doesn't work, or if
  1770. you have a different version of the OS or the NFS server, you can
  1771. force the NFS server to use 1KB blocks, which was reported to fix the
  1772. problem albeit at a price of slowing down file I/O. You can force 1KB
  1773. blocks by specifying the "-o rsize=1024,wsize=1024" options to the
  1774. `mount' command, or by adding ",rsize=1024,wsize=1024" to the mount
  1775. options in the appropriate system configuration file, such as
  1776. `/etc/auto.home'.
  1777. Alternatively, when Make fails due to this problem, you could wait for
  1778. a few seconds and then invoke Make again. In one particular case,
  1779. waiting for 10 or more seconds between the two Make invocations seemed
  1780. to work around the problem.
  1781. Similar problems can happen if your machine NFS-mounts a directory
  1782. onto itself. Suppose the Emacs sources live in `/usr/local/src' and
  1783. you are working on the host called `marvin'. Then an entry in the
  1784. `/etc/fstab' file like the following is asking for trouble:
  1785. marvin:/usr/local/src /usr/local/src ...options.omitted...
  1786. The solution is to remove this line from `etc/fstab'.
  1787. *** Building a 32-bit executable on a 64-bit GNU/Linux architecture.
  1788. First ensure that the necessary 32-bit system libraries and include
  1789. files are installed. Then use:
  1790. env CC="gcc -m32" ./configure --build=i386-linux-gnu \
  1791. --x-libraries=/usr/X11R6/lib
  1792. (using the location of the 32-bit X libraries on your system).
  1793. *** Building Emacs for Cygwin can fail with GCC 3
  1794. As of Emacs 22.1, there have been stability problems with Cygwin
  1795. builds of Emacs using GCC 3. Cygwin users are advised to use GCC 4.
  1796. *** Building Emacs 23.3 and later will fail under Cygwin 1.5.19
  1797. This is a consequence of a change to src/dired.c on 2010-07-27. The
  1798. issue is that Cygwin 1.5.19 did not have d_ino in 'struct dirent'.
  1799. See
  1800. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2010-07/msg01266.html
  1801. *** Building the native MS-Windows port fails due to unresolved externals
  1802. The linker error messages look like this:
  1803. oo-spd/i386/ctags.o:ctags.c:(.text+0x156e): undefined reference to `_imp__re_set_syntax'
  1804. collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
  1805. This happens because GCC finds an incompatible header regex.h
  1806. somewhere on the include path, before the version of regex.h supplied
  1807. with Emacs. One such incompatible version of regex.h is part of the
  1808. GnuWin32 Regex package.
  1809. The solution is to remove the incompatible regex.h from the include
  1810. path, when compiling Emacs. Alternatively, re-run the configure.bat
  1811. script with the "-isystem C:/GnuWin32/include" switch (adapt for your
  1812. system's place where you keep the GnuWin32 include files) -- this will
  1813. cause the compiler to search headers in the directories specified by
  1814. the Emacs Makefile _before_ it looks in the GnuWin32 include
  1815. directories.
  1816. *** Building the native MS-Windows port with Cygwin GCC can fail.
  1817. Emacs may not build using some Cygwin builds of GCC, such as Cygwin
  1818. version 1.1.8, using the default configure settings. It appears to be
  1819. necessary to specify the -mwin32 flag when compiling, and define
  1820. __MSVCRT__, like so:
  1821. configure --with-gcc --cflags -mwin32 --cflags -D__MSVCRT__
  1822. *** Building the MS-Windows port fails with a CreateProcess failure.
  1823. Some versions of mingw32 make on some versions of Windows do not seem
  1824. to detect the shell correctly. Try "make SHELL=cmd.exe", or if that
  1825. fails, try running make from Cygwin bash instead.
  1826. *** Building `ctags' for MS-Windows with the MinGW port of GCC fails.
  1827. This might happen due to a bug in the MinGW header assert.h, which
  1828. defines the `assert' macro with a trailing semi-colon. The following
  1829. patch to assert.h should solve this:
  1830. *** include/assert.h.orig Sun Nov 7 02:41:36 1999
  1831. --- include/assert.h Mon Jan 29 11:49:10 2001
  1832. ***************
  1833. *** 41,47 ****
  1834. /*
  1835. * If not debugging, assert does nothing.
  1836. */
  1837. ! #define assert(x) ((void)0);
  1838. #else /* debugging enabled */
  1839. --- 41,47 ----
  1840. /*
  1841. * If not debugging, assert does nothing.
  1842. */
  1843. ! #define assert(x) ((void)0)
  1844. #else /* debugging enabled */
  1845. *** Building the MS-Windows port with Visual Studio 2005 fails.
  1846. Microsoft no longer ships the single threaded version of the C library
  1847. with their compiler, and the multithreaded static library is missing
  1848. some functions that Microsoft have deemed non-threadsafe. The
  1849. dynamically linked C library has all the functions, but there is a
  1850. conflict between the versions of malloc in the DLL and in Emacs, which
  1851. is not resolvable due to the way Windows does dynamic linking.
  1852. We recommend the use of the MinGW port of GCC for compiling Emacs, as
  1853. not only does it not suffer these problems, but it is also Free
  1854. software like Emacs.
  1855. *** Building the MS-Windows port with Visual Studio fails compiling emacs.rc
  1856. If the build fails with the following message then the problem
  1857. described here most likely applies:
  1858. ../nt/emacs.rc(1) : error RC2176 : old DIB in icons\emacs.ico; pass it
  1859. through SDKPAINT
  1860. The Emacs icon contains a high resolution PNG icon for Vista, which is
  1861. not recognized by older versions of the resource compiler. There are
  1862. several workarounds for this problem:
  1863. 1. Use Free MinGW tools to compile, which do not have this problem.
  1864. 2. Install the latest Windows SDK.
  1865. 3. Replace emacs.ico with an older or edited icon.
  1866. *** Building the MS-Windows port complains about unknown escape sequences.
  1867. Errors and warnings can look like this:
  1868. w32.c:1959:27: error: \x used with no following hex digits
  1869. w32.c:1959:27: warning: unknown escape sequence '\i'
  1870. This happens when paths using backslashes are passed to the compiler or
  1871. linker (via -I and possibly other compiler flags); when these paths are
  1872. included in source code, the backslashes are interpreted as escape sequences.
  1873. See http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2010-07/msg00995.html
  1874. The fix is to use forward slashes in all paths passed to the compiler.
  1875. ** Linking
  1876. *** Building Emacs with a system compiler fails to link because of an
  1877. undefined symbol such as __eprintf which does not appear in Emacs.
  1878. This can happen if some of the libraries linked into Emacs were built
  1879. with GCC, but Emacs itself is being linked with a compiler other than
  1880. GCC. Object files compiled with GCC might need some helper functions
  1881. from libgcc.a, the library which comes with GCC, but the system
  1882. compiler does not instruct the linker to search libgcc.a during the
  1883. link stage.
  1884. A solution is to link with GCC, like this:
  1885. make CC=gcc
  1886. Since the .o object files already exist, this will not recompile Emacs
  1887. with GCC, but just restart by trying again to link temacs.
  1888. *** Sun with acc: Link failure when using acc on a Sun.
  1889. To use acc, you need additional options just before the libraries, such as
  1890. /usr/lang/SC2.0.1/values-Xt.o -L/usr/lang/SC2.0.1/cg87 -L/usr/lang/SC2.0.1
  1891. and you need to add -lansi just before -lc.
  1892. The precise file names depend on the compiler version, so we
  1893. cannot easily arrange to supply them.
  1894. *** Linking says that the functions insque and remque are undefined.
  1895. Change oldXMenu/Makefile by adding insque.o to the variable OBJS.
  1896. *** `tparam' reported as a multiply-defined symbol when linking with ncurses.
  1897. This problem results from an incompatible change in ncurses, in
  1898. version 1.9.9e approximately. This version is unable to provide a
  1899. definition of tparm without also defining tparam. This is also
  1900. incompatible with Terminfo; as a result, the Emacs Terminfo support
  1901. does not work with this version of ncurses.
  1902. The fix is to install a newer version of ncurses, such as version 4.2.
  1903. ** Bootstrapping
  1904. Bootstrapping (compiling the .el files) is normally only necessary
  1905. with development builds, since the .elc files are pre-compiled in releases.
  1906. *** "No rule to make target" with Ubuntu 8.04 make 3.81-3build1
  1907. Compiling the lisp files fails at random places, complaining:
  1908. "No rule to make target `/path/to/some/lisp.elc'".
  1909. The causes of this problem are not understood. Using GNU make 3.81 compiled
  1910. from source, rather than the Ubuntu version, worked. See Bug#327,821.
  1911. ** Dumping
  1912. *** Linux: Segfault during `make bootstrap' under certain recent versions of the Linux kernel.
  1913. With certain recent Linux kernels (like the one of Red Hat Fedora Core
  1914. 1 and newer), the new "Exec-shield" functionality is enabled by default, which
  1915. creates a different memory layout that breaks the emacs dumper. Emacs tries
  1916. to handle this at build time, but if the workaround used fails, these
  1917. instructions can be useful.
  1918. The work-around explained here is not enough on Fedora Core 4 (and possible
  1919. newer). Read the next item.
  1920. Configure can overcome the problem of exec-shield if the architecture is
  1921. x86 and the program setarch is present. On other architectures no
  1922. workaround is known.
  1923. You can check the Exec-shield state like this:
  1924. cat /proc/sys/kernel/exec-shield
  1925. It returns non-zero when Exec-shield is enabled, 0 otherwise. Please
  1926. read your system documentation for more details on Exec-shield and
  1927. associated commands. Exec-shield can be turned off with this command:
  1928. echo "0" > /proc/sys/kernel/exec-shield
  1929. When Exec-shield is enabled, building Emacs will segfault during the
  1930. execution of this command:
  1931. ./temacs --batch --load loadup [dump|bootstrap]
  1932. To work around this problem, it is necessary to temporarily disable
  1933. Exec-shield while building Emacs, or, on x86, by using the `setarch'
  1934. command when running temacs like this:
  1935. setarch i386 ./temacs --batch --load loadup [dump|bootstrap]
  1936. *** Fedora Core 4 GNU/Linux: Segfault during dumping.
  1937. In addition to exec-shield explained above "Linux: Segfault during
  1938. `make bootstrap' under certain recent versions of the Linux kernel"
  1939. item, Linux kernel shipped with Fedora Core 4 randomizes the virtual
  1940. address space of a process. As the result dumping may fail even if
  1941. you turn off exec-shield. In this case, use the -R option to the setarch
  1942. command:
  1943. setarch i386 -R ./temacs --batch --load loadup [dump|bootstrap]
  1944. or
  1945. setarch i386 -R make bootstrap
  1946. *** Fatal signal in the command temacs -l loadup inc dump.
  1947. This command is the final stage of building Emacs. It is run by the
  1948. Makefile in the src subdirectory.
  1949. It has been known to get fatal errors due to insufficient swapping
  1950. space available on the machine.
  1951. On 68000s, it has also happened because of bugs in the
  1952. subroutine `alloca'. Verify that `alloca' works right, even
  1953. for large blocks (many pages).
  1954. *** test-distrib says that the distribution has been clobbered.
  1955. *** or, temacs prints "Command key out of range 0-127".
  1956. *** or, temacs runs and dumps emacs, but emacs totally fails to work.
  1957. *** or, temacs gets errors dumping emacs.
  1958. This can be because the .elc files have been garbled. Do not be
  1959. fooled by the fact that most of a .elc file is text: these are
  1960. binary files and can contain all 256 byte values.
  1961. In particular `shar' cannot be used for transmitting GNU Emacs.
  1962. It typically truncates "lines". What appear to be "lines" in
  1963. a binary file can of course be of any length. Even once `shar'
  1964. itself is made to work correctly, `sh' discards null characters
  1965. when unpacking the shell archive.
  1966. I have also seen character \177 changed into \377. I do not know
  1967. what transfer means caused this problem. Various network
  1968. file transfer programs are suspected of clobbering the high bit.
  1969. If you have a copy of Emacs that has been damaged in its
  1970. nonprinting characters, you can fix them:
  1971. 1) Record the names of all the .elc files.
  1972. 2) Delete all the .elc files.
  1973. 3) Recompile alloc.c with a value of PURESIZE twice as large.
  1974. (See puresize.h.) You might as well save the old alloc.o.
  1975. 4) Remake emacs. It should work now.
  1976. 5) Running emacs, do Meta-x byte-compile-file repeatedly
  1977. to recreate all the .elc files that used to exist.
  1978. You may need to increase the value of the variable
  1979. max-lisp-eval-depth to succeed in running the compiler interpreted
  1980. on certain .el files. 400 was sufficient as of last report.
  1981. 6) Reinstall the old alloc.o (undoing changes to alloc.c if any)
  1982. and remake temacs.
  1983. 7) Remake emacs. It should work now, with valid .elc files.
  1984. *** temacs prints "Pure Lisp storage exhausted".
  1985. This means that the Lisp code loaded from the .elc and .el files
  1986. during temacs -l loadup inc dump took up more space than was allocated.
  1987. This could be caused by
  1988. 1) adding code to the preloaded Lisp files
  1989. 2) adding more preloaded files in loadup.el
  1990. 3) having a site-init.el or site-load.el which loads files.
  1991. Note that ANY site-init.el or site-load.el is nonstandard;
  1992. if you have received Emacs from some other site and it contains a
  1993. site-init.el or site-load.el file, consider deleting that file.
  1994. 4) getting the wrong .el or .elc files
  1995. (not from the directory you expected).
  1996. 5) deleting some .elc files that are supposed to exist.
  1997. This would cause the source files (.el files) to be
  1998. loaded instead. They take up more room, so you lose.
  1999. 6) a bug in the Emacs distribution which underestimates the space required.
  2000. If the need for more space is legitimate, change the definition
  2001. of PURESIZE in puresize.h.
  2002. But in some of the cases listed above, this problem is a consequence
  2003. of something else that is wrong. Be sure to check and fix the real problem.
  2004. *** OpenBSD 4.0 macppc: Segfault during dumping.
  2005. The build aborts with signal 11 when the command `./temacs --batch
  2006. --load loadup bootstrap' tries to load files.el. A workaround seems
  2007. to be to reduce the level of compiler optimization used during the
  2008. build (from -O2 to -O1). It is possible this is an OpenBSD
  2009. GCC problem specific to the macppc architecture, possibly only
  2010. occurring with older versions of GCC (e.g. 3.3.5).
  2011. *** openSUSE 10.3: Segfault in bcopy during dumping.
  2012. This is due to a bug in the bcopy implementation in openSUSE 10.3.
  2013. It is/will be fixed in an openSUSE update.
  2014. ** Installation
  2015. *** Installing Emacs gets an error running `install-info'.
  2016. You need to install a recent version of Texinfo; that package
  2017. supplies the `install-info' command.
  2018. *** Installing to a directory with spaces in the name fails.
  2019. For example, if you call configure with a directory-related option
  2020. with spaces in the value, eg --enable-locallisppath='/path/with\ spaces'.
  2021. Using directory paths with spaces is not supported at this time: you
  2022. must re-configure without using spaces.
  2023. *** Installing to a directory with non-ASCII characters in the name fails.
  2024. Installation may fail, or the Emacs executable may not start
  2025. correctly, if a directory name containing non-ASCII characters is used
  2026. as a `configure' argument (e.g. `--prefix'). The problem can also
  2027. occur if a non-ASCII directory is specified in the EMACSLOADPATH
  2028. envvar.
  2029. *** On Solaris, use GNU Make when installing an out-of-tree build
  2030. The Emacs configuration process allows you to configure the
  2031. build environment so that you can build emacs in a directory
  2032. outside of the distribution tree. When installing Emacs from an
  2033. out-of-tree build directory on Solaris, you may need to use GNU
  2034. make. The make programs bundled with Solaris support the VPATH
  2035. macro but use it differently from the way the VPATH macro is
  2036. used by GNU make. The differences will cause the "make install"
  2037. step to fail, leaving you with an incomplete emacs
  2038. installation. GNU make is available in /usr/sfw/bin on Solaris
  2039. 10 and can be installed as /opt/sfw/bin/gmake from the Solaris 9
  2040. Software Companion CDROM.
  2041. The problems due to the VPATH processing differences affect only
  2042. out of tree builds so, if you are on a Solaris installation
  2043. without GNU make, you can install Emacs completely by installing
  2044. from a build environment using the original emacs distribution tree.
  2045. ** First execution
  2046. *** Emacs binary is not in executable format, and cannot be run.
  2047. This was reported to happen when Emacs is built in a directory mounted
  2048. via NFS, for some combinations of NFS client and NFS server.
  2049. Usually, the file `emacs' produced in these cases is full of
  2050. binary null characters, and the `file' utility says:
  2051. emacs: ASCII text, with no line terminators
  2052. We don't know what exactly causes this failure. A work-around is to
  2053. build Emacs in a directory on a local disk.
  2054. *** The dumped Emacs crashes when run, trying to write pure data.
  2055. Two causes have been seen for such problems.
  2056. 1) On a system where getpagesize is not a system call, it is defined
  2057. as a macro. If the definition (in both unex*.c and malloc.c) is wrong,
  2058. it can cause problems like this. You might be able to find the correct
  2059. value in the man page for a.out (5).
  2060. 2) Some systems allocate variables declared static among the
  2061. initialized variables. Emacs makes all initialized variables in most
  2062. of its files pure after dumping, but the variables declared static and
  2063. not initialized are not supposed to be pure. On these systems you
  2064. may need to add "#define static" to config.h.
  2065. * Runtime problems on legacy systems
  2066. This section covers bugs reported on very old hardware or software.
  2067. If you are using hardware and an operating system shipped after 2000,
  2068. it is unlikely you will see any of these.
  2069. *** OPENSTEP 4.2: Compiling syntax.c with gcc 2.7.2.1 fails.
  2070. The compiler was reported to crash while compiling syntax.c with the
  2071. following message:
  2072. cc: Internal compiler error: program cc1obj got fatal signal 11
  2073. To work around this, replace the macros UPDATE_SYNTAX_TABLE_FORWARD,
  2074. INC_BOTH, and INC_FROM with functions. To this end, first define 3
  2075. functions, one each for every macro. Here's an example:
  2076. static int update_syntax_table_forward(int from)
  2077. {
  2078. return(UPDATE_SYNTAX_TABLE_FORWARD(from));
  2079. }/*update_syntax_table_forward*/
  2080. Then replace all references to UPDATE_SYNTAX_TABLE_FORWARD in syntax.c
  2081. with a call to the function update_syntax_table_forward.
  2082. *** Solaris 2.x
  2083. **** Strange results from format %d in a few cases, on a Sun.
  2084. Sun compiler version SC3.0 has been found to miscompile part of
  2085. editfns.c. The workaround is to compile with some other compiler such
  2086. as GCC.
  2087. **** On Solaris, Emacs dumps core if lisp-complete-symbol is called.
  2088. If you compile Emacs with the -fast or -xO4 option with version 3.0.2
  2089. of the Sun C compiler, Emacs dumps core when lisp-complete-symbol is
  2090. called. The problem does not happen if you compile with GCC.
  2091. **** On Solaris, Emacs crashes if you use (display-time).
  2092. This can happen if you configure Emacs without specifying the precise
  2093. version of Solaris that you are using.
  2094. **** Solaris 2.x: GCC complains "64 bit integer types not supported".
  2095. This suggests that GCC is not installed correctly. Most likely you
  2096. are using GCC 2.7.2.3 (or earlier) on Solaris 2.6 (or later); this
  2097. does not work without patching. To run GCC 2.7.2.3 on Solaris 2.6 or
  2098. later, you must patch fixinc.svr4 and reinstall GCC from scratch as
  2099. described in the Solaris FAQ
  2100. <http://www.wins.uva.nl/pub/solaris/solaris2.html>. A better fix is
  2101. to upgrade to GCC 2.8.1 or later.
  2102. **** Solaris 2.7: Building Emacs with WorkShop Compilers 5.0 98/12/15
  2103. C 5.0 failed, apparently with non-default CFLAGS, most probably due to
  2104. compiler bugs. Using Sun Solaris 2.7 Sun WorkShop 6 update 1 C
  2105. release was reported to work without problems. It worked OK on
  2106. another system with Solaris 8 using apparently the same 5.0 compiler
  2107. and the default CFLAGS.
  2108. **** Solaris 2.x: Emacs dumps core when built with Motif.
  2109. The Solaris Motif libraries are buggy, at least up through Solaris 2.5.1.
  2110. Install the current Motif runtime library patch appropriate for your host.
  2111. (Make sure the patch is current; some older patch versions still have the bug.)
  2112. You should install the other patches recommended by Sun for your host, too.
  2113. You can obtain Sun patches from ftp://sunsolve.sun.com/pub/patches/;
  2114. look for files with names ending in `.PatchReport' to see which patches
  2115. are currently recommended for your host.
  2116. On Solaris 2.6, Emacs is said to work with Motif when Solaris patch
  2117. 105284-12 is installed, but fail when 105284-15 is installed.
  2118. 105284-18 might fix it again.
  2119. **** Solaris 2.6 and 7: the Compose key does not work.
  2120. This is a bug in Motif in Solaris. Supposedly it has been fixed for
  2121. the next major release of Solaris. However, if someone with Sun
  2122. support complains to Sun about the bug, they may release a patch.
  2123. If you do this, mention Sun bug #4188711.
  2124. One workaround is to use a locale that allows non-ASCII characters.
  2125. For example, before invoking emacs, set the LC_ALL environment
  2126. variable to "en_US" (American English). The directory /usr/lib/locale
  2127. lists the supported locales; any locale other than "C" or "POSIX"
  2128. should do.
  2129. pen@lysator.liu.se says (Feb 1998) that the Compose key does work
  2130. if you link with the MIT X11 libraries instead of the Solaris X11 libraries.
  2131. *** HP/UX 10: Large file support is disabled.
  2132. (HP/UX 10 was end-of-lifed in May 1999.)
  2133. See the comments in src/s/hpux10-20.h.
  2134. *** HP/UX: Emacs is slow using X11R5.
  2135. This happens if you use the MIT versions of the X libraries--it
  2136. doesn't run as fast as HP's version. People sometimes use the version
  2137. because they see the HP version doesn't have the libraries libXaw.a,
  2138. libXmu.a, libXext.a and others. HP/UX normally doesn't come with
  2139. those libraries installed. To get good performance, you need to
  2140. install them and rebuild Emacs.
  2141. *** UnixWare 2.1: Error 12 (virtual memory exceeded) when dumping Emacs.
  2142. Paul Abrahams (abrahams@acm.org) reports that with the installed
  2143. virtual memory settings for UnixWare 2.1.2, an Error 12 occurs during
  2144. the "make" that builds Emacs, when running temacs to dump emacs. That
  2145. error indicates that the per-process virtual memory limit has been
  2146. exceeded. The default limit is probably 32MB. Raising the virtual
  2147. memory limit to 40MB should make it possible to finish building Emacs.
  2148. You can do this with the command `ulimit' (sh) or `limit' (csh).
  2149. But you have to be root to do it.
  2150. According to Martin Sohnius, you can also retune this in the kernel:
  2151. # /etc/conf/bin/idtune SDATLIM 33554432 ## soft data size limit
  2152. # /etc/conf/bin/idtune HDATLIM 33554432 ## hard "
  2153. # /etc/conf/bin/idtune SVMMSIZE unlimited ## soft process size limit
  2154. # /etc/conf/bin/idtune HVMMSIZE unlimited ## hard "
  2155. # /etc/conf/bin/idbuild -B
  2156. (He recommends you not change the stack limit, though.)
  2157. These changes take effect when you reboot.
  2158. ** MS-Windows 95, 98, ME, and NT
  2159. *** MS-Windows NT/95: Problems running Perl under Emacs
  2160. `perl -de 0' just hangs when executed in an Emacs subshell.
  2161. The fault lies with Perl (indirectly with Windows NT/95).
  2162. The problem is that the Perl debugger explicitly opens a connection to
  2163. "CON", which is the DOS/NT equivalent of "/dev/tty", for interacting
  2164. with the user.
  2165. On Unix, this is okay, because Emacs (or the shell?) creates a
  2166. pseudo-tty so that /dev/tty is really the pipe Emacs is using to
  2167. communicate with the subprocess.
  2168. On NT, this fails because CON always refers to the handle for the
  2169. relevant console (approximately equivalent to a tty), and cannot be
  2170. redirected to refer to the pipe Emacs assigned to the subprocess as
  2171. stdin.
  2172. A workaround is to modify perldb.pl to use STDIN/STDOUT instead of CON.
  2173. For Perl 4:
  2174. *** PERL/LIB/PERLDB.PL.orig Wed May 26 08:24:18 1993
  2175. --- PERL/LIB/PERLDB.PL Mon Jul 01 15:28:16 1996
  2176. ***************
  2177. *** 68,74 ****
  2178. $rcfile=".perldb";
  2179. }
  2180. else {
  2181. ! $console = "con";
  2182. $rcfile="perldb.ini";
  2183. }
  2184. --- 68,74 ----
  2185. $rcfile=".perldb";
  2186. }
  2187. else {
  2188. ! $console = "";
  2189. $rcfile="perldb.ini";
  2190. }
  2191. For Perl 5:
  2192. *** perl/5.001/lib/perl5db.pl.orig Sun Jun 04 21:13:40 1995
  2193. --- perl/5.001/lib/perl5db.pl Mon Jul 01 17:00:08 1996
  2194. ***************
  2195. *** 22,28 ****
  2196. $rcfile=".perldb";
  2197. }
  2198. elsif (-e "con") {
  2199. ! $console = "con";
  2200. $rcfile="perldb.ini";
  2201. }
  2202. else {
  2203. --- 22,28 ----
  2204. $rcfile=".perldb";
  2205. }
  2206. elsif (-e "con") {
  2207. ! $console = "";
  2208. $rcfile="perldb.ini";
  2209. }
  2210. else {
  2211. *** MS-Windows 95: Alt-f6 does not get through to Emacs.
  2212. This character seems to be trapped by the kernel in Windows 95.
  2213. You can enter M-f6 by typing ESC f6.
  2214. *** MS-Windows 95/98/ME: subprocesses do not terminate properly.
  2215. This is a limitation of the Operating System, and can cause problems
  2216. when shutting down Windows. Ensure that all subprocesses are exited
  2217. cleanly before exiting Emacs. For more details, see the FAQ at
  2218. http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/windows/.
  2219. *** MS-Windows 95/98/ME: crashes when Emacs invokes non-existent programs.
  2220. When a program you are trying to run is not found on the PATH,
  2221. Windows might respond by crashing or locking up your system. In
  2222. particular, this has been reported when trying to compile a Java
  2223. program in JDEE when javac.exe is installed, but not on the system PATH.
  2224. ** MS-DOS
  2225. *** When compiling with DJGPP on MS-Windows NT or later, "config msdos" fails.
  2226. If the error message is "VDM has been already loaded", this is because
  2227. Windows has a program called `redir.exe' that is incompatible with a
  2228. program by the same name supplied with DJGPP, which is used by
  2229. config.bat. To resolve this, move the DJGPP's `bin' subdirectory to
  2230. the front of your PATH environment variable.
  2231. *** When Emacs compiled with DJGPP runs on Windows 2000 and later, it cannot
  2232. find your HOME directory.
  2233. This was reported to happen when you click on "Save for future
  2234. sessions" button in a Customize buffer. You might see an error
  2235. message like this one:
  2236. basic-save-buffer-2: c:/FOO/BAR/~dosuser/: no such directory
  2237. (The telltale sign is the "~USER" part at the end of the directory
  2238. Emacs complains about, where USER is your username or the literal
  2239. string "dosuser", which is the default username set up by the DJGPP
  2240. startup file DJGPP.ENV.)
  2241. This happens when the functions `user-login-name' and
  2242. `user-real-login-name' return different strings for your username as
  2243. Emacs sees it. To correct this, make sure both USER and USERNAME
  2244. environment variables are set to the same value. Windows 2000 and
  2245. later sets USERNAME, so if you want to keep that, make sure USER is
  2246. set to the same value. If you don't want to set USER globally, you
  2247. can do it in the [emacs] section of your DJGPP.ENV file.
  2248. *** When Emacs compiled with DJGPP runs on Vista, it runs out of memory.
  2249. If Emacs running on Vista displays "!MEM FULL!" in the mode line, you
  2250. are hitting the memory allocation bugs in the Vista DPMI server. See
  2251. msdos/INSTALL for how to work around these bugs (search for "Vista").
  2252. *** When compiling with DJGPP on MS-Windows 95, Make fails for some targets
  2253. like make-docfile.
  2254. This can happen if long file name support (the setting of environment
  2255. variable LFN) when Emacs distribution was unpacked and during
  2256. compilation are not the same. See msdos/INSTALL for the explanation
  2257. of how to avoid this problem.
  2258. *** Emacs compiled with DJGPP complains at startup:
  2259. "Wrong type of argument: internal-facep, msdos-menu-active-face"
  2260. This can happen if you define an environment variable `TERM'. Emacs
  2261. on MSDOS uses an internal terminal emulator which is disabled if the
  2262. value of `TERM' is anything but the string "internal". Emacs then
  2263. works as if its terminal were a dumb glass teletype that doesn't
  2264. support faces. To work around this, arrange for `TERM' to be
  2265. undefined when Emacs runs. The best way to do that is to add an
  2266. [emacs] section to the DJGPP.ENV file which defines an empty value for
  2267. `TERM'; this way, only Emacs gets the empty value, while the rest of
  2268. your system works as before.
  2269. *** MS-DOS: Emacs crashes at startup.
  2270. Some users report that Emacs 19.29 requires dpmi memory management,
  2271. and crashes on startup if the system does not have it. We don't
  2272. know why this happens--perhaps these machines don't have enough real
  2273. memory, or perhaps something is wrong in Emacs or the compiler.
  2274. However, arranging to use dpmi support is a workaround.
  2275. You can find out if you have a dpmi host by running go32 without
  2276. arguments; it will tell you if it uses dpmi memory. For more
  2277. information about dpmi memory, consult the djgpp FAQ. (djgpp
  2278. is the GNU C compiler as packaged for MSDOS.)
  2279. Compiling Emacs under MSDOS is extremely sensitive for proper memory
  2280. configuration. If you experience problems during compilation, consider
  2281. removing some or all memory resident programs (notably disk caches)
  2282. and make sure that your memory managers are properly configured. See
  2283. the djgpp faq for configuration hints.
  2284. *** Emacs compiled with DJGPP for MS-DOS/MS-Windows cannot access files
  2285. in the directory with the special name `dev' under the root of any
  2286. drive, e.g. `c:/dev'.
  2287. This is an unfortunate side-effect of the support for Unix-style
  2288. device names such as /dev/null in the DJGPP runtime library. A
  2289. work-around is to rename the problem directory to another name.
  2290. *** MS-DOS+DJGPP: Problems on MS-DOS if DJGPP v2.0 is used to compile Emacs.
  2291. There are two DJGPP library bugs which cause problems:
  2292. * Running `shell-command' (or `compile', or `grep') you get
  2293. `Searching for program: permission denied (EACCES), c:/command.com';
  2294. * After you shell to DOS, Ctrl-Break kills Emacs.
  2295. To work around these bugs, you can use two files in the msdos
  2296. subdirectory: `is_exec.c' and `sigaction.c'. Compile them and link
  2297. them into the Emacs executable `temacs'; then they will replace the
  2298. incorrect library functions.
  2299. *** MS-DOS: Emacs compiled for MSDOS cannot find some Lisp files, or other
  2300. run-time support files, when long filename support is enabled.
  2301. Usually, this problem will manifest itself when Emacs exits
  2302. immediately after flashing the startup screen, because it cannot find
  2303. the Lisp files it needs to load at startup. Redirect Emacs stdout
  2304. and stderr to a file to see the error message printed by Emacs.
  2305. Another manifestation of this problem is that Emacs is unable to load
  2306. the support for editing program sources in languages such as C and Lisp.
  2307. This can happen if the Emacs distribution was unzipped without LFN
  2308. support, thus causing long filenames to be truncated to the first 6
  2309. characters and a numeric tail that Windows 95 normally attaches to it.
  2310. You should unzip the files again with a utility that supports long
  2311. filenames (such as djtar from DJGPP or InfoZip's UnZip program
  2312. compiled with DJGPP v2). The file msdos/INSTALL explains this issue
  2313. in more detail.
  2314. Another possible reason for such failures is that Emacs compiled for
  2315. MSDOS is used on Windows NT, where long file names are not supported
  2316. by this version of Emacs, but the distribution was unpacked by an
  2317. unzip program that preserved the long file names instead of truncating
  2318. them to DOS 8+3 limits. To be useful on NT, the MSDOS port of Emacs
  2319. must be unzipped by a DOS utility, so that long file names are
  2320. properly truncated.
  2321. ** Archaic window managers and toolkits
  2322. *** OpenLook: Under OpenLook, the Emacs window disappears when you type M-q.
  2323. Some versions of the Open Look window manager interpret M-q as a quit
  2324. command for whatever window you are typing at. If you want to use
  2325. Emacs with that window manager, you should try to configure the window
  2326. manager to use some other command. You can disable the
  2327. shortcut keys entirely by adding this line to ~/.OWdefaults:
  2328. OpenWindows.WindowMenuAccelerators: False
  2329. *** twm: A position you specified in .Xdefaults is ignored, using twm.
  2330. twm normally ignores "program-specified" positions.
  2331. You can tell it to obey them with this command in your `.twmrc' file:
  2332. UsePPosition "on" #allow clients to request a position
  2333. ** Bugs related to old DEC hardware
  2334. *** The Compose key on a DEC keyboard does not work as Meta key.
  2335. This shell command should fix it:
  2336. xmodmap -e 'keycode 0xb1 = Meta_L'
  2337. *** Keyboard input gets confused after a beep when using a DECserver
  2338. as a concentrator.
  2339. This problem seems to be a matter of configuring the DECserver to use
  2340. 7 bit characters rather than 8 bit characters.
  2341. * Build problems on legacy systems
  2342. ** SunOS: Emacs gets error message from linker on Sun.
  2343. If the error message says that a symbol such as `f68881_used' or
  2344. `ffpa_used' or `start_float' is undefined, this probably indicates
  2345. that you have compiled some libraries, such as the X libraries,
  2346. with a floating point option other than the default.
  2347. It's not terribly hard to make this work with small changes in
  2348. crt0.c together with linking with Fcrt1.o, Wcrt1.o or Mcrt1.o.
  2349. However, the easiest approach is to build Xlib with the default
  2350. floating point option: -fsoft.
  2351. ** HPUX 10.20: Emacs crashes during dumping on the HPPA machine.
  2352. This seems to be due to a GCC bug; it is fixed in GCC 2.8.1.
  2353. ** Vax C compiler bugs affecting Emacs.
  2354. You may get one of these problems compiling Emacs:
  2355. foo.c line nnn: compiler error: no table entry for op STASG
  2356. foo.c: fatal error in /lib/ccom
  2357. These are due to bugs in the C compiler; the code is valid C.
  2358. Unfortunately, the bugs are unpredictable: the same construct
  2359. may compile properly or trigger one of these bugs, depending
  2360. on what else is in the source file being compiled. Even changes
  2361. in header files that should not affect the file being compiled
  2362. can affect whether the bug happens. In addition, sometimes files
  2363. that compile correctly on one machine get this bug on another machine.
  2364. As a result, it is hard for me to make sure this bug will not affect
  2365. you. I have attempted to find and alter these constructs, but more
  2366. can always appear. However, I can tell you how to deal with it if it
  2367. should happen. The bug comes from having an indexed reference to an
  2368. array of Lisp_Objects, as an argument in a function call:
  2369. Lisp_Object *args;
  2370. ...
  2371. ... foo (5, args[i], ...)...
  2372. putting the argument into a temporary variable first, as in
  2373. Lisp_Object *args;
  2374. Lisp_Object tem;
  2375. ...
  2376. tem = args[i];
  2377. ... foo (r, tem, ...)...
  2378. causes the problem to go away.
  2379. The `contents' field of a Lisp vector is an array of Lisp_Objects,
  2380. so you may see the problem happening with indexed references to that.
  2381. ** 68000 C compiler problems
  2382. Various 68000 compilers have different problems.
  2383. These are some that have been observed.
  2384. *** Using value of assignment expression on union type loses.
  2385. This means that x = y = z; or foo (x = z); does not work
  2386. if x is of type Lisp_Object.
  2387. *** "cannot reclaim" error.
  2388. This means that an expression is too complicated. You get the correct
  2389. line number in the error message. The code must be rewritten with
  2390. simpler expressions.
  2391. *** XCONS, XSTRING, etc macros produce incorrect code.
  2392. If temacs fails to run at all, this may be the cause.
  2393. Compile this test program and look at the assembler code:
  2394. struct foo { char x; unsigned int y : 24; };
  2395. lose (arg)
  2396. struct foo arg;
  2397. {
  2398. test ((int *) arg.y);
  2399. }
  2400. If the code is incorrect, your compiler has this problem.
  2401. In the XCONS, etc., macros in lisp.h you must replace (a).u.val with
  2402. ((a).u.val + coercedummy) where coercedummy is declared as int.
  2403. This problem will only happen if USE_LISP_UNION_TYPE is manually
  2404. defined in lisp.h.
  2405. ** C compilers lose on returning unions.
  2406. I hear that some C compilers cannot handle returning a union type.
  2407. Most of the functions in GNU Emacs return type Lisp_Object, which is
  2408. defined as a union on some rare architectures.
  2409. This problem will only happen if USE_LISP_UNION_TYPE is manually
  2410. defined in lisp.h.
  2411. This file is part of GNU Emacs.
  2412. GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
  2413. it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
  2414. the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
  2415. (at your option) any later version.
  2416. GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  2417. but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  2418. MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
  2419. GNU General Public License for more details.
  2420. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
  2421. along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
  2422. Local variables:
  2423. mode: outline
  2424. paragraph-separate: "[ ]*$"
  2425. end: