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annotate lispref/edebug.texi @ 42811:cf0c0ef57504
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| author | Jason Rumney <jasonr@gnu.org> |
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| date | Thu, 17 Jan 2002 19:29:24 +0000 |
| parents | d2e5f1b7d8e2 |
| children | dc4f42a216d8 |
| rev | line source |
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| 6558 | 1 @comment -*-texinfo-*- |
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2 @c This is part of the GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual. |
| 27189 | 3 @c Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1998, 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
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4 @c See the file elisp.texi for copying conditions. |
| 6558 | 5 |
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6 @c This file can also be used by an independent Edebug User |
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7 @c Manual in which case the Edebug node below should be used |
| 6558 | 8 @c with the following links to the Bugs section and to the top level: |
| 9 | |
| 10 @c , Bugs and Todo List, Top, Top | |
| 11 | |
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12 @node Edebug, Syntax Errors, Debugger, Debugging |
| 6558 | 13 @section Edebug |
| 14 @cindex Edebug mode | |
| 15 | |
| 16 @cindex Edebug | |
| 17 Edebug is a source-level debugger for Emacs Lisp programs with which | |
| 18 you can: | |
| 19 | |
| 20 @itemize @bullet | |
| 21 @item | |
| 22 Step through evaluation, stopping before and after each expression. | |
| 23 | |
| 24 @item | |
| 25 Set conditional or unconditional breakpoints. | |
| 26 | |
| 27 @item | |
| 28 Stop when a specified condition is true (the global break event). | |
| 29 | |
| 30 @item | |
| 31 Trace slow or fast, stopping briefly at each stop point, or | |
| 32 at each breakpoint. | |
| 33 | |
| 34 @item | |
| 35 Display expression results and evaluate expressions as if outside of | |
| 36 Edebug. | |
| 37 | |
| 38 @item | |
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39 Automatically re-evaluate a list of expressions and |
| 6558 | 40 display their results each time Edebug updates the display. |
| 41 | |
| 42 @item | |
| 43 Output trace info on function enter and exit. | |
| 44 | |
| 45 @item | |
| 46 Stop when an error occurs. | |
| 47 | |
| 48 @item | |
| 49 Display a backtrace, omitting Edebug's own frames. | |
| 50 | |
| 51 @item | |
| 52 Specify argument evaluation for macros and defining forms. | |
| 53 | |
| 54 @item | |
| 55 Obtain rudimentary coverage testing and frequency counts. | |
| 56 @end itemize | |
| 57 | |
| 58 The first three sections below should tell you enough about Edebug to | |
| 59 enable you to use it. | |
| 60 | |
| 61 @menu | |
| 62 * Using Edebug:: Introduction to use of Edebug. | |
| 63 * Instrumenting:: You must instrument your code | |
| 64 in order to debug it with Edebug. | |
| 65 * Modes: Edebug Execution Modes. Execution modes, stopping more or less often. | |
| 66 * Jumping:: Commands to jump to a specified place. | |
| 67 * Misc: Edebug Misc. Miscellaneous commands. | |
| 68 * Breakpoints:: Setting breakpoints to make the program stop. | |
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69 * Trapping Errors:: Trapping errors with Edebug. |
| 6558 | 70 * Views: Edebug Views. Views inside and outside of Edebug. |
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71 * Eval: Edebug Eval. Evaluating expressions within Edebug. |
| 6558 | 72 * Eval List:: Expressions whose values are displayed |
| 73 each time you enter Edebug. | |
| 74 * Printing in Edebug:: Customization of printing. | |
| 75 * Trace Buffer:: How to produce trace output in a buffer. | |
| 76 * Coverage Testing:: How to test evaluation coverage. | |
| 77 * The Outside Context:: Data that Edebug saves and restores. | |
| 78 * Instrumenting Macro Calls:: Specifying how to handle macro calls. | |
| 79 * Options: Edebug Options. Option variables for customizing Edebug. | |
| 80 @end menu | |
| 81 | |
| 82 @node Using Edebug | |
| 83 @subsection Using Edebug | |
| 84 | |
| 85 To debug a Lisp program with Edebug, you must first @dfn{instrument} | |
| 86 the Lisp code that you want to debug. A simple way to do this is to | |
| 87 first move point into the definition of a function or macro and then do | |
| 88 @kbd{C-u C-M-x} (@code{eval-defun} with a prefix argument). See | |
| 89 @ref{Instrumenting}, for alternative ways to instrument code. | |
| 90 | |
| 91 Once a function is instrumented, any call to the function activates | |
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92 Edebug. Depending on which Edebug execution mode you have selected, |
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93 activating Edebug may stop execution and let you step through the |
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94 function, or it may update the display and continue execution while |
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95 checking for debugging commands. The default execution mode is step, |
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96 which stops execution. @xref{Edebug Execution Modes}. |
| 6558 | 97 |
| 98 Within Edebug, you normally view an Emacs buffer showing the source of | |
| 99 the Lisp code you are debugging. This is referred to as the @dfn{source | |
| 26254 | 100 code buffer}, and it is temporarily read-only. |
| 6558 | 101 |
| 102 An arrow at the left margin indicates the line where the function is | |
| 103 executing. Point initially shows where within the line the function is | |
| 104 executing, but this ceases to be true if you move point yourself. | |
| 105 | |
| 106 If you instrument the definition of @code{fac} (shown below) and then | |
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107 execute @code{(fac 3)}, here is what you would normally see. Point is |
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108 at the open-parenthesis before @code{if}. |
| 6558 | 109 |
| 110 @example | |
| 111 (defun fac (n) | |
| 112 =>@point{}(if (< 0 n) | |
| 113 (* n (fac (1- n))) | |
| 114 1)) | |
| 115 @end example | |
| 116 | |
| 117 @cindex stop points | |
| 118 The places within a function where Edebug can stop execution are called | |
| 119 @dfn{stop points}. These occur both before and after each subexpression | |
| 120 that is a list, and also after each variable reference. | |
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121 Here we use periods to show the stop points in the function |
| 6558 | 122 @code{fac}: |
| 123 | |
| 124 @example | |
| 125 (defun fac (n) | |
| 126 .(if .(< 0 n.). | |
| 127 .(* n. .(fac (1- n.).).). | |
| 128 1).) | |
| 129 @end example | |
| 130 | |
| 131 The special commands of Edebug are available in the source code buffer | |
| 132 in addition to the commands of Emacs Lisp mode. For example, you can | |
| 133 type the Edebug command @key{SPC} to execute until the next stop point. | |
| 134 If you type @key{SPC} once after entry to @code{fac}, here is the | |
| 135 display you will see: | |
| 136 | |
| 137 @example | |
| 138 (defun fac (n) | |
| 139 =>(if @point{}(< 0 n) | |
| 140 (* n (fac (1- n))) | |
| 141 1)) | |
| 142 @end example | |
| 143 | |
| 144 When Edebug stops execution after an expression, it displays the | |
| 145 expression's value in the echo area. | |
| 146 | |
| 147 Other frequently used commands are @kbd{b} to set a breakpoint at a stop | |
| 148 point, @kbd{g} to execute until a breakpoint is reached, and @kbd{q} to | |
| 149 exit Edebug and return to the top-level command loop. Type @kbd{?} to | |
| 150 display a list of all Edebug commands. | |
| 151 | |
| 152 @node Instrumenting | |
| 153 @subsection Instrumenting for Edebug | |
| 154 | |
| 155 In order to use Edebug to debug Lisp code, you must first | |
| 156 @dfn{instrument} the code. Instrumenting code inserts additional code | |
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157 into it, to invoke Edebug at the proper places. |
| 6558 | 158 |
| 159 @kindex C-M-x | |
| 160 @findex eval-defun (Edebug) | |
| 161 Once you have loaded Edebug, the command @kbd{C-M-x} | |
| 162 (@code{eval-defun}) is redefined so that when invoked with a prefix | |
| 163 argument on a definition, it instruments the definition before | |
| 164 evaluating it. (The source code itself is not modified.) If the | |
| 165 variable @code{edebug-all-defs} is non-@code{nil}, that inverts the | |
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166 meaning of the prefix argument: in this case, @kbd{C-M-x} instruments the |
| 6558 | 167 definition @emph{unless} it has a prefix argument. The default value of |
| 168 @code{edebug-all-defs} is @code{nil}. The command @kbd{M-x | |
| 169 edebug-all-defs} toggles the value of the variable | |
| 170 @code{edebug-all-defs}. | |
| 171 | |
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172 @findex eval-region @r{(Edebug)} |
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173 @findex eval-current-buffer @r{(Edebug)} |
| 6558 | 174 If @code{edebug-all-defs} is non-@code{nil}, then the commands |
| 175 @code{eval-region}, @code{eval-current-buffer}, and @code{eval-buffer} | |
| 176 also instrument any definitions they evaluate. Similarly, | |
| 177 @code{edebug-all-forms} controls whether @code{eval-region} should | |
| 178 instrument @emph{any} form, even non-defining forms. This doesn't apply | |
| 179 to loading or evaluations in the minibuffer. The command @kbd{M-x | |
| 180 edebug-all-forms} toggles this option. | |
| 181 | |
| 182 @findex edebug-eval-top-level-form | |
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183 Another command, @kbd{M-x edebug-eval-top-level-form}, is available to |
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184 instrument any top-level form regardless of the values of |
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185 @code{edebug-all-defs} and @code{edebug-all-forms}. |
| 6558 | 186 |
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187 While Edebug is active, the command @kbd{I} |
| 6558 | 188 (@code{edebug-instrument-callee}) instruments the definition of the |
| 189 function or macro called by the list form after point, if is not already | |
| 190 instrumented. This is possible only if Edebug knows where to find the | |
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191 source for that function; for this reading, after loading Edebug, |
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192 @code{eval-region} records the position of every definition it |
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193 evaluates, even if not instrumenting it. See also the @kbd{i} command |
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194 (@pxref{Jumping}), which steps into the call after instrumenting the |
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195 function. |
| 6558 | 196 |
| 197 @cindex special forms (Edebug) | |
| 198 @cindex interactive commands (Edebug) | |
| 199 @cindex anonymous lambda expressions (Edebug) | |
| 200 @cindex Common Lisp (Edebug) | |
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201 @pindex cl.el @r{(Edebug)} |
| 6558 | 202 @pindex cl-specs.el |
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203 Edebug knows how to instrument all the standard special forms, |
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204 @code{interactive} forms with an expression argument, anonymous lambda |
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205 expressions, and other defining forms. However, Edebug cannot determine |
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206 on its own what a user-defined macro will do with the arguments of a |
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207 macro call, so you must provide that information; see @ref{Instrumenting |
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208 Macro Calls}, for details. |
| 6558 | 209 |
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210 When Edebug is about to instrument code for the first time in a |
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211 session, it runs the hook @code{edebug-setup-hook}, then sets it to |
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212 @code{nil}. You can use this to load Edebug specifications |
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213 (@pxref{Instrumenting Macro Calls}) associated with a package you are |
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214 using, but only when you use Edebug. |
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215 |
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216 @findex eval-expression @r{(Edebug)} |
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217 To remove instrumentation from a definition, simply re-evaluate its |
| 6558 | 218 definition in a way that does not instrument. There are two ways of |
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219 evaluating forms that never instrument them: from a file with |
| 6558 | 220 @code{load}, and from the minibuffer with @code{eval-expression} |
| 12098 | 221 (@kbd{M-:}). |
| 6558 | 222 |
| 223 If Edebug detects a syntax error while instrumenting, it leaves point | |
| 224 at the erroneous code and signals an @code{invalid-read-syntax} error. | |
| 225 | |
| 226 @xref{Edebug Eval}, for other evaluation functions available | |
| 227 inside of Edebug. | |
| 228 | |
| 229 @node Edebug Execution Modes | |
| 230 @subsection Edebug Execution Modes | |
| 231 | |
| 232 @cindex Edebug execution modes | |
| 233 Edebug supports several execution modes for running the program you are | |
| 234 debugging. We call these alternatives @dfn{Edebug execution modes}; do | |
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235 not confuse them with major or minor modes. The current Edebug execution mode |
| 6558 | 236 determines how far Edebug continues execution before stopping---whether |
| 237 it stops at each stop point, or continues to the next breakpoint, for | |
| 238 example---and how much Edebug displays the progress of the evaluation | |
| 239 before it stops. | |
| 240 | |
| 241 Normally, you specify the Edebug execution mode by typing a command to | |
| 242 continue the program in a certain mode. Here is a table of these | |
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243 commands; all except for @kbd{S} resume execution of the program, at |
| 6558 | 244 least for a certain distance. |
| 245 | |
| 246 @table @kbd | |
| 247 @item S | |
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248 Stop: don't execute any more of the program, but wait for more |
| 6558 | 249 Edebug commands (@code{edebug-stop}). |
| 250 | |
| 251 @item @key{SPC} | |
| 252 Step: stop at the next stop point encountered (@code{edebug-step-mode}). | |
| 253 | |
| 254 @item n | |
| 255 Next: stop at the next stop point encountered after an expression | |
| 256 (@code{edebug-next-mode}). Also see @code{edebug-forward-sexp} in | |
| 257 @ref{Edebug Misc}. | |
| 258 | |
| 259 @item t | |
| 260 Trace: pause one second at each Edebug stop point (@code{edebug-trace-mode}). | |
| 261 | |
| 262 @item T | |
| 263 Rapid trace: update the display at each stop point, but don't actually | |
| 264 pause (@code{edebug-Trace-fast-mode}). | |
| 265 | |
| 266 @item g | |
| 267 Go: run until the next breakpoint (@code{edebug-go-mode}). @xref{Breakpoints}. | |
| 268 | |
| 269 @item c | |
| 270 Continue: pause one second at each breakpoint, and then continue | |
| 271 (@code{edebug-continue-mode}). | |
| 272 | |
| 273 @item C | |
| 274 Rapid continue: move point to each breakpoint, but don't pause | |
| 275 (@code{edebug-Continue-fast-mode}). | |
| 276 | |
| 277 @item G | |
| 278 Go non-stop: ignore breakpoints (@code{edebug-Go-nonstop-mode}). You | |
| 279 can still stop the program by typing @kbd{S}, or any editing command. | |
| 280 @end table | |
| 281 | |
| 282 In general, the execution modes earlier in the above list run the | |
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283 program more slowly or stop sooner than the modes later in the list. |
| 6558 | 284 |
| 285 While executing or tracing, you can interrupt the execution by typing | |
| 286 any Edebug command. Edebug stops the program at the next stop point and | |
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287 then executes the command you typed. For example, typing @kbd{t} during |
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288 execution switches to trace mode at the next stop point. You can use |
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289 @kbd{S} to stop execution without doing anything else. |
| 6558 | 290 |
| 291 If your function happens to read input, a character you type intending | |
| 292 to interrupt execution may be read by the function instead. You can | |
| 293 avoid such unintended results by paying attention to when your program | |
| 294 wants input. | |
| 295 | |
| 296 @cindex keyboard macros (Edebug) | |
| 297 Keyboard macros containing the commands in this section do not | |
| 298 completely work: exiting from Edebug, to resume the program, loses track | |
| 299 of the keyboard macro. This is not easy to fix. Also, defining or | |
| 300 executing a keyboard macro outside of Edebug does not affect commands | |
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301 inside Edebug. This is usually an advantage. See also the |
| 6558 | 302 @code{edebug-continue-kbd-macro} option (@pxref{Edebug Options}). |
| 303 | |
| 304 When you enter a new Edebug level, the initial execution mode comes from | |
| 305 the value of the variable @code{edebug-initial-mode}. By default, this | |
| 306 specifies step mode. Note that you may reenter the same Edebug level | |
| 307 several times if, for example, an instrumented function is called | |
| 308 several times from one command. | |
| 309 | |
| 310 | |
| 311 @node Jumping | |
| 312 @subsection Jumping | |
| 313 | |
| 314 The commands described in this section execute until they reach a | |
| 315 specified location. All except @kbd{i} make a temporary breakpoint to | |
| 316 establish the place to stop, then switch to go mode. Any other | |
| 317 breakpoint reached before the intended stop point will also stop | |
| 318 execution. @xref{Breakpoints}, for the details on breakpoints. | |
| 319 | |
| 320 These commands may fail to work as expected in case of nonlocal exit, | |
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321 as that can bypass the temporary breakpoint where you expected the |
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322 program to stop. |
| 6558 | 323 |
| 324 @table @kbd | |
| 325 @item h | |
| 326 Proceed to the stop point near where point is (@code{edebug-goto-here}). | |
| 327 | |
| 328 @item f | |
| 329 Run the program forward over one expression | |
| 330 (@code{edebug-forward-sexp}). | |
| 331 | |
| 332 @item o | |
| 333 Run the program until the end of the containing sexp. | |
| 334 | |
| 335 @item i | |
| 336 Step into the function or macro called by the form after point. | |
| 337 @end table | |
| 338 | |
| 339 The @kbd{h} command proceeds to the stop point near the current location | |
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340 of point, using a temporary breakpoint. See @ref{Breakpoints}, for more |
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341 information about breakpoints. |
| 6558 | 342 |
| 343 The @kbd{f} command runs the program forward over one expression. More | |
| 344 precisely, it sets a temporary breakpoint at the position that | |
| 345 @kbd{C-M-f} would reach, then executes in go mode so that the program | |
| 346 will stop at breakpoints. | |
| 347 | |
| 348 With a prefix argument @var{n}, the temporary breakpoint is placed | |
| 349 @var{n} sexps beyond point. If the containing list ends before @var{n} | |
| 350 more elements, then the place to stop is after the containing | |
| 351 expression. | |
| 352 | |
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353 You must check that the position @kbd{C-M-f} finds is a place that the |
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354 program will really get to. In @code{cond}, for example, this may not |
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355 be true. |
| 6558 | 356 |
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357 For flexibility, the @kbd{f} command does @code{forward-sexp} starting |
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358 at point, rather than at the stop point. If you want to execute one |
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359 expression @emph{from the current stop point}, first type @kbd{w}, to |
| 6558 | 360 move point there, and then type @kbd{f}. |
| 361 | |
| 362 The @kbd{o} command continues ``out of'' an expression. It places a | |
| 363 temporary breakpoint at the end of the sexp containing point. If the | |
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364 containing sexp is a function definition itself, @kbd{o} continues until |
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365 just before the last sexp in the definition. If that is where you are |
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366 now, it returns from the function and then stops. In other words, this |
| 6558 | 367 command does not exit the currently executing function unless you are |
| 368 positioned after the last sexp. | |
| 369 | |
| 370 The @kbd{i} command steps into the function or macro called by the list | |
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371 form after point, and stops at its first stop point. Note that the form |
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372 need not be the one about to be evaluated. But if the form is a |
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373 function call about to be evaluated, remember to use this command before |
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374 any of the arguments are evaluated, since otherwise it will be too late. |
| 6558 | 375 |
| 376 The @kbd{i} command instruments the function or macro it's supposed to | |
| 377 step into, if it isn't instrumented already. This is convenient, but keep | |
| 378 in mind that the function or macro remains instrumented unless you explicitly | |
| 379 arrange to deinstrument it. | |
| 380 | |
| 381 @node Edebug Misc | |
| 382 @subsection Miscellaneous Edebug Commands | |
| 383 | |
| 384 Some miscellaneous Edebug commands are described here. | |
| 385 | |
| 386 @table @kbd | |
| 387 @item ? | |
| 388 Display the help message for Edebug (@code{edebug-help}). | |
| 389 | |
| 390 @item C-] | |
| 391 Abort one level back to the previous command level | |
| 392 (@code{abort-recursive-edit}). | |
| 393 | |
| 394 @item q | |
| 395 Return to the top level editor command loop (@code{top-level}). This | |
| 396 exits all recursive editing levels, including all levels of Edebug | |
| 397 activity. However, instrumented code protected with | |
| 398 @code{unwind-protect} or @code{condition-case} forms may resume | |
| 399 debugging. | |
| 400 | |
| 401 @item Q | |
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402 Like @kbd{q}, but don't stop even for protected code |
| 6558 | 403 (@code{top-level-nonstop}). |
| 404 | |
| 405 @item r | |
| 406 Redisplay the most recently known expression result in the echo area | |
| 407 (@code{edebug-previous-result}). | |
| 408 | |
| 409 @item d | |
| 410 Display a backtrace, excluding Edebug's own functions for clarity | |
| 411 (@code{edebug-backtrace}). | |
| 412 | |
| 413 You cannot use debugger commands in the backtrace buffer in Edebug as | |
| 414 you would in the standard debugger. | |
| 415 | |
| 416 The backtrace buffer is killed automatically when you continue | |
| 417 execution. | |
| 418 @end table | |
| 419 | |
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420 You can invoke commands from Edebug that activate Edebug again |
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421 recursively. Whenever Edebug is active, you can quit to the top level |
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422 with @kbd{q} or abort one recursive edit level with @kbd{C-]}. You can |
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423 display a backtrace of all the pending evaluations with @kbd{d}. |
| 6558 | 424 |
| 425 @node Breakpoints | |
| 426 @subsection Breakpoints | |
| 427 | |
| 428 @cindex breakpoints | |
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429 Edebug's step mode stops execution when the next stop point is reached. |
| 6558 | 430 There are three other ways to stop Edebug execution once it has started: |
| 431 breakpoints, the global break condition, and source breakpoints. | |
| 432 | |
| 433 While using Edebug, you can specify @dfn{breakpoints} in the program you | |
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434 are testing: these are places where execution should stop. You can set a |
| 6558 | 435 breakpoint at any stop point, as defined in @ref{Using Edebug}. For |
| 436 setting and unsetting breakpoints, the stop point that is affected is | |
| 437 the first one at or after point in the source code buffer. Here are the | |
| 438 Edebug commands for breakpoints: | |
| 439 | |
| 440 @table @kbd | |
| 441 @item b | |
| 442 Set a breakpoint at the stop point at or after point | |
| 443 (@code{edebug-set-breakpoint}). If you use a prefix argument, the | |
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444 breakpoint is temporary---it turns off the first time it stops the |
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445 program. |
| 6558 | 446 |
| 447 @item u | |
| 448 Unset the breakpoint (if any) at the stop point at or after | |
| 449 point (@code{edebug-unset-breakpoint}). | |
| 450 | |
| 451 @item x @var{condition} @key{RET} | |
| 452 Set a conditional breakpoint which stops the program only if | |
| 453 @var{condition} evaluates to a non-@code{nil} value | |
| 454 (@code{edebug-set-conditional-breakpoint}). With a prefix argument, the | |
| 455 breakpoint is temporary. | |
| 456 | |
| 457 @item B | |
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458 Move point to the next breakpoint in the current definition |
| 6558 | 459 (@code{edebug-next-breakpoint}). |
| 460 @end table | |
| 461 | |
| 462 While in Edebug, you can set a breakpoint with @kbd{b} and unset one | |
| 463 with @kbd{u}. First move point to the Edebug stop point of your choice, | |
| 464 then type @kbd{b} or @kbd{u} to set or unset a breakpoint there. | |
| 465 Unsetting a breakpoint where none has been set has no effect. | |
| 466 | |
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467 Re-evaluating or reinstrumenting a definition removes all of its |
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468 previous breakpoints. |
| 6558 | 469 |
| 470 A @dfn{conditional breakpoint} tests a condition each time the program | |
| 471 gets there. Any errors that occur as a result of evaluating the | |
| 472 condition are ignored, as if the result were @code{nil}. To set a | |
| 473 conditional breakpoint, use @kbd{x}, and specify the condition | |
| 474 expression in the minibuffer. Setting a conditional breakpoint at a | |
| 475 stop point that has a previously established conditional breakpoint puts | |
| 476 the previous condition expression in the minibuffer so you can edit it. | |
| 477 | |
| 478 You can make a conditional or unconditional breakpoint | |
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479 @dfn{temporary} by using a prefix argument with the command to set the |
| 6558 | 480 breakpoint. When a temporary breakpoint stops the program, it is |
| 481 automatically unset. | |
| 482 | |
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483 Edebug always stops or pauses at a breakpoint, except when the Edebug |
| 6558 | 484 mode is Go-nonstop. In that mode, it ignores breakpoints entirely. |
| 485 | |
| 486 To find out where your breakpoints are, use the @kbd{B} command, which | |
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487 moves point to the next breakpoint following point, within the same |
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488 function, or to the first breakpoint if there are no following |
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489 breakpoints. This command does not continue execution---it just moves |
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490 point in the buffer. |
| 6558 | 491 |
| 492 @menu | |
| 493 * Global Break Condition:: Breaking on an event. | |
| 494 * Source Breakpoints:: Embedding breakpoints in source code. | |
| 495 @end menu | |
| 496 | |
| 497 | |
| 498 @node Global Break Condition | |
| 499 @subsubsection Global Break Condition | |
| 500 | |
| 501 @cindex stopping on events | |
| 502 @cindex global break condition | |
| 503 A @dfn{global break condition} stops execution when a specified | |
| 504 condition is satisfied, no matter where that may occur. Edebug | |
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505 evaluates the global break condition at every stop point; if it |
| 6558 | 506 evaluates to a non-@code{nil} value, then execution stops or pauses |
| 507 depending on the execution mode, as if a breakpoint had been hit. If | |
| 508 evaluating the condition gets an error, execution does not stop. | |
| 509 | |
| 510 @findex edebug-set-global-break-condition | |
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511 The condition expression is stored in |
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512 @code{edebug-global-break-condition}. You can specify a new expression |
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513 using the @kbd{X} command (@code{edebug-set-global-break-condition}). |
| 6558 | 514 |
| 515 The global break condition is the simplest way to find where in your | |
| 516 code some event occurs, but it makes code run much more slowly. So you | |
| 517 should reset the condition to @code{nil} when not using it. | |
| 518 | |
| 519 @node Source Breakpoints | |
| 520 @subsubsection Source Breakpoints | |
| 521 | |
| 522 @findex edebug | |
| 523 @cindex source breakpoints | |
| 524 All breakpoints in a definition are forgotten each time you | |
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525 reinstrument it. If you wish to make a breakpoint that won't be |
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526 forgotten, you can write a @dfn{source breakpoint}, which is simply a |
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527 call to the function @code{edebug} in your source code. You can, of |
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528 course, make such a call conditional. For example, in the @code{fac} |
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529 function, you can insert the first line as shown below, to stop when the |
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530 argument reaches zero: |
| 6558 | 531 |
| 532 @example | |
| 533 (defun fac (n) | |
| 534 (if (= n 0) (edebug)) | |
| 535 (if (< 0 n) | |
| 536 (* n (fac (1- n))) | |
| 537 1)) | |
| 538 @end example | |
| 539 | |
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540 When the @code{fac} definition is instrumented and the function is |
| 6558 | 541 called, the call to @code{edebug} acts as a breakpoint. Depending on |
| 542 the execution mode, Edebug stops or pauses there. | |
| 543 | |
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544 If no instrumented code is being executed when @code{edebug} is called, |
| 6558 | 545 that function calls @code{debug}. |
| 546 @c This may not be a good idea anymore. | |
| 547 | |
| 548 @node Trapping Errors | |
| 549 @subsection Trapping Errors | |
| 550 | |
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551 Emacs normally displays an error message when an error is signaled and |
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552 not handled with @code{condition-case}. While Edebug is active and |
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553 executing instrumented code, it normally responds to all unhandled |
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554 errors. You can customize this with the options @code{edebug-on-error} |
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555 and @code{edebug-on-quit}; see @ref{Edebug Options}. |
| 6558 | 556 |
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557 When Edebug responds to an error, it shows the last stop point |
| 6558 | 558 encountered before the error. This may be the location of a call to a |
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559 function which was not instrumented, and within which the error actually |
| 6558 | 560 occurred. For an unbound variable error, the last known stop point |
| 561 might be quite distant from the offending variable reference. In that | |
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562 case, you might want to display a full backtrace (@pxref{Edebug Misc}). |
| 6558 | 563 |
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564 @c Edebug should be changed for the following: -- dan |
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565 If you change @code{debug-on-error} or @code{debug-on-quit} while |
| 6558 | 566 Edebug is active, these changes will be forgotten when Edebug becomes |
| 567 inactive. Furthermore, during Edebug's recursive edit, these variables | |
| 568 are bound to the values they had outside of Edebug. | |
| 569 | |
| 570 @node Edebug Views | |
| 571 @subsection Edebug Views | |
| 572 | |
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573 These Edebug commands let you view aspects of the buffer and window |
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574 status as they were before entry to Edebug. The outside window |
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575 configuration is the collection of windows and contents that were in |
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576 effect outside of Edebug. |
| 6558 | 577 |
| 578 @table @kbd | |
| 579 @item v | |
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580 Temporarily view the outside window configuration |
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581 (@code{edebug-view-outside}). |
| 6558 | 582 |
| 583 @item p | |
| 584 Temporarily display the outside current buffer with point at its outside | |
| 585 position (@code{edebug-bounce-point}). With a prefix argument @var{n}, | |
| 586 pause for @var{n} seconds instead. | |
| 587 | |
| 588 @item w | |
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589 Move point back to the current stop point in the source code buffer |
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590 (@code{edebug-where}). |
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591 |
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592 If you use this command in a different window displaying the same |
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593 buffer, that window will be used instead to display the current |
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594 definition in the future. |
| 6558 | 595 |
| 596 @item W | |
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597 @c Its function is not simply to forget the saved configuration -- dan |
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598 Toggle whether Edebug saves and restores the outside window |
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599 configuration (@code{edebug-toggle-save-windows}). |
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600 |
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601 With a prefix argument, @code{W} only toggles saving and restoring of |
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602 the selected window. To specify a window that is not displaying the |
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603 source code buffer, you must use @kbd{C-x X W} from the global keymap. |
| 6558 | 604 @end table |
| 605 | |
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606 You can view the outside window configuration with @kbd{v} or just |
| 6558 | 607 bounce to the point in the current buffer with @kbd{p}, even if |
| 608 it is not normally displayed. After moving point, you may wish to jump | |
| 609 back to the stop point with @kbd{w} from a source code buffer. | |
| 610 | |
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611 Each time you use @kbd{W} to turn saving @emph{off}, Edebug forgets the |
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612 saved outside window configuration---so that even if you turn saving |
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613 back @emph{on}, the current window configuration remains unchanged when |
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614 you next exit Edebug (by continuing the program). However, the |
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615 automatic redisplay of @samp{*edebug*} and @samp{*edebug-trace*} may |
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616 conflict with the buffers you wish to see unless you have enough windows |
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617 open. |
| 6558 | 618 |
| 619 @node Edebug Eval | |
| 620 @subsection Evaluation | |
| 621 | |
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622 While within Edebug, you can evaluate expressions ``as if'' Edebug |
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623 were not running. Edebug tries to be invisible to the expression's |
| 6558 | 624 evaluation and printing. Evaluation of expressions that cause side |
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625 effects will work as expected, except for changes to data that Edebug |
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626 explicitly saves and restores. @xref{The Outside Context}, for details |
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627 on this process. |
| 6558 | 628 |
| 629 @table @kbd | |
| 630 @item e @var{exp} @key{RET} | |
| 631 Evaluate expression @var{exp} in the context outside of Edebug | |
| 632 (@code{edebug-eval-expression}). That is, Edebug tries to minimize its | |
| 633 interference with the evaluation. | |
| 634 | |
| 12098 | 635 @item M-: @var{exp} @key{RET} |
| 6558 | 636 Evaluate expression @var{exp} in the context of Edebug itself. |
| 637 | |
| 638 @item C-x C-e | |
| 639 Evaluate the expression before point, in the context outside of Edebug | |
| 640 (@code{edebug-eval-last-sexp}). | |
| 641 @end table | |
| 642 | |
| 643 @cindex lexical binding (Edebug) | |
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644 Edebug supports evaluation of expressions containing references to |
| 6558 | 645 lexically bound symbols created by the following constructs in |
| 646 @file{cl.el} (version 2.03 or later): @code{lexical-let}, | |
| 647 @code{macrolet}, and @code{symbol-macrolet}. | |
| 648 | |
| 649 @node Eval List | |
| 650 @subsection Evaluation List Buffer | |
| 651 | |
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652 You can use the @dfn{evaluation list buffer}, called @samp{*edebug*}, to |
| 6558 | 653 evaluate expressions interactively. You can also set up the |
| 654 @dfn{evaluation list} of expressions to be evaluated automatically each | |
| 655 time Edebug updates the display. | |
| 656 | |
| 657 @table @kbd | |
| 658 @item E | |
| 659 Switch to the evaluation list buffer @samp{*edebug*} | |
| 660 (@code{edebug-visit-eval-list}). | |
| 661 @end table | |
| 662 | |
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663 In the @samp{*edebug*} buffer you can use the commands of Lisp |
| 6558 | 664 Interaction mode (@pxref{Lisp Interaction,,, emacs, The GNU Emacs |
| 665 Manual}) as well as these special commands: | |
| 666 | |
| 667 @table @kbd | |
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668 @item C-j |
| 6558 | 669 Evaluate the expression before point, in the outside context, and insert |
| 670 the value in the buffer (@code{edebug-eval-print-last-sexp}). | |
| 671 | |
| 672 @item C-x C-e | |
| 673 Evaluate the expression before point, in the context outside of Edebug | |
| 674 (@code{edebug-eval-last-sexp}). | |
| 675 | |
| 676 @item C-c C-u | |
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677 Build a new evaluation list from the contents of the buffer |
| 6558 | 678 (@code{edebug-update-eval-list}). |
| 679 | |
| 680 @item C-c C-d | |
| 681 Delete the evaluation list group that point is in | |
| 682 (@code{edebug-delete-eval-item}). | |
| 683 | |
| 684 @item C-c C-w | |
| 685 Switch back to the source code buffer at the current stop point | |
| 686 (@code{edebug-where}). | |
| 687 @end table | |
| 688 | |
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689 You can evaluate expressions in the evaluation list window with |
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690 @kbd{C-j} or @kbd{C-x C-e}, just as you would in @samp{*scratch*}; |
| 6558 | 691 but they are evaluated in the context outside of Edebug. |
| 692 | |
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693 The expressions you enter interactively (and their results) are lost |
| 6558 | 694 when you continue execution; but you can set up an @dfn{evaluation list} |
| 695 consisting of expressions to be evaluated each time execution stops. | |
| 696 | |
| 697 @cindex evaluation list group | |
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698 To do this, write one or more @dfn{evaluation list groups} in the |
| 6558 | 699 evaluation list buffer. An evaluation list group consists of one or |
| 700 more Lisp expressions. Groups are separated by comment lines. | |
| 701 | |
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702 The command @kbd{C-c C-u} (@code{edebug-update-eval-list}) rebuilds the |
| 6558 | 703 evaluation list, scanning the buffer and using the first expression of |
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704 each group. (The idea is that the second expression of the group is the |
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705 value previously computed and displayed.) |
| 6558 | 706 |
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707 Each entry to Edebug redisplays the evaluation list by inserting each |
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708 expression in the buffer, followed by its current value. It also |
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709 inserts comment lines so that each expression becomes its own group. |
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710 Thus, if you type @kbd{C-c C-u} again without changing the buffer text, |
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711 the evaluation list is effectively unchanged. |
| 6558 | 712 |
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713 If an error occurs during an evaluation from the evaluation list, the |
| 6558 | 714 error message is displayed in a string as if it were the result. |
| 715 Therefore, expressions that use variables not currently valid do not | |
| 716 interrupt your debugging. | |
| 717 | |
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718 Here is an example of what the evaluation list window looks like after |
| 6558 | 719 several expressions have been added to it: |
| 720 | |
| 721 @smallexample | |
| 722 (current-buffer) | |
| 723 #<buffer *scratch*> | |
| 724 ;--------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 725 (selected-window) | |
| 726 #<window 16 on *scratch*> | |
| 727 ;--------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 728 (point) | |
| 729 196 | |
| 730 ;--------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 731 bad-var | |
| 732 "Symbol's value as variable is void: bad-var" | |
| 733 ;--------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 734 (recursion-depth) | |
| 735 0 | |
| 736 ;--------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 737 this-command | |
| 738 eval-last-sexp | |
| 739 ;--------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| 740 @end smallexample | |
| 741 | |
| 742 To delete a group, move point into it and type @kbd{C-c C-d}, or simply | |
| 743 delete the text for the group and update the evaluation list with | |
| 744 @kbd{C-c C-u}. To add a new expression to the evaluation list, insert | |
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745 the expression at a suitable place, insert a new comment line, then type |
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746 @kbd{C-c C-u}. You need not insert dashes in the comment line---its |
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747 contents don't matter. |
| 6558 | 748 |
| 749 After selecting @samp{*edebug*}, you can return to the source code | |
| 750 buffer with @kbd{C-c C-w}. The @samp{*edebug*} buffer is killed when | |
| 751 you continue execution, and recreated next time it is needed. | |
| 752 | |
| 753 @node Printing in Edebug | |
| 754 @subsection Printing in Edebug | |
| 755 | |
| 756 @cindex printing (Edebug) | |
| 757 @cindex printing circular structures | |
| 758 @pindex cust-print | |
| 759 If an expression in your program produces a value containing circular | |
| 760 list structure, you may get an error when Edebug attempts to print it. | |
| 761 | |
| 762 One way to cope with circular structure is to set @code{print-length} | |
| 763 or @code{print-level} to truncate the printing. Edebug does this for | |
| 764 you; it binds @code{print-length} and @code{print-level} to 50 if they | |
| 765 were @code{nil}. (Actually, the variables @code{edebug-print-length} | |
| 766 and @code{edebug-print-level} specify the values to use within Edebug.) | |
| 767 @xref{Output Variables}. | |
| 768 | |
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769 @defopt edebug-print-length |
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770 If non-@code{nil}, Edebug binds @code{print-length} to this value while |
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771 printing results. The default value is @code{50}. |
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772 @end defopt |
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773 |
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774 @defopt edebug-print-level |
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775 If non-@code{nil}, Edebug binds @code{print-level} to this value while |
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776 printing results. The default value is @code{50}. |
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777 @end defopt |
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778 |
| 6558 | 779 You can also print circular structures and structures that share |
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780 elements more informatively by binding @code{print-circle} |
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781 to a non-@code{nil} value. |
| 6558 | 782 |
| 783 Here is an example of code that creates a circular structure: | |
| 784 | |
| 785 @example | |
| 786 (setq a '(x y)) | |
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787 (setcar a a) |
| 6558 | 788 @end example |
| 789 | |
| 790 @noindent | |
| 791 Custom printing prints this as @samp{Result: #1=(#1# y)}. The | |
| 792 @samp{#1=} notation labels the structure that follows it with the label | |
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793 @samp{1}, and the @samp{#1#} notation references the previously labeled |
| 6558 | 794 structure. This notation is used for any shared elements of lists or |
| 795 vectors. | |
| 796 | |
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797 @defopt edebug-print-circle |
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798 If non-@code{nil}, Edebug binds @code{print-circle} to this value while |
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799 printing results. The default value is @code{nil}. |
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800 @end defopt |
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801 |
| 6558 | 802 Other programs can also use custom printing; see @file{cust-print.el} |
| 803 for details. | |
| 804 | |
| 805 @node Trace Buffer | |
| 806 @subsection Trace Buffer | |
| 807 @cindex trace buffer | |
| 808 | |
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809 Edebug can record an execution trace, storing it in a buffer named |
| 6558 | 810 @samp{*edebug-trace*}. This is a log of function calls and returns, |
| 811 showing the function names and their arguments and values. To enable | |
| 812 trace recording, set @code{edebug-trace} to a non-@code{nil} value. | |
| 813 | |
| 814 Making a trace buffer is not the same thing as using trace execution | |
| 815 mode (@pxref{Edebug Execution Modes}). | |
| 816 | |
| 817 When trace recording is enabled, each function entry and exit adds | |
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818 lines to the trace buffer. A function entry record consists of |
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819 @samp{::::@{}, followed by the function name and argument values. A |
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820 function exit record consists of @samp{::::@}}, followed by the function |
| 6558 | 821 name and result of the function. |
| 822 | |
| 823 The number of @samp{:}s in an entry shows its recursion depth. You | |
| 824 can use the braces in the trace buffer to find the matching beginning or | |
| 825 end of function calls. | |
| 826 | |
| 827 @findex edebug-print-trace-before | |
| 828 @findex edebug-print-trace-after | |
| 829 You can customize trace recording for function entry and exit by | |
| 830 redefining the functions @code{edebug-print-trace-before} and | |
| 831 @code{edebug-print-trace-after}. | |
| 832 | |
| 833 @defmac edebug-tracing string body@dots{} | |
| 834 This macro requests additional trace information around the execution | |
| 835 of the @var{body} forms. The argument @var{string} specifies text | |
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836 to put in the trace buffer. All the arguments are evaluated, and |
| 6558 | 837 @code{edebug-tracing} returns the value of the last form in @var{body}. |
| 838 @end defmac | |
| 839 | |
| 840 @defun edebug-trace format-string &rest format-args | |
| 841 This function inserts text in the trace buffer. It computes the text | |
| 842 with @code{(apply 'format @var{format-string} @var{format-args})}. | |
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843 It also appends a newline to separate entries. |
| 6558 | 844 @end defun |
| 845 | |
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846 @code{edebug-tracing} and @code{edebug-trace} insert lines in the |
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847 trace buffer whenever they are called, even if Edebug is not active. |
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848 Adding text to the trace buffer also scrolls its window to show the last |
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849 lines inserted. |
| 6558 | 850 |
| 851 @node Coverage Testing | |
| 852 @subsection Coverage Testing | |
| 853 | |
| 854 @cindex coverage testing | |
| 855 @cindex frequency counts | |
| 856 @cindex performance analysis | |
| 857 Edebug provides rudimentary coverage testing and display of execution | |
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858 frequency. |
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859 |
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860 Coverage testing works by comparing the result of each expression with |
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861 the previous result; each form in the program is considered ``covered'' |
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862 if it has returned two different values since you began testing coverage |
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863 in the current Emacs session. Thus, to do coverage testing on your |
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864 program, execute it under various conditions and note whether it behaves |
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865 correctly; Edebug will tell you when you have tried enough different |
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866 conditions that each form has returned two different values. |
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867 |
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868 Coverage testing makes execution slower, so it is only done if |
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869 @code{edebug-test-coverage} is non-@code{nil}. Frequency counting is |
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870 performed for all execution of an instrumented function, even if the |
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871 execution mode is Go-nonstop, and regardless of whether coverage testing |
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872 is enabled. |
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873 |
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874 Use @kbd{M-x edebug-display-freq-count} to display both the |
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875 coverage information and the frequency counts for a definition. |
| 6558 | 876 |
| 877 @deffn Command edebug-display-freq-count | |
| 878 This command displays the frequency count data for each line of the | |
| 879 current definition. | |
| 880 | |
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881 The frequency counts appear as comment lines after each line of code, |
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882 and you can undo all insertions with one @code{undo} command. The |
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883 counts appear under the @samp{(} before an expression or the @samp{)} |
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884 after an expression, or on the last character of a variable. To |
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885 simplify the display, a count is not shown if it is equal to the |
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886 count of an earlier expression on the same line. |
| 6558 | 887 |
| 888 The character @samp{=} following the count for an expression says that | |
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889 the expression has returned the same value each time it was evaluated. |
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890 In other words, it is not yet ``covered'' for coverage testing purposes. |
| 6558 | 891 |
| 892 To clear the frequency count and coverage data for a definition, | |
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893 simply reinstrument it with @code{eval-defun}. |
| 6558 | 894 @end deffn |
| 895 | |
| 896 For example, after evaluating @code{(fac 5)} with a source | |
| 897 breakpoint, and setting @code{edebug-test-coverage} to @code{t}, when | |
| 898 the breakpoint is reached, the frequency data looks like this: | |
| 899 | |
| 900 @example | |
| 901 (defun fac (n) | |
| 902 (if (= n 0) (edebug)) | |
| 903 ;#6 1 0 =5 | |
| 904 (if (< 0 n) | |
| 905 ;#5 = | |
| 906 (* n (fac (1- n))) | |
| 907 ;# 5 0 | |
| 908 1)) | |
| 909 ;# 0 | |
| 910 @end example | |
| 911 | |
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912 The comment lines show that @code{fac} was called 6 times. The |
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913 first @code{if} statement returned 5 times with the same result each |
| 6558 | 914 time; the same is true of the condition on the second @code{if}. |
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915 The recursive call of @code{fac} did not return at all. |
| 6558 | 916 |
| 917 | |
| 918 @node The Outside Context | |
| 919 @subsection The Outside Context | |
| 920 | |
| 921 Edebug tries to be transparent to the program you are debugging, but it | |
| 922 does not succeed completely. Edebug also tries to be transparent when | |
| 923 you evaluate expressions with @kbd{e} or with the evaluation list | |
| 924 buffer, by temporarily restoring the outside context. This section | |
| 925 explains precisely what context Edebug restores, and how Edebug fails to | |
| 926 be completely transparent. | |
| 927 | |
| 928 @menu | |
| 929 * Checking Whether to Stop:: When Edebug decides what to do. | |
| 930 * Edebug Display Update:: When Edebug updates the display. | |
| 931 * Edebug Recursive Edit:: When Edebug stops execution. | |
| 932 @end menu | |
| 933 | |
| 934 @node Checking Whether to Stop | |
| 935 @subsubsection Checking Whether to Stop | |
| 936 | |
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937 Whenever Edebug is entered, it needs to save and restore certain data |
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938 before even deciding whether to make trace information or stop the |
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939 program. |
| 6558 | 940 |
| 941 @itemize @bullet | |
| 942 @item | |
| 943 @code{max-lisp-eval-depth} and @code{max-specpdl-size} are both | |
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944 incremented once to reduce Edebug's impact on the stack. You could, |
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945 however, still run out of stack space when using Edebug. |
| 6558 | 946 |
| 947 @item | |
| 948 The state of keyboard macro execution is saved and restored. While | |
| 949 Edebug is active, @code{executing-macro} is bound to | |
| 950 @code{edebug-continue-kbd-macro}. | |
| 951 | |
| 952 @end itemize | |
| 953 | |
| 954 | |
| 955 @node Edebug Display Update | |
| 956 @subsubsection Edebug Display Update | |
| 957 | |
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958 @c This paragraph is not filled, because LaLiberte's conversion script |
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959 @c needs an xref to be on just one line. |
| 6558 | 960 When Edebug needs to display something (e.g., in trace mode), it saves |
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961 the current window configuration from ``outside'' Edebug |
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962 (@pxref{Window Configurations}). When you exit Edebug (by continuing |
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963 the program), it restores the previous window configuration. |
| 6558 | 964 |
| 965 Emacs redisplays only when it pauses. Usually, when you continue | |
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966 execution, the program re-enters Edebug at a breakpoint or after |
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967 stepping, without pausing or reading input in between. In such cases, |
| 6558 | 968 Emacs never gets a chance to redisplay the ``outside'' configuration. |
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969 Consequently, what you see is the same window configuration as the last |
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970 time Edebug was active, with no interruption. |
| 6558 | 971 |
| 972 Entry to Edebug for displaying something also saves and restores the | |
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973 following data (though some of them are deliberately not restored if an |
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974 error or quit signal occurs). |
| 6558 | 975 |
| 976 @itemize @bullet | |
| 977 @item | |
| 978 @cindex current buffer point and mark (Edebug) | |
| 979 Which buffer is current, and the positions of point and the mark in the | |
| 980 current buffer, are saved and restored. | |
| 981 | |
| 982 @item | |
| 983 @cindex window configuration (Edebug) | |
| 984 The outside window configuration is saved and restored if | |
| 985 @code{edebug-save-windows} is non-@code{nil} (@pxref{Edebug Display Update}). | |
| 986 | |
| 987 The window configuration is not restored on error or quit, but the | |
| 988 outside selected window @emph{is} reselected even on error or quit in | |
| 989 case a @code{save-excursion} is active. If the value of | |
| 990 @code{edebug-save-windows} is a list, only the listed windows are saved | |
| 991 and restored. | |
| 992 | |
| 993 The window start and horizontal scrolling of the source code buffer are | |
| 994 not restored, however, so that the display remains coherent within Edebug. | |
| 995 | |
| 996 @item | |
| 997 The value of point in each displayed buffer is saved and restored if | |
| 998 @code{edebug-save-displayed-buffer-points} is non-@code{nil}. | |
| 999 | |
| 1000 @item | |
| 1001 The variables @code{overlay-arrow-position} and | |
| 1002 @code{overlay-arrow-string} are saved and restored. So you can safely | |
| 1003 invoke Edebug from the recursive edit elsewhere in the same buffer. | |
| 1004 | |
| 1005 @item | |
| 1006 @code{cursor-in-echo-area} is locally bound to @code{nil} so that | |
| 1007 the cursor shows up in the window. | |
| 1008 @end itemize | |
| 1009 | |
| 1010 @node Edebug Recursive Edit | |
| 1011 @subsubsection Edebug Recursive Edit | |
| 1012 | |
| 1013 When Edebug is entered and actually reads commands from the user, it | |
| 1014 saves (and later restores) these additional data: | |
| 1015 | |
| 1016 @itemize @bullet | |
| 1017 @item | |
| 1018 The current match data. @xref{Match Data}. | |
| 1019 | |
| 1020 @item | |
| 1021 @code{last-command}, @code{this-command}, @code{last-command-char}, | |
| 1022 @code{last-input-char}, @code{last-input-event}, | |
| 1023 @code{last-command-event}, @code{last-event-frame}, | |
| 1024 @code{last-nonmenu-event}, and @code{track-mouse}. Commands used within | |
| 1025 Edebug do not affect these variables outside of Edebug. | |
| 1026 | |
| 1027 The key sequence returned by @code{this-command-keys} is changed by | |
| 1028 executing commands within Edebug and there is no way to reset | |
| 1029 the key sequence from Lisp. | |
| 1030 | |
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1031 Edebug cannot save and restore the value of |
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1032 @code{unread-command-events}. Entering Edebug while this variable has a |
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1033 nontrivial value can interfere with execution of the program you are |
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1034 debugging. |
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1035 |
| 6558 | 1036 @item |
| 1037 Complex commands executed while in Edebug are added to the variable | |
| 1038 @code{command-history}. In rare cases this can alter execution. | |
| 1039 | |
| 1040 @item | |
| 1041 Within Edebug, the recursion depth appears one deeper than the recursion | |
| 1042 depth outside Edebug. This is not true of the automatically updated | |
| 1043 evaluation list window. | |
| 1044 | |
| 1045 @item | |
| 1046 @code{standard-output} and @code{standard-input} are bound to @code{nil} | |
| 1047 by the @code{recursive-edit}, but Edebug temporarily restores them during | |
| 1048 evaluations. | |
| 1049 | |
| 1050 @item | |
| 1051 The state of keyboard macro definition is saved and restored. While | |
| 1052 Edebug is active, @code{defining-kbd-macro} is bound to | |
| 1053 @code{edebug-continue-kbd-macro}. | |
| 1054 @end itemize | |
| 1055 | |
| 1056 @node Instrumenting Macro Calls | |
| 1057 @subsection Instrumenting Macro Calls | |
| 1058 | |
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1059 When Edebug instruments an expression that calls a Lisp macro, it needs |
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1060 additional information about the macro to do the job properly. This is |
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1061 because there is no a-priori way to tell which subexpressions of the |
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1062 macro call are forms to be evaluated. (Evaluation may occur explicitly |
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1063 in the macro body, or when the resulting expansion is evaluated, or any |
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1064 time later.) |
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1065 |
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1066 Therefore, you must define an Edebug specification for each macro that |
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1067 Edebug will encounter, to explain the format of calls to that macro. To |
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1068 do this, use @code{def-edebug-spec}. |
| 6558 | 1069 |
| 1070 @deffn Macro def-edebug-spec macro specification | |
| 1071 Specify which expressions of a call to macro @var{macro} are forms to be | |
| 1072 evaluated. For simple macros, the @var{specification} often looks very | |
| 1073 similar to the formal argument list of the macro definition, but | |
| 1074 specifications are much more general than macro arguments. | |
| 1075 | |
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1076 The @var{macro} argument can actually be any symbol, not just a macro |
| 6558 | 1077 name. |
| 1078 @end deffn | |
| 1079 | |
| 1080 Here is a simple example that defines the specification for the | |
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1081 @code{for} example macro (@pxref{Argument Evaluation}), followed by an |
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1082 alternative, equivalent specification. |
| 6558 | 1083 |
| 1084 @example | |
| 1085 (def-edebug-spec for | |
| 1086 (symbolp "from" form "to" form "do" &rest form)) | |
| 1087 | |
| 1088 (def-edebug-spec for | |
| 1089 (symbolp ['from form] ['to form] ['do body])) | |
| 1090 @end example | |
| 1091 | |
| 1092 Here is a table of the possibilities for @var{specification} and how each | |
| 1093 directs processing of arguments. | |
| 1094 | |
| 7734 | 1095 @table @asis |
| 6558 | 1096 @item @code{t} |
| 1097 All arguments are instrumented for evaluation. | |
| 1098 | |
| 1099 @item @code{0} | |
| 1100 None of the arguments is instrumented. | |
| 1101 | |
| 1102 @item a symbol | |
| 1103 The symbol must have an Edebug specification which is used instead. | |
| 1104 This indirection is repeated until another kind of specification is | |
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1105 found. This allows you to inherit the specification from another macro. |
| 6558 | 1106 |
| 1107 @item a list | |
| 1108 The elements of the list describe the types of the arguments of a | |
| 1109 calling form. The possible elements of a specification list are | |
| 1110 described in the following sections. | |
| 1111 @end table | |
| 1112 | |
| 1113 @menu | |
| 1114 * Specification List:: How to specify complex patterns of evaluation. | |
| 1115 * Backtracking:: What Edebug does when matching fails. | |
| 1116 * Specification Examples:: To help understand specifications. | |
| 1117 @end menu | |
| 1118 | |
| 1119 | |
| 1120 @node Specification List | |
| 1121 @subsubsection Specification List | |
| 1122 | |
| 1123 @cindex Edebug specification list | |
| 1124 A @dfn{specification list} is required for an Edebug specification if | |
| 1125 some arguments of a macro call are evaluated while others are not. Some | |
| 1126 elements in a specification list match one or more arguments, but others | |
| 1127 modify the processing of all following elements. The latter, called | |
| 1128 @dfn{specification keywords}, are symbols beginning with @samp{&} (such | |
| 1129 as @code{&optional}). | |
| 1130 | |
| 1131 A specification list may contain sublists which match arguments that are | |
| 1132 themselves lists, or it may contain vectors used for grouping. Sublists | |
| 1133 and groups thus subdivide the specification list into a hierarchy of | |
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1134 levels. Specification keywords apply only to the remainder of the |
| 6558 | 1135 sublist or group they are contained in. |
| 1136 | |
| 1137 When a specification list involves alternatives or repetition, matching | |
| 1138 it against an actual macro call may require backtracking. | |
| 1139 @xref{Backtracking}, for more details. | |
| 1140 | |
| 1141 Edebug specifications provide the power of regular expression matching, | |
| 1142 plus some context-free grammar constructs: the matching of sublists with | |
| 1143 balanced parentheses, recursive processing of forms, and recursion via | |
| 1144 indirect specifications. | |
| 1145 | |
| 1146 Here's a table of the possible elements of a specification list, with | |
| 1147 their meanings: | |
| 1148 | |
| 1149 @table @code | |
| 1150 @item sexp | |
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1151 A single unevaluated Lisp object, which is not instrumented. |
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1152 @c an "expression" is not necessarily intended for evaluation. |
| 6558 | 1153 |
| 1154 @item form | |
| 1155 A single evaluated expression, which is instrumented. | |
| 1156 | |
| 1157 @item place | |
| 1158 @findex edebug-unwrap | |
| 1159 A place to store a value, as in the Common Lisp @code{setf} construct. | |
| 1160 | |
| 1161 @item body | |
| 1162 Short for @code{&rest form}. See @code{&rest} below. | |
| 1163 | |
| 1164 @item function-form | |
| 1165 A function form: either a quoted function symbol, a quoted lambda | |
| 1166 expression, or a form (that should evaluate to a function symbol or | |
| 1167 lambda expression). This is useful when an argument that's a lambda | |
| 1168 expression might be quoted with @code{quote} rather than | |
| 1169 @code{function}, since it instruments the body of the lambda expression | |
| 1170 either way. | |
| 1171 | |
| 1172 @item lambda-expr | |
| 1173 A lambda expression with no quoting. | |
| 1174 | |
| 1175 @item &optional | |
| 1176 @kindex &optional @r{(Edebug)} | |
| 1177 All following elements in the specification list are optional; as soon | |
| 1178 as one does not match, Edebug stops matching at this level. | |
| 1179 | |
| 1180 To make just a few elements optional followed by non-optional elements, | |
| 1181 use @code{[&optional @var{specs}@dots{}]}. To specify that several | |
| 1182 elements must all match or none, use @code{&optional | |
| 1183 [@var{specs}@dots{}]}. See the @code{defun} example below. | |
| 1184 | |
| 1185 @item &rest | |
| 1186 @kindex &rest @r{(Edebug)} | |
| 1187 All following elements in the specification list are repeated zero or | |
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1188 more times. In the last repetition, however, it is not a problem if the |
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1189 expression runs out before matching all of the elements of the |
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1190 specification list. |
| 6558 | 1191 |
| 1192 To repeat only a few elements, use @code{[&rest @var{specs}@dots{}]}. | |
| 1193 To specify several elements that must all match on every repetition, use | |
| 1194 @code{&rest [@var{specs}@dots{}]}. | |
| 1195 | |
| 1196 @item &or | |
| 1197 @kindex &or @r{(Edebug)} | |
| 1198 Each of the following elements in the specification list is an | |
| 1199 alternative. One of the alternatives must match, or the @code{&or} | |
| 1200 specification fails. | |
| 1201 | |
| 1202 Each list element following @code{&or} is a single alternative. To | |
| 1203 group two or more list elements as a single alternative, enclose them in | |
| 1204 @code{[@dots{}]}. | |
| 1205 | |
| 1206 @item ¬ | |
| 1207 @kindex ¬ @r{(Edebug)} | |
| 1208 Each of the following elements is matched as alternatives as if by using | |
| 1209 @code{&or}, but if any of them match, the specification fails. If none | |
| 1210 of them match, nothing is matched, but the @code{¬} specification | |
| 1211 succeeds. | |
| 1212 | |
| 1213 @item &define | |
| 1214 @kindex &define @r{(Edebug)} | |
| 1215 Indicates that the specification is for a defining form. The defining | |
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1216 form itself is not instrumented (that is, Edebug does not stop before and |
| 6558 | 1217 after the defining form), but forms inside it typically will be |
| 1218 instrumented. The @code{&define} keyword should be the first element in | |
| 1219 a list specification. | |
| 1220 | |
| 1221 @item nil | |
| 1222 This is successful when there are no more arguments to match at the | |
| 1223 current argument list level; otherwise it fails. See sublist | |
| 1224 specifications and the backquote example below. | |
| 1225 | |
| 1226 @item gate | |
| 1227 @cindex preventing backtracking | |
| 1228 No argument is matched but backtracking through the gate is disabled | |
| 1229 while matching the remainder of the specifications at this level. This | |
| 1230 is primarily used to generate more specific syntax error messages. See | |
| 1231 @ref{Backtracking}, for more details. Also see the @code{let} example | |
| 1232 below. | |
| 1233 | |
| 1234 @item @var{other-symbol} | |
| 1235 @cindex indirect specifications | |
| 1236 Any other symbol in a specification list may be a predicate or an | |
| 1237 indirect specification. | |
| 1238 | |
| 1239 If the symbol has an Edebug specification, this @dfn{indirect | |
| 1240 specification} should be either a list specification that is used in | |
| 1241 place of the symbol, or a function that is called to process the | |
| 1242 arguments. The specification may be defined with @code{def-edebug-spec} | |
| 1243 just as for macros. See the @code{defun} example below. | |
| 1244 | |
| 1245 Otherwise, the symbol should be a predicate. The predicate is called | |
| 1246 with the argument and the specification fails if the predicate returns | |
| 1247 @code{nil}. In either case, that argument is not instrumented. | |
| 1248 | |
| 1249 Some suitable predicates include @code{symbolp}, @code{integerp}, | |
| 1250 @code{stringp}, @code{vectorp}, and @code{atom}. | |
| 1251 | |
| 1252 @item [@var{elements}@dots{}] | |
| 1253 @cindex [@dots{}] (Edebug) | |
| 1254 A vector of elements groups the elements into a single @dfn{group | |
| 1255 specification}. Its meaning has nothing to do with vectors. | |
| 1256 | |
| 1257 @item "@var{string}" | |
| 1258 The argument should be a symbol named @var{string}. This specification | |
| 1259 is equivalent to the quoted symbol, @code{'@var{symbol}}, where the name | |
| 1260 of @var{symbol} is the @var{string}, but the string form is preferred. | |
| 1261 | |
| 1262 @item (vector @var{elements}@dots{}) | |
| 1263 The argument should be a vector whose elements must match the | |
| 1264 @var{elements} in the specification. See the backquote example below. | |
| 1265 | |
| 1266 @item (@var{elements}@dots{}) | |
| 1267 Any other list is a @dfn{sublist specification} and the argument must be | |
| 1268 a list whose elements match the specification @var{elements}. | |
| 1269 | |
| 1270 @cindex dotted lists (Edebug) | |
| 1271 A sublist specification may be a dotted list and the corresponding list | |
| 1272 argument may then be a dotted list. Alternatively, the last @sc{cdr} of a | |
| 1273 dotted list specification may be another sublist specification (via a | |
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1274 grouping or an indirect specification, e.g., @code{(spec . [(more |
| 6558 | 1275 specs@dots{})])}) whose elements match the non-dotted list arguments. |
| 1276 This is useful in recursive specifications such as in the backquote | |
| 1277 example below. Also see the description of a @code{nil} specification | |
| 1278 above for terminating such recursion. | |
| 1279 | |
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1280 Note that a sublist specification written as @code{(specs . nil)} |
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1281 is equivalent to @code{(specs)}, and @code{(specs . |
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1282 (sublist-elements@dots{}))} is equivalent to @code{(specs |
| 6558 | 1283 sublist-elements@dots{})}. |
| 1284 @end table | |
| 1285 | |
| 1286 @c Need to document extensions with &symbol and :symbol | |
| 1287 | |
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1288 Here is a list of additional specifications that may appear only after |
| 6558 | 1289 @code{&define}. See the @code{defun} example below. |
| 1290 | |
| 1291 @table @code | |
| 1292 @item name | |
| 1293 The argument, a symbol, is the name of the defining form. | |
| 1294 | |
| 1295 A defining form is not required to have a name field; and it may have | |
| 1296 multiple name fields. | |
| 1297 | |
| 1298 @item :name | |
| 1299 This construct does not actually match an argument. The element | |
| 1300 following @code{:name} should be a symbol; it is used as an additional | |
| 1301 name component for the definition. You can use this to add a unique, | |
| 1302 static component to the name of the definition. It may be used more | |
| 1303 than once. | |
| 1304 | |
| 1305 @item arg | |
| 1306 The argument, a symbol, is the name of an argument of the defining form. | |
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1307 However, lambda-list keywords (symbols starting with @samp{&}) |
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1308 are not allowed. |
| 6558 | 1309 |
| 1310 @item lambda-list | |
| 1311 @cindex lambda-list (Edebug) | |
| 1312 This matches a lambda list---the argument list of a lambda expression. | |
| 1313 | |
| 1314 @item def-body | |
| 1315 The argument is the body of code in a definition. This is like | |
| 1316 @code{body}, described above, but a definition body must be instrumented | |
| 1317 with a different Edebug call that looks up information associated with | |
| 1318 the definition. Use @code{def-body} for the highest level list of forms | |
| 1319 within the definition. | |
| 1320 | |
| 1321 @item def-form | |
| 1322 The argument is a single, highest-level form in a definition. This is | |
| 1323 like @code{def-body}, except use this to match a single form rather than | |
| 1324 a list of forms. As a special case, @code{def-form} also means that | |
| 1325 tracing information is not output when the form is executed. See the | |
| 1326 @code{interactive} example below. | |
| 1327 @end table | |
| 1328 | |
| 1329 @node Backtracking | |
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1330 @subsubsection Backtracking in Specifications |
| 6558 | 1331 |
| 1332 @cindex backtracking | |
| 1333 @cindex syntax error (Edebug) | |
| 1334 If a specification fails to match at some point, this does not | |
| 1335 necessarily mean a syntax error will be signaled; instead, | |
| 1336 @dfn{backtracking} will take place until all alternatives have been | |
| 1337 exhausted. Eventually every element of the argument list must be | |
| 1338 matched by some element in the specification, and every required element | |
| 1339 in the specification must match some argument. | |
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1340 |
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1341 When a syntax error is detected, it might not be reported until much |
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1342 later after higher-level alternatives have been exhausted, and with the |
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1343 point positioned further from the real error. But if backtracking is |
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1344 disabled when an error occurs, it can be reported immediately. Note |
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1345 that backtracking is also reenabled automatically in several situations; |
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1346 it is reenabled when a new alternative is established by |
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1347 @code{&optional}, @code{&rest}, or @code{&or}, or at the start of |
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1348 processing a sublist, group, or indirect specification. The effect of |
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1349 enabling or disabling backtracking is limited to the remainder of the |
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1350 level currently being processed and lower levels. |
| 6558 | 1351 |
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1352 Backtracking is disabled while matching any of the |
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1353 form specifications (that is, @code{form}, @code{body}, @code{def-form}, and |
| 6558 | 1354 @code{def-body}). These specifications will match any form so any error |
| 1355 must be in the form itself rather than at a higher level. | |
| 1356 | |
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1357 Backtracking is also disabled after successfully matching a quoted |
| 6558 | 1358 symbol or string specification, since this usually indicates a |
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1359 recognized construct. But if you have a set of alternative constructs that |
| 6558 | 1360 all begin with the same symbol, you can usually work around this |
| 1361 constraint by factoring the symbol out of the alternatives, e.g., | |
| 1362 @code{["foo" &or [first case] [second case] ...]}. | |
| 1363 | |
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1364 Most needs are satisfied by these two ways that bactracking is |
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1365 automatically disabled, but occasionally it is useful to explicitly |
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1366 disable backtracking by using the @code{gate} specification. This is |
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1367 useful when you know that no higher alternatives could apply. See the |
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1368 example of the @code{let} specification. |
| 6558 | 1369 |
| 1370 @node Specification Examples | |
| 1371 @subsubsection Specification Examples | |
| 1372 | |
| 1373 It may be easier to understand Edebug specifications by studying | |
| 1374 the examples provided here. | |
| 1375 | |
| 1376 A @code{let} special form has a sequence of bindings and a body. Each | |
| 1377 of the bindings is either a symbol or a sublist with a symbol and | |
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1378 optional expression. In the specification below, notice the @code{gate} |
| 6558 | 1379 inside of the sublist to prevent backtracking once a sublist is found. |
| 1380 | |
| 1381 @example | |
| 1382 (def-edebug-spec let | |
| 1383 ((&rest | |
| 1384 &or symbolp (gate symbolp &optional form)) | |
| 1385 body)) | |
| 1386 @end example | |
| 1387 | |
| 1388 Edebug uses the following specifications for @code{defun} and | |
| 1389 @code{defmacro} and the associated argument list and @code{interactive} | |
| 1390 specifications. It is necessary to handle interactive forms specially | |
| 1391 since an expression argument it is actually evaluated outside of the | |
| 1392 function body. | |
| 1393 | |
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1394 @smallexample |
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1395 (def-edebug-spec defmacro defun) ; @r{Indirect ref to @code{defun} spec.} |
| 6558 | 1396 (def-edebug-spec defun |
| 1397 (&define name lambda-list | |
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1398 [&optional stringp] ; @r{Match the doc string, if present.} |
| 6558 | 1399 [&optional ("interactive" interactive)] |
| 1400 def-body)) | |
| 1401 | |
| 1402 (def-edebug-spec lambda-list | |
| 1403 (([&rest arg] | |
| 1404 [&optional ["&optional" arg &rest arg]] | |
| 1405 &optional ["&rest" arg] | |
| 1406 ))) | |
| 1407 | |
| 1408 (def-edebug-spec interactive | |
| 1409 (&optional &or stringp def-form)) ; @r{Notice: @code{def-form}} | |
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1410 @end smallexample |
| 6558 | 1411 |
| 1412 The specification for backquote below illustrates how to match | |
| 1413 dotted lists and use @code{nil} to terminate recursion. It also | |
| 1414 illustrates how components of a vector may be matched. (The actual | |
| 1415 specification defined by Edebug does not support dotted lists because | |
| 1416 doing so causes very deep recursion that could fail.) | |
| 1417 | |
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1418 @smallexample |
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1419 (def-edebug-spec ` (backquote-form)) ; @r{Alias just for clarity.} |
| 6558 | 1420 |
| 1421 (def-edebug-spec backquote-form | |
| 1422 (&or ([&or "," ",@@"] &or ("quote" backquote-form) form) | |
| 1423 (backquote-form . [&or nil backquote-form]) | |
| 1424 (vector &rest backquote-form) | |
| 1425 sexp)) | |
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1426 @end smallexample |
| 6558 | 1427 |
| 1428 | |
| 1429 @node Edebug Options | |
| 1430 @subsection Edebug Options | |
| 1431 | |
| 1432 These options affect the behavior of Edebug: | |
| 1433 | |
| 1434 @defopt edebug-setup-hook | |
| 1435 Functions to call before Edebug is used. Each time it is set to a new | |
| 1436 value, Edebug will call those functions once and then | |
| 1437 @code{edebug-setup-hook} is reset to @code{nil}. You could use this to | |
| 1438 load up Edebug specifications associated with a package you are using | |
| 1439 but only when you also use Edebug. | |
| 1440 @xref{Instrumenting}. | |
| 1441 @end defopt | |
| 1442 | |
| 1443 @defopt edebug-all-defs | |
| 1444 If this is non-@code{nil}, normal evaluation of defining forms such as | |
| 1445 @code{defun} and @code{defmacro} instruments them for Edebug. This | |
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1446 applies to @code{eval-defun}, @code{eval-region}, @code{eval-buffer}, |
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1447 and @code{eval-current-buffer}. |
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1448 |
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1449 Use the command @kbd{M-x edebug-all-defs} to toggle the value of this |
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1450 option. @xref{Instrumenting}. |
| 6558 | 1451 @end defopt |
| 1452 | |
| 1453 @defopt edebug-all-forms | |
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1454 If this is non-@code{nil}, the commands @code{eval-defun}, |
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1455 @code{eval-region}, @code{eval-buffer}, and @code{eval-current-buffer} |
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1456 instrument all forms, even those that don't define anything. |
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1457 This doesn't apply to loading or evaluations in the minibuffer. |
| 6558 | 1458 |
| 1459 Use the command @kbd{M-x edebug-all-forms} to toggle the value of this | |
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1460 option. @xref{Instrumenting}. |
| 6558 | 1461 @end defopt |
| 1462 | |
| 1463 @defopt edebug-save-windows | |
| 1464 If this is non-@code{nil}, Edebug saves and restores the window | |
| 1465 configuration. That takes some time, so if your program does not care | |
| 1466 what happens to the window configurations, it is better to set this | |
| 1467 variable to @code{nil}. | |
| 1468 | |
| 1469 If the value is a list, only the listed windows are saved and | |
| 1470 restored. | |
| 1471 | |
| 1472 You can use the @kbd{W} command in Edebug to change this variable | |
| 1473 interactively. @xref{Edebug Display Update}. | |
| 1474 @end defopt | |
| 1475 | |
| 1476 @defopt edebug-save-displayed-buffer-points | |
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1477 If this is non-@code{nil}, Edebug saves and restores point in all |
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1478 displayed buffers. |
| 6558 | 1479 |
| 1480 Saving and restoring point in other buffers is necessary if you are | |
| 1481 debugging code that changes the point of a buffer which is displayed in | |
| 1482 a non-selected window. If Edebug or the user then selects the window, | |
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1483 point in that buffer will move to the window's value of point. |
| 6558 | 1484 |
| 1485 Saving and restoring point in all buffers is expensive, since it | |
| 1486 requires selecting each window twice, so enable this only if you need | |
| 1487 it. @xref{Edebug Display Update}. | |
| 1488 @end defopt | |
| 1489 | |
| 1490 @defopt edebug-initial-mode | |
| 1491 If this variable is non-@code{nil}, it specifies the initial execution | |
| 1492 mode for Edebug when it is first activated. Possible values are | |
| 1493 @code{step}, @code{next}, @code{go}, @code{Go-nonstop}, @code{trace}, | |
| 1494 @code{Trace-fast}, @code{continue}, and @code{Continue-fast}. | |
| 1495 | |
| 1496 The default value is @code{step}. | |
| 1497 @xref{Edebug Execution Modes}. | |
| 1498 @end defopt | |
| 1499 | |
| 1500 @defopt edebug-trace | |
| 1501 Non-@code{nil} means display a trace of function entry and exit. | |
| 1502 Tracing output is displayed in a buffer named @samp{*edebug-trace*}, one | |
| 1503 function entry or exit per line, indented by the recursion level. | |
| 1504 | |
| 1505 The default value is @code{nil}. | |
| 1506 | |
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1507 Also see @code{edebug-tracing}, in @ref{Trace Buffer}. |
| 6558 | 1508 @end defopt |
| 1509 | |
| 1510 @defopt edebug-test-coverage | |
| 1511 If non-@code{nil}, Edebug tests coverage of all expressions debugged. | |
| 1512 @xref{Coverage Testing}. | |
| 1513 @end defopt | |
| 1514 | |
| 1515 @defopt edebug-continue-kbd-macro | |
| 1516 If non-@code{nil}, continue defining or executing any keyboard macro | |
| 1517 that is executing outside of Edebug. Use this with caution since it is not | |
| 1518 debugged. | |
| 1519 @xref{Edebug Execution Modes}. | |
| 1520 @end defopt | |
| 1521 | |
| 1522 @defopt edebug-on-error | |
| 1523 Edebug binds @code{debug-on-error} to this value, if | |
| 1524 @code{debug-on-error} was previously @code{nil}. @xref{Trapping | |
| 1525 Errors}. | |
| 1526 @end defopt | |
| 1527 | |
| 1528 @defopt edebug-on-quit | |
| 1529 Edebug binds @code{debug-on-quit} to this value, if | |
| 1530 @code{debug-on-quit} was previously @code{nil}. @xref{Trapping | |
| 1531 Errors}. | |
| 1532 @end defopt | |
| 1533 | |
| 1534 If you change the values of @code{edebug-on-error} or | |
| 1535 @code{edebug-on-quit} while Edebug is active, their values won't be used | |
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1536 until the @emph{next} time Edebug is invoked via a new command. |
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1537 @c Not necessarily a deeper command level. |
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1538 @c A new command is not precisely true, but that is close enough -- dan |
| 6558 | 1539 |
| 1540 @defopt edebug-global-break-condition | |
| 1541 If non-@code{nil}, an expression to test for at every stop point. | |
| 1542 If the result is non-nil, then break. Errors are ignored. | |
| 1543 @xref{Global Break Condition}. | |
| 1544 @end defopt |
