278
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1 -*- mode:outline -*-
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2
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0
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3 This file describes various problems that have been encountered
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4 in compiling, installing and running XEmacs. It has been updated for
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5 XEmacs 21.5.
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6
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278
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7 This file is rather large, but we have tried to sort the entries by
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8 their respective relevance for XEmacs, but may have not succeeded
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9 completely in that task. The file is divided into four parts:
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124
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10
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197
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11 - Problems with building XEmacs
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12 - Problems with running XEmacs
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13 - Compatibility problems
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14 - Mule issues
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120
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15
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197
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16 Use `C-c C-f' to move to the next equal level of outline, and
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223
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17 `C-c C-b' to move to previous equal level. `C-h m' will give more
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18 info about the Outline mode.
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19
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197
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20 Also, Try finding the things you need using one of the search commands
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21 XEmacs provides (e.g. `C-s').
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22
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524
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23 General advice:
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957
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24
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524
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25 WATCH OUT for your init file! (~/.xemacs/init.el or ~/.emacs) If
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26 you observe strange problems, invoke XEmacs with the `-vanilla'
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27 option and see if you can repeat the problem.
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28
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29 Note that most of the problems described here manifest at RUN
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30 time, even those described as BUILD problems. It is quite unusual
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31 for a released XEmacs to fail to build. So a "build problem"
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32 requires you to tweak the build environment, then rebuild XEmacs.
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33 A "runtime problem" is one that can be fixed by proper
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34 configuration of the existing build. Compatibility problems and
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35 Mule issues are generally runtime problems, but are treated
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36 separately for convenience.
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37
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120
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38
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124
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39 * Problems with building XEmacs
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197
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40 ===============================
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0
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41
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373
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42 ** General
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43
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915
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44 Much general information is in INSTALL. If it's covered in
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45 INSTALL, we don't repeat it here.
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46
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3404
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47 *** X11/bitmaps/gray (or other X11-related file) not found.
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48
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49 The X11R6 distribution was monolithic, but the X11R7 distribution is
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50 much more modular. Many OS distributions omit these bitmaps (assuming
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51 nobody uses them, evidently). Your OS distribution should have a
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52 developer's package containing these files, probably with a name
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53 containing the string "bitmap". Known package names (you may need to
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54 add an extension such as .deb or .rpm) include x11/xbitmaps (Ubuntu)
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55 and xorg-x11-xbitmaps (Fedora Core 5).
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56
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1098
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57 *** How do I configure to get the buffer tabs/progress bars?
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915
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58
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59 These features depend on support for "native widgets". Use the
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60 --enable-widgets option to configure. Configuration of widgets is
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915
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61 automatic for "modern" toolkits (MS Windows, GTK, and Motif), but if
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62 you are using Xt and the Athena widgets, you will probably want to
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63 specify a "3d" widget set. See configure --usage, and don't forget to
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64 install the corresponding development libraries.
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65
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66 *** I know I have libfoo installed, but configure doesn't find it.
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67
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68 Typical of Linux systems with package managers. To link with a shared
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69 library, you only need the shared library. To compile objects that
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70 link with it, you need the headers---and distros don't provide them with
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71 the libraries. You need the additional "development" package, too.
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72
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373
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73 *** When using gcc, you get the error message "undefined symbol __fixunsdfsi".
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74 When using gcc, you get the error message "undefined symbol __main".
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75
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76 This means that you need to link with the gcc library. It may be called
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77 "gcc-gnulib" or "libgcc.a"; figure out where it is, and define LIB_GCC in
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78 config.h to point to it.
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79
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80 It may also work to use the GCC version of `ld' instead of the standard one.
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81
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82 *** Excessive optimization with pgcc can break XEmacs
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83
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84 It has been reported on some systems that compiling with -O6 can lead
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85 to XEmacs failures. The workaround is to use a lower optimization
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86 level. -O2 and -O4 have been tested extensively.
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87
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229
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88 All of this depends heavily on the version of pgcc and the version
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89 of libc. Snapshots near the release of pgcc-1.0 have been tested
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90 extensively and no sign of breakage has been seen on systems using
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91 glibc-2.
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92
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373
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93 *** src/Makefile and lib-src/Makefile are truncated--most of the file missing.
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229
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94
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373
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95 This can happen if configure uses GNU sed version 2.03. That version
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96 had a bug. GNU sed version 2.05 works properly.
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124
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97
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373
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98 *** When compiling with X11, you get "undefined symbol _XtStrings".
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124
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99
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373
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100 This means that you are trying to link emacs against the X11r4 version of
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101 libXt.a, but you have compiled either Emacs or the code in the lwlib
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102 subdirectory with the X11r5 header files. That doesn't work.
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124
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103
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373
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104 Remember, you can't compile lwlib for r4 and emacs for r5, or vice versa.
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105 They must be in sync.
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106
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373
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107 *** test-distrib says that the distribution has been clobbered
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197
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108 or, temacs prints "Command key out of range 0-127"
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109 or, temacs runs and dumps xemacs, but xemacs totally fails to work.
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110 or, temacs gets errors dumping xemacs
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111
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112 This can be because the .elc files have been garbled. Do not be
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113 fooled by the fact that most of a .elc file is text: these are binary
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114 files and can contain all 256 byte values.
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115
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116 In particular `shar' cannot be used for transmitting GNU Emacs. It
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117 typically truncates "lines". (this does not apply to GNU shar, which
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118 uses uuencode to encode binary files.)
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119
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120 If you have a copy of Emacs that has been damaged in its nonprinting
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121 characters, you can fix them by running:
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122
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123 make all-elc
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124
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125 This will rebuild all the needed .elc files.
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126
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1318
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127 ** Intel Architecture General
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128
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129 *** Don't use -O2 or -O3 with Cygwin 1.0, CodeFusion-99070 or gcc 2.7.2 on x86
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130 without also using `-fno-strength-reduce'.
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131
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132 gcc will generate incorrect code otherwise. This bug is present in at
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133 least 2.6.x and 2.7.[0-2]. This bug has been fixed in GCC 2.7.2.1 and
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134 later. This bug is O/S independent, but is limited to x86 architectures.
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135
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136 This problem is known to be fixed in egcs (or pgcc) 1.0 or later.
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137
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138 Unfortunately, later releases of Cygnus-released compilers (not the
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139 Net-released ones) have a bug with the same `problem signature'.
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140
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141 If you're lucky, you'll get an error while compiling that looks like:
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142
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143 event-stream.c:3189: internal error--unrecognizable insn:
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144 (insn 256 14 15 (set (reg/v:SI 24)
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145 (minus:SI (reg/v:SI 25)
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146 (const_int 2))) -1 (insn_list 11 (nil))
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147 (nil))
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148 0 0 [main]
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149
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150 If you're unlucky, your code will simply execute incorrectly.
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151
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152 *** Don't use -O2 with gcc 2.7.2 under Intel architectures without also
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153 using `-fno-caller-saves'.
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154
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155 gcc will generate incorrect code otherwise. This bug is still
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156 present in gcc 2.7.2.3. There have been no reports to indicate the
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157 bug is present in egcs 1.0 (or pgcc 1.0) or later. This bug is O/S
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158 independent, but limited to x86 architectures.
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159
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160 This problem is known to be fixed in egcs (or pgcc) 1.0 or later.
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161
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373
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162 *** `compress' and `uncompress' not found and XFree86
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163
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164 XFree86 installs a very old version of libz.a by default ahead of where
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165 more modern version of libz might be installed. This will cause problems
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166 when attempting to link against libMagick. The fix is to remove the old
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167 libz.a in the X11 binary directory.
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168
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169
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3863
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170 ** X11 and Motif
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171
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172 Motif is the X11 version of the Gnus torture test: if there's a way to
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173 crash, Motif will find it. With the open source release of Motif, it
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174 seems like a good idea to collect all Motif-related issues in one
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175 place. X11 itself is not all that safe, either.
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176
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177 You should also look in your OS's section, as it may not be the window
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178 system (toolkit's) fault.
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179
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180 *** XEmacs and the X server crash when inserting or displaying a TAB character.
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181
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182 If you are using the XFree86 distribution, you need an X server with
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183 this patch applied:
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184
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185 https://bugs.freedesktop.org/attachment.cgi?id=2016
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186
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187 Versions of XFree86 previous to that crashed when an app tried to draw a
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188 literal tab character using many fonts.
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189
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190 *** XEmacs crashes on exit (#1).
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191
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192 The backtrace is something like:
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193
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194 (gdb) where
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195 #0 0xfeb9a480 in _libc_kill () from /usr/lib/libc.so.1
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196 #1 0x000b0388 in fatal_error_signal ()
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197 #2 <signal handler called>
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198 #3 YowIter (ht=0xb, id=0x0, v=0x74682074, client=0x47e3c0)
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199 at ImageCache.c:1159
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200 #4 0xff26cc5c in _LTHashTableForEachItem (ht=0x4725e8,
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201 iter=0xff26dda0 <YowIter>, ClientData=0x47e3c0) at Hash.c:671
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202 #5 0xff2a4664 in destroy (w=0x496550) at Screen.c:352
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203 #6 0xfef92118 in Phase2Destroy () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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204 #7 0xfef91940 in Recursive () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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205 #8 0xfef91e44 in XtPhase2Destroy () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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206 #9 0xfef91ae8 in _XtDoPhase2Destroy () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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207 #10 0xfef918cc in XtDestroyWidget () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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208 #11 0xfef91438 in CloseDisplay () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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209 #12 0xfef91394 in XtCloseDisplay () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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210 #13 0x0025b8b0 in x_delete_device ()
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211 #14 0x000940b0 in delete_device_internal ()
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212 #15 0x000806a0 in delete_console_internal ()
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213
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214 This is known to happen with Lesstif version 0.93.36. Similar
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215 backtraces have also been observed on HP/UX and Solaris. There is a
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216 patch for Lesstif. (This is not a solution; it just stops the crash.
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217 It may or may not be harmless, but "it works for the author".)
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218
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219 Note that this backtrace looks a lot like the one in the next item.
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220 However, this one is invulnerable to the Solaris patches mentioned there.
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221
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222 Frank McIngvale <frankm@hiwaay.net> says:
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223
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224 Ok, 0.93.34 works, and I tracked down the crash to a section
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225 marked "experimental" in 0.93.36. Patch attached, "works for me".
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226
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227 diff -u -r lesstif-0.93.36/lib/Xm/ImageCache.c lesstif-0.93.36-mod/lib/Xm/ImageCache.c
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228 --- lesstif-0.93.36/lib/Xm/ImageCache.c 2002-08-05 14:53:24.000000000 -0500
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229 +++ lesstif-0.93.36-mod/lib/Xm/ImageCache.c 2002-11-11 11:13:12.000000000 -0600
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230 @@ -1166,5 +1166,4 @@
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231 DEBUGOUT(_LtDebug0(__FILE__, NULL, "_LtImageCacheScreenDestroy (XmGetPixmapByDepth) %p\n",
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232 s));
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233
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234 - (void) _LTHashTableForEachItem(PixmapCache, YowIter, (XtPointer)s);
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235 }
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236
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237 *** XEmacs crashes on exit (#2)
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238
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239 Especially frequent with multiple frames. Crashes that produce C
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240 backtraces like this:
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241
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242 #0 0xfec9a118 in _libc_kill () from /usr/lib/libc.so.1
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243 #1 0x77f48 in fatal_error_signal (sig=11)
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244 at /codes/rpluim/xemacs-21.4/src/emacs.c:539
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245 #2 <signal handler called>
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246 #3 0xfee929f4 in XFindContext () from /usr/openwin/lib/libX11.so.4
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247 #4 0xfee92930 in XFindContext () from /usr/openwin/lib/libX11.so.4
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248 #5 0xff297e54 in DisplayDestroy () from /usr/dt/lib/libXm.so.4
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249 #6 0xfefbece0 in XtCallCallbackList () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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250 #7 0xfefc486c in XtPhase2Destroy () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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251 #8 0xfefc45d0 in _XtDoPhase2Destroy () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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252 #9 0xfefc43b4 in XtDestroyWidget () from /usr/openwin/lib/libXt.so.4
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253 #10 0x15cf9c in x_delete_device (d=0x523f00)
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254
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255 are caused by buggy Motif libraries. Installing the following patches
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256 has been reported to solve the problem on Solaris 2.7:
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257
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258 107081-40 107656-07
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259
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260 For information (although they have not been confirmed to work), the
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261 equivalent patches for Solaris 2.8 are:
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262
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263 108940-33 108652-25
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264
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265 *** On HP-UX 11.0 XEmacs causes excessive X11 errors when running.
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266 (also appears on AIX as reported in comp.emacs.xemacs)
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267
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268 Marcus Thiessel <marcus@xemacs.org>
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269
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270 Unfortunately, XEmacs releases prior to 21.0 don't work with
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271 Motif2.1. It will compile but you will get excessive X11 errors like
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272
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273 xemacs: X Error of failed request: BadGC (invalid GC parameter)
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274
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275 and finally XEmacs gets killed. A workaround is to use the
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276 Motif1.2_R6 libraries. You can the following line to your call to
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277 configure:
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278
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279 --x-libraries="/usr/lib/Motif1.2_R6 -L/usr/lib/X11R6"
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280
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281 Make sure /usr/lib/Motif1.2_R6/libXm.sl is a link to
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282 /usr/lib/Motif1.2_R6/libXm.3.
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283
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284 *** On HP-UX 11.0: Object "" does not have windowed ancestor
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285
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286 Marcus Thiessel <marcus@xemacs.org>
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287
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288 XEmacs dies without core file and reports:
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289
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290 Error: Object "" does not have windowed ancestor.
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291
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292 This is a bug. Please apply the patch PHSS_19964 (check if
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293 superseded). The other alternative is to link with Motif1.2_R6 (see
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294 previous item).
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295
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296 *** Motif dialog boxes lose on Irix.
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297
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298 Larry Auton <lda@control.att.com> writes:
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299 Beware of not specifying
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300
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2648
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301 --enable-dialogs=athena
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1245
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302
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303 if it builds with the motif dialogs [boom!] you're a dead man.
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304
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305
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373
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306 ** AIX
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1009
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307 *** IBM compiler fails: "The character # is not a valid C source character."
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308
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309 Most recently observed in 21.5.9, due to USE_KKCC ifdefs (they just
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310 happen to tickle the implementation).
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311
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312 Valdis Kletnieks says:
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313
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314 The problem is that IBM defines a *MACRO* called 'memcpy', and we
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315 have stuck a #ifdef/#endif inside the macro call. As a workaround,
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316 try adding '-U__STR__' to your CFLAGS - this will cause string.h to
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317 not do a #define for strcpy() to __strcpy() - it uses this for
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318 automatic inlining support.
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319
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320 (For the record, the same issue affects a number of other functions
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321 defined in string.h - basically anything the compiler knows how to
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322 inline.)
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323
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2648
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324 *** On AIX 4.3, you must specify --enable-dialogs=athena with configure
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373
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325
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442
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326 *** The libXt shipped with AIX 4.3 up to 4.3.2 is broken. This causes
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327 xemacs -nw to fail in various ways. The official APAR is this:
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328
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329 APAR NUMBER: <IX89470> RESOLVED AS: PROGRAM ERROR
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330
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331 ABSTRACT:
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332 <IX89470>: LIBXT.A INCORRECT HANDLING OF EXCEPTIONS IN XTAPPADDINPUT
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333
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334 The solution is to install X11.base.lib at version >=4.3.2.5.
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392
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335
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373
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336 *** On AIX, you get this compiler error message:
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337
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338 Processing include file ./XMenuInt.h
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339 1501-106: (S) Include file X11/Xlib.h not found.
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340
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341 This means your system was installed with only the X11 runtime i.d
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342 libraries. You have to find your sipo (bootable tape) and install
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343 X11Dev... with smit.
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344
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345 *** On AIX 4.1.2, linker error messages such as
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346 ld: 0711-212 SEVERE ERROR: Symbol .__quous, found in the global symbol table
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347 of archive /usr/lib/libIM.a, was not defined in archive member shr.o.
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348
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349 This is a problem in libIM.a. You can work around it by executing
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350 these shell commands in the src subdirectory of the directory where
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351 you build Emacs:
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352
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353 cp /usr/lib/libIM.a .
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354 chmod 664 libIM.a
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355 ranlib libIM.a
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356
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357 Then change -lIM to ./libIM.a in the command to link temacs (in
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358 Makefile).
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359
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360 *** Excessive optimization on AIX 4.2 can lead to compiler failure.
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361
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362 Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu writes:
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363 At least at the b34 level, and the latest-and-greatest IBM xlc
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364 (3.1.4.4), there are problems with -O3. I haven't investigated
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365 further.
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366
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367
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368 ** SunOS/Solaris
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1318
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369 *** Don't use -O2 with gcc 2.8.1 and egcs 1.0 under SPARC architectures
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370 without also using `-fno-schedule-insns'.
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371
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372 gcc will generate incorrect code otherwise, typically resulting in
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373 crashes in the function skip-syntax-backward.
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374
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375 *** Don't use gcc-2.95.2 with -mcpu=ultrasparc on Solaris 2.6.
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376
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377 gcc will assume a 64-bit operating system, even though you've
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378 merely told it to assume a 64-bit instruction set.
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379
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454
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380 *** Dumping error when using GNU binutils / GNU ld on a Sun.
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381
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382 Errors similar to the following:
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383
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384 Dumping under the name xemacs unexec():
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385 dldump(/space/rpluim/xemacs-obj/src/xemacs): ld.so.1: ./temacs:
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386 fatal: /space/rpluim/xemacs-obj/src/xemacs: unknown dynamic entry:
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387 1879048176
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388
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389 are caused by using GNU ld. There are several workarounds available:
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390
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391 In XEmacs 21.2 or later, configure using the new portable dumper
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2648
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392 (--enable-pdump).
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454
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393
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394 Alternatively, you can link using the Sun version of ld, which is
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395 normally held in /usr/ccs/bin. This can be done by one of:
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396
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397 - building gcc with these configure flags:
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398 configure --with-ld=/usr/ccs/bin/ld --with-as=/usr/ccs/bin/as
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399
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400 - adding -B/usr/ccs/bin/ to CFLAGS used to configure XEmacs
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401 (Note: The trailing '/' there is significant.)
|
|
402
|
|
403 - uninstalling GNU ld.
|
|
404
|
|
405 The Solaris2 FAQ claims:
|
|
406
|
|
407 When you install gcc, don't make the mistake of installing
|
|
408 GNU binutils or GNU libc, they are not as capable as their
|
|
409 counterparts you get with Solaris 2.x.
|
|
410
|
373
|
411 *** Link failure when using acc on a Sun.
|
|
412
|
|
413 To use acc, you need additional options just before the libraries, such as
|
|
414
|
|
415 /usr/lang/SC2.0.1/values-Xt.o -L/usr/lang/SC2.0.1/cg87 -L/usr/lang/SC2.0.1
|
|
416
|
|
417 and you need to add -lansi just before -lc.
|
|
418
|
|
419 The precise file names depend on the compiler version, so we
|
|
420 cannot easily arrange to supply them.
|
|
421
|
|
422 *** Problems finding X11 libraries on Solaris with Openwindows
|
|
423
|
|
424 Some users have reported problems in this area. The reported solution
|
|
425 is to define the environment variable OPENWINHOME, even if you must set
|
|
426 it to `/usr/openwin'.
|
|
427
|
|
428 *** Sed problems on Solaris 2.5
|
|
429
|
|
430 There have been reports of Sun sed truncating very lines in the
|
|
431 Makefile during configuration. The workaround is to use GNU sed or,
|
454
|
432 even better, think of a better way to generate Makefile, and send us a
|
373
|
433 patch. :-)
|
|
434
|
|
435 *** On Solaris 2 I get undefined symbols from libcurses.a.
|
|
436
|
|
437 You probably have /usr/ucblib/ on your LD_LIBRARY_PATH. Do the link with
|
|
438 LD_LIBRARY_PATH unset. Generally, avoid using any ucb* stuff when
|
|
439 building XEmacs.
|
|
440
|
|
441 *** On Solaris 2 I cannot make alloc.o, glyphs.o or process.o.
|
|
442
|
|
443 The SparcWorks C compiler may have difficulty building those modules
|
|
444 with optimization level -xO4. Try using only "-fast" optimization
|
|
445 for just those modules. (Or use gcc).
|
|
446
|
|
447 *** Solaris 2.3 /bin/sh coredumps during configuration.
|
|
448
|
|
449 This only occurs if you have LANG != C. This is a known bug with
|
|
450 /bin/sh fixed by installing Patch-ID# 101613-01. Or, you can use
|
1697
|
451 bash by setting the environment variable CONFIG_SHELL to /bin/bash
|
|
452
|
|
453 *** Solaris 2.x configure fails: ./config.status: test: argument expected
|
|
454
|
|
455 This is a known bug with /bin/sh and /bin/test, i.e. they do not
|
|
456 support the XPG4 standard. You can use bash as a workaround or an
|
|
457 XPG4-compliant Bourne shell such as the Sun-supplied /usr/xpg4/bin/sh
|
|
458 by setting the environment variable CONFIG_SHELL to /usr/xpg4/bin/sh
|
373
|
459
|
|
460 *** On SunOS, you get linker errors
|
454
|
461 ld: Undefined symbol
|
373
|
462 _get_wmShellWidgetClass
|
|
463 _get_applicationShellWidgetClass
|
|
464
|
|
465 The fix to this is to install patch 100573 for OpenWindows 3.0
|
|
466 or link libXmu statically.
|
|
467
|
|
468 *** On Sunos 4, you get the error ld: Undefined symbol __lib_version.
|
|
469
|
|
470 This is the result of using cc or gcc with the shared library meant
|
|
471 for acc (the Sunpro compiler). Check your LD_LIBRARY_PATH and delete
|
|
472 /usr/lang/SC2.0.1 or some similar directory.
|
|
473
|
|
474 *** Undefined symbols when linking on Sunos 4.1.
|
|
475
|
|
476 If you get the undefined symbols _atowc _wcslen, _iswprint, _iswspace,
|
|
477 _iswcntrl, _wcscpy, and _wcsncpy, then you need to add -lXwchar after
|
|
478 -lXaw in the command that links temacs.
|
|
479
|
|
480 This problem seems to arise only when the international language
|
|
481 extensions to X11R5 are installed.
|
|
482
|
|
483 *** On a Sun running SunOS 4.1.1, you get this error message from GNU ld:
|
|
484
|
454
|
485 /lib/libc.a(_Q_sub.o): Undefined symbol __Q_get_rp_rd referenced from text segment
|
373
|
486
|
|
487 The problem is in the Sun shared C library, not in GNU ld.
|
|
488
|
|
489 The solution is to install Patch-ID# 100267-03 from Sun.
|
|
490
|
|
491 *** SunOS 4.1.2: undefined symbol _get_wmShellWidgetClass
|
|
492
|
|
493 Apparently the version of libXmu.so.a that Sun ships is hosed: it's missing
|
454
|
494 some stuff that is in libXmu.a (the static version). Sun has a patch for
|
373
|
495 this, but a workaround is to use the static version of libXmu, by changing
|
|
496 the link command from "-lXmu" to "-Bstatic -lXmu -Bdynamic". If you have
|
|
497 OpenWindows 3.0, ask Sun for these patches:
|
|
498 100512-02 4.1.x OpenWindows 3.0 libXt Jumbo patch
|
|
499 100573-03 4.1.x OpenWindows 3.0 undefined symbols with shared libXmu
|
|
500
|
|
501 *** Random other SunOS 4.1.[12] link errors.
|
|
502
|
|
503 The X headers and libraries that Sun ships in /usr/{include,lib}/X11 are
|
|
504 broken. Use the ones in /usr/openwin/{include,lib} instead.
|
|
505
|
|
506 ** Linux
|
1318
|
507
|
|
508 See also Intel Architecture General, above.
|
|
509
|
|
510 *** egcs-1.1 on Alpha Linux
|
|
511
|
|
512 There have been reports of egcs-1.1 not compiling XEmacs correctly on
|
|
513 Alpha Linux. There have also been reports that egcs-1.0.3a is O.K.
|
|
514
|
373
|
515 *** Under Linux, you get "too many arguments to function `getpgrp'".
|
|
516
|
|
517 You have probably installed LessTiff under `/usr/local' and `libXm.so'
|
|
518 could not be found when linking `getpgrp()' test program, making XEmacs
|
|
519 think that `getpgrp()' takes an argument. Try adding `/usr/local/lib'
|
|
520 in `/etc/ld.so.conf' and run `ldconfig'. Then run XEmacs's `configure'
|
|
521 again. As with all problems of this type, reading the config.log file
|
|
522 generated from configure and seeing the log of how the test failed can
|
|
523 prove enlightening.
|
|
524
|
|
525 *** `Error: No ExtNode to pop!' on Linux systems with Lesstif.
|
197
|
526
|
|
527 This error message has been observed with lesstif-0.75a. It does not
|
|
528 appear to cause any harm.
|
|
529
|
373
|
530 *** xemacs: can't resolve symbol '__malloc_hook'
|
|
531
|
|
532 This is a Linux problem where you've compiled the XEmacs binary on a libc
|
|
533 5.4 with version higher than 5.4.19 and attempted to run the binary against
|
|
534 an earlier version. The solution is to upgrade your old library.
|
|
535
|
|
536 ** IRIX
|
452
|
537
|
1098
|
538 *** More coredumping in Irix (6.5 known to be vulnerable)
|
|
539
|
|
540 No fix is known yet. Here's the best information we have:
|
|
541
|
|
542 Valdis Kletnieks <Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu> writes:
|
|
543
|
|
544 Were xemacs and [any 3rd party, locally-compiled] libraries [you use]
|
|
545 all compiled with the same ABI ( -o32, -n32, -64) and
|
|
546 mips2/mips3/mips4 flags, and are they appropriate for the machine in
|
|
547 question? I know the IP30 implies an Octane, so it should be an R10K
|
|
548 chipset and above such nonsense, but I've seen the most astoundingly
|
|
549 bizzare crashes when somebody managed to compile with -mips4 and get
|
|
550 it to run on an R4400 or R5K system. ;)
|
|
551
|
|
552 Also, since you're using gcc, try re-running fixincludes and *then*
|
|
553 rebuilding xemacs and [any] libraries - mismatched headers can do that
|
|
554 sort of thing to you with little or no clue what's wrong (often you
|
|
555 get screwed when one routine does an malloc(sizeof(foo_struct)) and
|
|
556 passes the result to something that things foo_struct is a bit bigger,
|
|
557 trashing memory....
|
|
558
|
2648
|
559 Here's typical crash backtrace. With --enable-pdump, this occurs
|
|
560 usually at startup under X windows and xemacs -nw at least starts, while
|
|
561 without --pdump a similar crash is observed during build.
|
1098
|
562
|
|
563 #0 0x0fa460b8 in kill () at regcomp.c:637
|
|
564 637 regcomp.c: No such file or directory.
|
|
565 in regcomp.c
|
|
566 (gdb) where
|
|
567 #0 0x0fa460b8 in kill () at regcomp.c:637
|
|
568 #1 0x10087f34 in fatal_error_signal ()
|
|
569 (gdb) quit
|
|
570
|
|
571 This is confusing because there is no such file in the XEmacs
|
|
572 distribution. This is seen on (at least) the following configurations:
|
|
573
|
|
574 uname -a: IRIX64 oct202 6.5 01091821 IP30
|
|
575 XEmacs 21.4.9 "Informed Management" configured for `mips-sgi-irix6.5'.
|
|
576 XEmacs 21.5-b9 "brussels sprouts" configured for `mips-sgi-irix6.5'.
|
|
577
|
452
|
578 *** On Irix 6.5, the MIPSpro compiler gets an internal compiler error
|
|
579
|
|
580 The MIPSpro Compiler (at least version 7.2.1) can't seem to handle the
|
|
581 union type properly, and fails to compile src/glyphs.c. To avoid this
|
2648
|
582 problem, always build --enable-union-type=no (but that's the default, so
|
452
|
583 you should only see this problem if you're an XEmacs maintainer).
|
|
584
|
373
|
585 *** Linking with -rpath on IRIX.
|
124
|
586
|
|
587 Darrell Kindred <dkindred@cmu.edu> writes:
|
|
588 There are a couple of problems [with use of -rpath with Irix ld], though:
|
|
589
|
|
590 1. The ld in IRIX 5.3 ignores all but the last -rpath
|
|
591 spec, so the patched configure spits out a warning
|
2648
|
592 if --x-libraries or --with-site-runtime-libraries are
|
454
|
593 specified under irix 5.x, and it only adds -rpath
|
2648
|
594 entries for the --with-site-runtime-libraries. This bug was
|
124
|
595 fixed sometime between 5.3 and 6.2.
|
|
596
|
|
597 2. IRIX gcc 2.7.2 doesn't accept -rpath directly, so
|
|
598 it would have to be prefixed by -Xlinker or "-Wl,".
|
|
599 This would be fine, except that configure compiles with
|
|
600 ${CC-cc} $CFLAGS $LDFLAGS ...
|
|
601 rather than quoting $LDFLAGS with prefix-args, like
|
|
602 src/Makefile does. So if you specify --x-libraries
|
2648
|
603 or --with-site-runtime-libraries, you must use
|
|
604 --with--gcc=no, or configure will fail.
|
124
|
605
|
373
|
606 *** On Irix 6.3, the SGI ld quits with segmentation fault when linking temacs
|
207
|
607
|
|
608 This occurs if you use the SGI linker version 7.1. Installing the
|
|
609 patch SG0001872 fixes this problem.
|
197
|
610
|
373
|
611 *** On Irix 6.0, make tries (and fails) to build a program named unexelfsgi
|
|
612
|
|
613 A compiler bug inserts spaces into the string "unexelfsgi . o"
|
|
614 in src/Makefile. Edit src/Makefile, after configure is run,
|
|
615 find that string, and take out the spaces.
|
|
616
|
|
617 Compiler fixes in Irix 6.0.1 should eliminate this problem.
|
124
|
618
|
373
|
619 *** On Irix 5.2, unexelfsgi.c can't find cmplrs/stsupport.h.
|
124
|
620
|
373
|
621 The file cmplrs/stsupport.h was included in the wrong file set in the
|
|
622 Irix 5.2 distribution. You can find it in the optional fileset
|
|
623 compiler_dev, or copy it from some other Irix 5.2 system. A kludgy
|
|
624 workaround is to change unexelfsgi.c to include sym.h instead of
|
|
625 syms.h.
|
124
|
626
|
373
|
627 *** Coredumping in Irix 6.2
|
124
|
628
|
373
|
629 Pete Forman <gsez020@compo.bedford.waii.com> writes:
|
|
630 A problem noted by myself and others (I've lost the references) was
|
|
631 that XEmacs coredumped when the cut or copy toolbar buttons were
|
|
632 pressed. This has been fixed by loading the SGI patchset (Feb 98)
|
|
633 without having to recompile XEmacs.
|
124
|
634
|
373
|
635 My versions are XEmacs 20.3 (problem first noted in 19.15) and IRIX
|
|
636 6.2, compiled using -n32. I'd guess that the relevant individual
|
|
637 patch was "SG0002580: multiple fixes for X libraries". SGI recommends
|
|
638 that the complete patch set be installed rather than parts of it.
|
124
|
639
|
373
|
640 ** Digital UNIX/OSF/VMS
|
|
641 *** On Digital UNIX, the DEC C compiler might have a problem compiling
|
197
|
642 some files.
|
124
|
643
|
|
644 In particular, src/extents.c and src/faces.c might cause the DEC C
|
|
645 compiler to abort. When this happens: cd src, compile the files by
|
|
646 hand, cd .., and redo the "make" command. When recompiling the files by
|
|
647 hand, use the old C compiler for the following versions of Digital UNIX:
|
|
648 - V3.n: Remove "-migrate" from the compile command.
|
|
649 - V4.n: Add "-oldc" to the compile command.
|
|
650
|
197
|
651 A related compiler bug has been fixed by the DEC compiler team. The
|
|
652 new versions of the compiler should run fine.
|
126
|
653
|
373
|
654 *** Under some versions of OSF XEmacs runs fine if built without
|
|
655 optimization but will crash randomly if built with optimization.
|
|
656
|
|
657 Using 'cc -g' is not sufficient to eliminate all optimization. Try
|
|
658 'cc -g -O0' instead.
|
|
659
|
|
660 *** Compilation errors on VMS.
|
|
661
|
|
662 Sorry, XEmacs does not work under VMS. You might consider working on
|
|
663 the port if you really want to have XEmacs work under VMS.
|
|
664
|
|
665 ** HP-UX
|
|
666 *** On HPUX, the HP C compiler might have a problem compiling some files
|
278
|
667 with optimization.
|
124
|
668
|
|
669 Richard Cognot <cognot@ensg.u-nancy.fr> writes:
|
|
670
|
|
671 Had to drop once again to level 2 optimization, at least to
|
|
672 compile lstream.c. Otherwise, I get a "variable is void: \if"
|
|
673 problem while dumping (this is a problem I already reported
|
|
674 with vanilla hpux 10.01 and 9.07, which went away after
|
|
675 applying patches for the C compiler). Trouble is I still
|
|
676 haven't found the same patch for hpux 10.10, and I don't
|
|
677 remember the patch numbers. I think potential XEmacs builders
|
|
678 on HP should be warned about this.
|
|
679
|
373
|
680 *** I don't have `xmkmf' and `imake' on my HP.
|
124
|
681
|
304
|
682 You can get these standard X tools by anonymous FTP to
|
|
683 hpcvaaz.cv.hp.com. Essentially all X programs need these.
|
124
|
684
|
373
|
685 *** On HP-UX, problems with make
|
278
|
686
|
442
|
687 Marcus Thiessel <marcus@xemacs.org>
|
278
|
688
|
304
|
689 Some releases of XEmacs (e.g. 20.4) require GNU make to build
|
|
690 successfully. You don't need GNU make when building 21.x.
|
278
|
691
|
373
|
692 *** On HP-UX 9.05 XEmacs won't compile or coredump during the build.
|
278
|
693
|
442
|
694 Marcus Thiessel <marcus@xemacs.org>
|
278
|
695
|
|
696 This might be a sed problem. For your own safety make sure to use
|
|
697 GNU sed while dumping XEmacs.
|
|
698
|
442
|
699
|
373
|
700 ** SCO OpenServer
|
|
701 *** Native cc on SCO OpenServer 5 is now OK. Icc may still throw you
|
197
|
702 a curve. Here is what Robert Lipe <robertl@arnet.com> says:
|
124
|
703
|
454
|
704 Unlike XEmacs 19.13, building with the native cc on SCO OpenServer 5
|
124
|
705 now produces a functional binary. I will typically build this
|
|
706 configuration for COFF with:
|
|
707
|
197
|
708 /path_to_xemacs_source/configure --with-gcc=no \
|
2648
|
709 --with-site-includes=/usr/local/include \
|
|
710 --with-site-libraries=/usr/local/lib \
|
|
711 --with-xpm --with-xface --enable-sound=nas
|
124
|
712
|
454
|
713 This version now supports ELF builds. I highly recommend this to
|
|
714 reduce the in-core footprint of XEmacs. This is now how I compile
|
124
|
715 all my test releases. Build it like this:
|
|
716
|
|
717 /path_to_XEmacs_source/configure --with-gcc=no \
|
2648
|
718 --with-site-includes=/usr/local/include
|
|
719 --with-site-libraries=/usr/local/lib \
|
|
720 --with-xpm --with-xface --enable-sound=nas --with-dynamic
|
124
|
721
|
454
|
722 The compiler known as icc [ supplied with the OpenServer 5 Development
|
124
|
723 System ] generates a working binary, but it takes forever to generate
|
|
724 XEmacs. ICC also whines more about the code than /bin/cc does. I do
|
|
725 believe all its whining is legitimate, however. Note that you do
|
|
726 have to 'cd src ; make LD=icc' to avoid linker errors.
|
|
727
|
|
728 The way I handle the build procedure is:
|
|
729
|
|
730 /path_to_XEmacs_source/configure --with-gcc=no \
|
2648
|
731 --with-site-includes=/usr/local/include \
|
|
732 --with-site-libraries=/usr/local/lib \
|
|
733 --with-xpm --with-xface --enable-sound=nas --with-dynamic \
|
|
734 --with-compiler="icc"
|
124
|
735
|
454
|
736 NOTE I have the xpm, xface, and audio libraries and includes in
|
124
|
737 /usr/local/lib, /usr/local/include. If you don't have these,
|
|
738 don't include the "--with-*" arguments in any of my examples.
|
|
739
|
454
|
740 In previous versions of XEmacs, you had to override the defaults while
|
124
|
741 compiling font-lock.o and extents.o when building with icc. This seems
|
|
742 to no longer be true, but I'm including this old information in case it
|
|
743 resurfaces. The process I used was:
|
|
744
|
454
|
745 make -k
|
|
746 [ procure pizza, beer, repeat ]
|
124
|
747 cd src
|
|
748 make CC="icc -W0,-mP1COPT_max_tree_size=3000" font-lock.o extents.o
|
|
749 make LD=icc
|
|
750
|
454
|
751 If you want sound support, get the tls566 supplement from
|
|
752 ftp.sco.com:/TLS or any of its mirrors. It works just groovy
|
124
|
753 with XEmacs.
|
|
754
|
|
755 The M-x manual-entry is known not to work. If you know Lisp and would
|
|
756 like help in making it work, e-mail me at <robertl@dgii.com>.
|
|
757 (UNCHECKED for 19.15 -- it might work).
|
|
758
|
454
|
759 In earlier releases, gnuserv/gnuclient/gnudoit would open a frame
|
124
|
760 just fine, but the client would lock up and the server would
|
454
|
761 terminate when you used C-x # to close the frame. This is now
|
124
|
762 fixed in XEmacs.
|
|
763
|
|
764 In etc/ there are two files of note. emacskeys.sco and emacsstrs.sco.
|
|
765 The comments at the top of emacskeys.sco describe its function, and
|
|
766 the emacstrs.sco is a suitable candidate for /usr/lib/keyboard/strings
|
|
767 to take advantage of the keyboard map in emacskeys.sco.
|
|
768
|
373
|
769 Note: Much of the above entry is probably not valid for XEmacs 21.0
|
207
|
770 and later.
|
197
|
771
|
1332
|
772 ** Windows
|
|
773
|
1441
|
774 *** XEmacs complains "No such file or directory, diff"
|
|
775
|
|
776 or "ispell" or other commands that seem related to whatever you just
|
|
777 tried to do.
|
|
778
|
|
779 There are a large number of common (in the sense that "everyone has
|
|
780 these, really") Unix utilities that are not provided with XEmacs. The
|
|
781 GNU Project's implementations are available for Windows in the the
|
|
782 Cygwin distribution (http://www.cygwin.com/), which also provides a
|
|
783 complete Unix emulation environment (and thus makes ports of Unix
|
|
784 utilities nearly trivial). Another implementation is that from MinGW
|
|
785 (http://www.mingw.org/msys.shtml).
|
|
786
|
1332
|
787 *** Weird crashes in pdump load or shortly after pdump load.
|
|
788
|
|
789 This can happen with incremental linking. Check if you have set
|
|
790 SUPPORT_EDIT_AND_CONTINUE to non-zero in config.inc, which must allow
|
|
791 incremental linking to be enabled (otherwise it's disabled). Either turn
|
|
792 this off, execute `nmake -f xemacs.mak clean', or manually remove
|
|
793 `temacs.exe' and `xemacs.exe'.
|
|
794
|
392
|
795 ** Cygwin
|
524
|
796
|
1318
|
797 See also Intel Architecture General, above.
|
|
798
|
|
799 *** Signal 11 when building or running a dumped XEmacs.
|
|
800
|
|
801 This appears to happen when using the traditional dumping mechanism and
|
|
802 the system malloc. Andy Piper writes:
|
|
803
|
1332
|
804 Traditional dumping on Cygwin relies on using gmalloc (there are specific
|
1318
|
805 hacks in our version of gmalloc to support this), I suspect using sysmalloc
|
|
806 is the problem.
|
|
807
|
|
808 Try configuring with pdump or without system malloc.
|
|
809
|
524
|
810 *** Syntax errors running configure scripts, make failing with exit code 127
|
|
811 in inexplicable situations, etc.
|
392
|
812
|
1332
|
813 [[ This may be because you are using the default Cygwin shell, under old
|
|
814 versions of Cygwin. The default Cygwin shell (/bin/sh.exe) is ash, which
|
|
815 appears to work in most circumstances but has some weird failure modes.
|
|
816 You may need to replace the symlink with bash.exe. ]] This doesn't appear
|
|
817 to affect Cygwin any longer, and /bin/sh.exe is no longer a symlink in
|
|
818 any case.
|
392
|
819
|
524
|
820 *** Lots of compile errors, esp. on lines containing macro definitions
|
|
821 terminated by backslashes.
|
392
|
822
|
524
|
823 Your partition holding the source files is mounted binary. It needs
|
|
824 to be mounted text. (This will not screw up any binary files because
|
|
825 the Cygwin utilities specify explicitly whether they want binary or
|
|
826 text mode when working with source vs. binary files, which overrides
|
|
827 the mount type.) To fix this, you just need to run the appropriate
|
|
828 mount command once -- afterwards, the settings are remembered in the
|
|
829 registry.
|
392
|
830
|
524
|
831 *** Errors from make like /c:not found.
|
392
|
832
|
524
|
833 Make sure you set the environment variable MAKE_MODE to UNIX in your
|
|
834 .bashrc, Control Panel (Windows 2000/NT), or AUTOEXEC.BAT (Windows
|
|
835 98/95).
|
392
|
836
|
|
837 *** The info files will not build.
|
|
838
|
1332
|
839 makeinfo that ships with old versions of Cygwin doesn't work.
|
|
840 Upgrade to the latest Cygwin version.
|
392
|
841
|
524
|
842 *** XEmacs hangs while attempting to rebuild the .elc files.
|
392
|
843
|
524
|
844 Check to make sure you're not configuring with rel-alloc. The relocating
|
|
845 allocator does not currently work under Cygwin due to bugs in Cygwin's
|
|
846 mmap().
|
392
|
847
|
524
|
848 *** Trying to build with X, but X11 not detected.
|
|
849
|
|
850 This is usually because xmkmf is not in your path or because you are
|
1332
|
851 using the default Cygwin shell. (See above.)
|
333
|
852
|
|
853
|
373
|
854 * Problems with running XEmacs
|
|
855 ==============================
|
|
856 ** General
|
1332
|
857
|
|
858 *** Changes made to .el files do not take effect.
|
|
859
|
|
860 You may have forgotten to recompile them into .elc files. Then the
|
|
861 old .elc files will be loaded, and your changes will not be seen. To
|
|
862 fix this, do `M-x byte-recompile-directory' and specify the directory
|
|
863 that contains the Lisp files.
|
|
864
|
|
865 Note that you will get a warning when loading a .elc file that is
|
|
866 older than the corresponding .el file.
|
|
867
|
|
868 *** VM appears to hang in large folders.
|
|
869
|
|
870 This is normal (trust us) when upgrading to VM-6.22 from earlier
|
|
871 versions. Let VM finish what it is doing and all will be well.
|
1042
|
872
|
892
|
873 *** Starting with 21.4.x, killing text is absurdly slow.
|
|
874
|
|
875 See FAQ Q3.10.6. Should be available on the web near
|
|
876 http://www.xemacs.org/faq/xemacs-faq.html#SEC160.
|
|
877
|
835
|
878 *** Whenever I try to retrieve a remote file, I have problems.
|
|
879
|
|
880 A typical error: FTP Error: USER request failed; 500 AUTH not understood.
|
|
881 Thanks to giacomo boffi <giacomo.boffi@polimi.it> on comp.emacs.xemacs:
|
|
882
|
|
883 tell your ftp client to not attempt AUTH authentication (or do not
|
|
884 use FTP servers that don't understand AUTH)
|
|
885
|
|
886 and notes that you need to add an element (often "-u") to
|
|
887 `efs-ftp-program-args'. Use M-x customize-variable, and verify the
|
|
888 needed flag with `man ftp' or other local documentation.
|
|
889
|
464
|
890 *** gnuserv is running, some clients can connect, but others cannot.
|
|
891
|
|
892 The code in gnuslib.c respects the value of TMPDIR. If the server and
|
|
893 the client have different values in their environment, you lose.
|
|
894 One program known to set TMPDIR and manifest this problem is exmh.
|
|
895 You can defeat the use of TMPDIR by unsetting USE_TMPDIR at the top of
|
|
896 gnuserv.h at build time.
|
|
897
|
1332
|
898 ** General Unix
|
124
|
899
|
373
|
900 *** You type Control-H (Backspace) expecting to delete characters.
|
124
|
901
|
|
902 Emacs has traditionally used Control-H for help; unfortunately this
|
424
|
903 interferes with its use as Backspace on TTY's. As of XEmacs 21,
|
|
904 XEmacs looks at the "erase" setting of TTY structures and maps C-h to
|
|
905 backspace when erase is set to C-h. This is sort of a special hack,
|
|
906 but it makes it possible for you to use the standard:
|
|
907
|
|
908 stty erase ^H
|
355
|
909
|
424
|
910 to get your backspace key to erase characters. The erase setting is
|
|
911 recorded in the Lisp variable `tty-erase-char', which you can use to
|
|
912 tune the settings in your .emacs.
|
124
|
913
|
424
|
914 A major drawback of this is that when C-h becomes backspace, it no
|
|
915 longer invokes help. In that case, you need to use f1 for help, or
|
|
916 bind another key. An example of the latter is the following code,
|
|
917 which moves help to Meta-? (ESC ?):
|
124
|
918
|
424
|
919 (global-set-key "\M-?" 'help-command)
|
124
|
920
|
1332
|
921 *** At startup I get a warning on stderr about missing charsets:
|
|
922
|
|
923 Warning: Missing charsets in String to FontSet conversion
|
|
924
|
|
925 You need to specify appropriate charsets for your locale (usually the
|
|
926 value of the LANG environment variable) in .Xresources. See
|
|
927 etc/Emacs.ad for the relevant resources (mostly menubar fonts and
|
|
928 fontsets). Do not edit this file, it's purely informative.
|
|
929
|
|
930 If you have no satisfactory fonts for iso-8859-1, XEmacs will crash.
|
|
931
|
|
932 It looks like XFree86 4.x (the usual server on Linux and *BSD) has
|
|
933 some braindamage where .UTF-8 locales will always generate this
|
|
934 message, because the XFree86 (font)server doesn't know that UTF-8 will
|
|
935 use the ISO10646-1 font registry (or a Cmap or something).
|
|
936
|
|
937 If you are not using a .UTF-8 locale and see this warning for a
|
|
938 character set not listed in the default in Emacs.ad, please let
|
|
939 xemacs-beta@xemacs.org know about it, so we can add fonts to the
|
|
940 appropriate fontsets and stifle this warning. (Unfortunately it's
|
|
941 buried in Xlib, so we can't easily get rid of it otherwise.)
|
|
942
|
373
|
943 *** Mail agents (VM, Gnus, rmail) cannot get new mail
|
197
|
944
|
|
945 rmail and VM get new mail from /usr/spool/mail/$USER using a program
|
|
946 called `movemail'. This program interlocks with /bin/mail using the
|
|
947 protocol defined by /bin/mail.
|
|
948
|
|
949 There are two different protocols in general use. One of them uses
|
|
950 the `flock' system call. The other involves creating a lock file;
|
|
951 `movemail' must be able to write in /usr/spool/mail in order to do
|
|
952 this. You control which one is used by defining, or not defining, the
|
|
953 macro MAIL_USE_FLOCK in config.h or the m- or s- file it includes. IF
|
|
954 YOU DON'T USE THE FORM OF INTERLOCKING THAT IS NORMAL ON YOUR SYSTEM,
|
|
955 YOU CAN LOSE MAIL!
|
|
956
|
|
957 If your system uses the lock file protocol, and fascist restrictions
|
|
958 prevent ordinary users from writing the lock files in /usr/spool/mail,
|
|
959 you may need to make `movemail' setgid to a suitable group such as
|
|
960 `mail'. To do this, use the following commands (as root) after doing
|
|
961 the make install.
|
|
962
|
|
963 chgrp mail movemail
|
|
964 chmod 2755 movemail
|
|
965
|
|
966 Installation normally copies movemail from the build directory to an
|
|
967 installation directory which is usually under /usr/local/lib. The
|
|
968 installed copy of movemail is usually in the directory
|
|
969 /usr/local/lib/emacs/VERSION/TARGET. You must change the group and
|
|
970 mode of the installed copy; changing the group and mode of the build
|
|
971 directory copy is ineffective.
|
|
972
|
373
|
973 *** Things which should be bold or italic (such as the initial
|
197
|
974 copyright notice) are not.
|
0
|
975
|
197
|
976 The fonts of the "bold" and "italic" faces are generated from the font
|
|
977 of the "default" face; in this way, your bold and italic fonts will
|
|
978 have the appropriate size and family. However, emacs can only be
|
|
979 clever in this way if you have specified the default font using the
|
|
980 XLFD (X Logical Font Description) format, which looks like
|
0
|
981
|
|
982 *-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-*-*
|
|
983
|
197
|
984 if you use any of the other, less strict font name formats, some of
|
|
985 which look like:
|
|
986
|
0
|
987 lucidasanstypewriter-12
|
|
988 and fixed
|
|
989 and 9x13
|
|
990
|
|
991 then emacs won't be able to guess the names of the "bold" and "italic"
|
|
992 versions. All X fonts can be referred to via XLFD-style names, so you
|
|
993 should use those forms. See the man pages for X(1), xlsfonts(1), and
|
|
994 xfontsel(1).
|
|
995
|
373
|
996 *** The dumped Emacs crashes when run, trying to write pure data.
|
0
|
997
|
|
998 Two causes have been seen for such problems.
|
|
999
|
|
1000 1) On a system where getpagesize is not a system call, it is defined
|
|
1001 as a macro. If the definition (in both unexec.c and malloc.c) is wrong,
|
|
1002 it can cause problems like this. You might be able to find the correct
|
|
1003 value in the man page for a.out (5).
|
|
1004
|
|
1005 2) Some systems allocate variables declared static among the
|
|
1006 initialized variables. Emacs makes all initialized variables in most
|
|
1007 of its files pure after dumping, but the variables declared static and
|
|
1008 not initialized are not supposed to be pure. On these systems you
|
|
1009 may need to add "#define static" to the m- or the s- file.
|
|
1010
|
373
|
1011 *** Reading and writing files is very very slow.
|
0
|
1012
|
|
1013 Try evaluating the form (setq lock-directory nil) and see if that helps.
|
|
1014 There is a problem with file-locking on some systems (possibly related
|
454
|
1015 to NFS) that I don't understand. Please send mail to the address
|
1332
|
1016 xemacs-beta@xemacs.org if you figure this one out.
|
0
|
1017
|
373
|
1018 *** When emacs starts up, I get lots of warnings about unknown keysyms.
|
124
|
1019
|
|
1020 If you are running the prebuilt binaries, the Motif library expects to find
|
|
1021 certain thing in the XKeysymDB file. This file is normally in /usr/lib/X11/
|
|
1022 or in /usr/openwin/lib/. If you keep yours in a different place, set the
|
454
|
1023 environment variable $XKEYSYMDB to point to it before starting emacs. If
|
|
1024 you still have the problem after doing that, perhaps your version of X is
|
2536
|
1025 too old. There is a copy of the MIT X11R6 XKeysymDB file in the emacs `etc'
|
124
|
1026 directory. Try using that one.
|
|
1027
|
3406
|
1028 *** Lots of warnings generated when displaying via ssh X forwarding.
|
|
1029
|
|
1030 If you are seeing a significant number of X11 warnings (in particular
|
|
1031 BadWindow errors) when using XEmacs via ssh X forwarding try using a
|
|
1032 trusted x11 connection instead (for openssh, use -Y instead of -X).
|
|
1033
|
373
|
1034 *** My X resources used to work, and now some of them are being ignored.
|
0
|
1035
|
124
|
1036 Check the resources in .../etc/Emacs.ad (which is the same as the file
|
1389
|
1037 sample.Xresources). Perhaps some of the default resources built in to
|
124
|
1038 emacs are now overriding your existing resources. Copy and edit the
|
|
1039 resources in Emacs.ad as necessary.
|
|
1040
|
373
|
1041 *** I have focus problems when I use `M-o' to switch to another screen
|
197
|
1042 without using the mouse.
|
124
|
1043
|
197
|
1044 The focus issues with a program like XEmacs, which has multiple
|
|
1045 homogeneous top-level windows, are very complicated, and as a result,
|
|
1046 most window managers don't implement them correctly.
|
0
|
1047
|
124
|
1048 The R4/R5 version of twm (and all of its descendants) had buggy focus
|
197
|
1049 handling. Sufficiently recent versions of tvtwm have been fixed. In
|
|
1050 addition, if you're using twm, make sure you have not specified
|
|
1051 "NoTitleFocus" in your .tvtwmrc file. The very nature of this option
|
|
1052 makes twm do some illegal focus tricks, even with the patch.
|
0
|
1053
|
197
|
1054 It is known that olwm and olvwm are buggy, and in different ways. If
|
|
1055 you're using click-to-type mode, try using point-to-type, or vice
|
|
1056 versa.
|
0
|
1057
|
197
|
1058 In older versions of NCDwm, one could not even type at XEmacs windows.
|
|
1059 This has been fixed in newer versions (2.4.3, and possibly earlier).
|
0
|
1060
|
197
|
1061 (Many people suggest that XEmacs should warp the mouse when focusing
|
|
1062 on another screen in point-to-type mode. This is not ICCCM-compliant
|
|
1063 behavior. Implementing such policy is the responsibility of the
|
|
1064 window manager itself, it is not legal for a client to do this.)
|
0
|
1065
|
373
|
1066 *** Emacs spontaneously displays "I-search: " at the bottom of the screen.
|
0
|
1067
|
|
1068 This means that Control-S/Control-Q (XON/XOFF) "flow control" is being
|
|
1069 used. C-s/C-q flow control is bad for Emacs editors because it takes
|
|
1070 away C-s and C-q as user commands. Since editors do not output long
|
|
1071 streams of text without user commands, there is no need for a
|
|
1072 user-issuable "stop output" command in an editor; therefore, a
|
|
1073 properly designed flow control mechanism would transmit all possible
|
|
1074 input characters without interference. Designing such a mechanism is
|
|
1075 easy, for a person with at least half a brain.
|
|
1076
|
|
1077 There are three possible reasons why flow control could be taking place:
|
|
1078
|
|
1079 1) Terminal has not been told to disable flow control
|
|
1080 2) Insufficient padding for the terminal in use
|
|
1081 3) Some sort of terminal concentrator or line switch is responsible
|
|
1082
|
|
1083 First of all, many terminals have a set-up mode which controls whether
|
|
1084 they generate XON/XOFF flow control characters. This must be set to
|
|
1085 "no XON/XOFF" in order for Emacs to work. Sometimes there is an
|
|
1086 escape sequence that the computer can send to turn flow control off
|
|
1087 and on. If so, perhaps the termcap `ti' string should turn flow
|
|
1088 control off, and the `te' string should turn it on.
|
|
1089
|
|
1090 Once the terminal has been told "no flow control", you may find it
|
|
1091 needs more padding. The amount of padding Emacs sends is controlled
|
|
1092 by the termcap entry for the terminal in use, and by the output baud
|
|
1093 rate as known by the kernel. The shell command `stty' will print
|
|
1094 your output baud rate; `stty' with suitable arguments will set it if
|
|
1095 it is wrong. Setting to a higher speed causes increased padding. If
|
|
1096 the results are wrong for the correct speed, there is probably a
|
|
1097 problem in the termcap entry. You must speak to a local Unix wizard
|
|
1098 to fix this. Perhaps you are just using the wrong terminal type.
|
|
1099
|
|
1100 For terminals that lack a "no flow control" mode, sometimes just
|
|
1101 giving lots of padding will prevent actual generation of flow control
|
|
1102 codes. You might as well try it.
|
|
1103
|
|
1104 If you are really unlucky, your terminal is connected to the computer
|
|
1105 through a concentrator which sends XON/XOFF flow control to the
|
|
1106 computer, or it insists on sending flow control itself no matter how
|
|
1107 much padding you give it. Unless you can figure out how to turn flow
|
|
1108 control off on this concentrator (again, refer to your local wizard),
|
|
1109 you are screwed! You should have the terminal or concentrator
|
|
1110 replaced with a properly designed one. In the mean time, some drastic
|
|
1111 measures can make Emacs semi-work.
|
|
1112
|
|
1113 You can make Emacs ignore C-s and C-q and let the operating system
|
|
1114 handle them. To do this on a per-session basis, just type M-x
|
|
1115 enable-flow-control RET. You will see a message that C-\ and C-^ are
|
|
1116 now translated to C-s and C-q. (Use the same command M-x
|
|
1117 enable-flow-control to turn *off* this special mode. It toggles flow
|
|
1118 control handling.)
|
|
1119
|
|
1120 If C-\ and C-^ are inconvenient for you (for example, if one of them
|
|
1121 is the escape character of your terminal concentrator), you can choose
|
|
1122 other characters by setting the variables flow-control-c-s-replacement
|
|
1123 and flow-control-c-q-replacement. But choose carefully, since all
|
|
1124 other control characters are already used by emacs.
|
|
1125
|
|
1126 IMPORTANT: if you type C-s by accident while flow control is enabled,
|
|
1127 Emacs output will freeze, and you will have to remember to type C-q in
|
|
1128 order to continue.
|
|
1129
|
|
1130 If you work in an environment where a majority of terminals of a
|
|
1131 certain type are flow control hobbled, you can use the function
|
|
1132 `enable-flow-control-on' to turn on this flow control avoidance scheme
|
|
1133 automatically. Here is an example:
|
|
1134
|
|
1135 (enable-flow-control-on "vt200" "vt300" "vt101" "vt131")
|
|
1136
|
|
1137 If this isn't quite correct (e.g. you have a mixture of flow-control hobbled
|
|
1138 and good vt200 terminals), you can still run enable-flow-control
|
|
1139 manually.
|
|
1140
|
|
1141 I have no intention of ever redesigning the Emacs command set for the
|
|
1142 assumption that terminals use C-s/C-q flow control. XON/XOFF flow
|
|
1143 control technique is a bad design, and terminals that need it are bad
|
|
1144 merchandise and should not be purchased. Now that X is becoming
|
|
1145 widespread, XON/XOFF seems to be on the way out. If you can get some
|
|
1146 use out of GNU Emacs on inferior terminals, more power to you, but I
|
|
1147 will not make Emacs worse for properly designed systems for the sake
|
|
1148 of inferior systems.
|
|
1149
|
373
|
1150 *** Control-S and Control-Q commands are ignored completely.
|
0
|
1151
|
|
1152 For some reason, your system is using brain-damaged C-s/C-q flow
|
|
1153 control despite Emacs's attempts to turn it off. Perhaps your
|
|
1154 terminal is connected to the computer through a concentrator
|
|
1155 that wants to use flow control.
|
|
1156
|
|
1157 You should first try to tell the concentrator not to use flow control.
|
|
1158 If you succeed in this, try making the terminal work without
|
|
1159 flow control, as described in the preceding section.
|
|
1160
|
|
1161 If that line of approach is not successful, map some other characters
|
|
1162 into C-s and C-q using keyboard-translate-table. The example above
|
|
1163 shows how to do this with C-^ and C-\.
|
|
1164
|
373
|
1165 *** Control-S and Control-Q commands are ignored completely on a net
|
197
|
1166 connection.
|
0
|
1167
|
|
1168 Some versions of rlogin (and possibly telnet) do not pass flow
|
|
1169 control characters to the remote system to which they connect.
|
|
1170 On such systems, emacs on the remote system cannot disable flow
|
|
1171 control on the local system.
|
|
1172
|
|
1173 One way to cure this is to disable flow control on the local host
|
|
1174 (the one running rlogin, not the one running rlogind) using the
|
|
1175 stty command, before starting the rlogin process. On many systems,
|
120
|
1176 `stty start u stop u' will do this.
|
0
|
1177
|
|
1178 Some versions of tcsh will prevent even this from working. One way
|
|
1179 around this is to start another shell before starting rlogin, and
|
|
1180 issue the stty command to disable flow control from that shell.
|
|
1181
|
|
1182 If none of these methods work, the best solution is to type
|
120
|
1183 `M-x enable-flow-control' at the beginning of your emacs session, or
|
0
|
1184 if you expect the problem to continue, add a line such as the
|
|
1185 following to your .emacs (on the host running rlogind):
|
|
1186
|
|
1187 (enable-flow-control-on "vt200" "vt300" "vt101" "vt131")
|
|
1188
|
|
1189 See the entry about spontaneous display of I-search (above) for more
|
|
1190 info.
|
|
1191
|
373
|
1192 *** TTY redisplay is slow.
|
197
|
1193
|
|
1194 XEmacs has fairly new TTY redisplay support (beginning from 19.12),
|
|
1195 which doesn't include some basic TTY optimizations -- like using
|
|
1196 scrolling regions to move around blocks of text. This is why
|
454
|
1197 redisplay on the traditional terminals, or over slow lines can be very
|
197
|
1198 slow.
|
|
1199
|
|
1200 If you are interested in fixing this, please let us know at
|
1332
|
1201 <xemacs-beta@xemacs.org>.
|
197
|
1202
|
373
|
1203 *** Screen is updated wrong, but only on one kind of terminal.
|
0
|
1204
|
120
|
1205 This could mean that the termcap entry you are using for that terminal
|
|
1206 is wrong, or it could mean that Emacs has a bug handing the
|
|
1207 combination of features specified for that terminal.
|
0
|
1208
|
|
1209 The first step in tracking this down is to record what characters
|
|
1210 Emacs is sending to the terminal. Execute the Lisp expression
|
120
|
1211 (open-termscript "./emacs-script") to make Emacs write all terminal
|
|
1212 output into the file ~/emacs-script as well; then do what makes the
|
|
1213 screen update wrong, and look at the file and decode the characters
|
|
1214 using the manual for the terminal. There are several possibilities:
|
0
|
1215
|
|
1216 1) The characters sent are correct, according to the terminal manual.
|
|
1217
|
|
1218 In this case, there is no obvious bug in Emacs, and most likely you
|
|
1219 need more padding, or possibly the terminal manual is wrong.
|
|
1220
|
120
|
1221 2) The characters sent are incorrect, due to an obscure aspect of the
|
|
1222 terminal behavior not described in an obvious way by termcap.
|
0
|
1223
|
120
|
1224 This case is hard. It will be necessary to think of a way for Emacs
|
|
1225 to distinguish between terminals with this kind of behavior and other
|
|
1226 terminals that behave subtly differently but are classified the same
|
|
1227 by termcap; or else find an algorithm for Emacs to use that avoids the
|
|
1228 difference. Such changes must be tested on many kinds of terminals.
|
0
|
1229
|
|
1230 3) The termcap entry is wrong.
|
|
1231
|
120
|
1232 See the file etc/TERMS for information on changes that are known to be
|
|
1233 needed in commonly used termcap entries for certain terminals.
|
0
|
1234
|
120
|
1235 4) The characters sent are incorrect, and clearly cannot be right for
|
|
1236 any terminal with the termcap entry you were using.
|
0
|
1237
|
120
|
1238 This is unambiguously an Emacs bug, and can probably be fixed in
|
197
|
1239 termcap.c, terminfo.c, tparam.c, cm.c, redisplay-tty.c,
|
|
1240 redisplay-output.c, or redisplay.c.
|
0
|
1241
|
373
|
1242 *** My buffers are full of \000 characters or otherwise corrupt.
|
|
1243
|
|
1244 Some compilers have trouble with gmalloc.c and ralloc.c; try recompiling
|
|
1245 without optimization. If that doesn't work, try recompiling with
|
|
1246 SYSTEM_MALLOC defined, and/or with REL_ALLOC undefined.
|
|
1247
|
1389
|
1248 *** A position you specified in .Xresources is ignored, using twm.
|
373
|
1249
|
|
1250 twm normally ignores "program-specified" positions.
|
|
1251 You can tell it to obey them with this command in your `.twmrc' file:
|
|
1252
|
|
1253 UsePPosition "on" #allow clents to request a position
|
|
1254
|
|
1255 *** With M-x enable-flow-control, you need to type C-\ twice to do
|
|
1256 incremental search--a single C-\ gets no response.
|
|
1257
|
|
1258 This has been traced to communicating with your machine via kermit,
|
|
1259 with C-\ as the kermit escape character. One solution is to use
|
|
1260 another escape character in kermit. One user did
|
|
1261
|
|
1262 set escape-character 17
|
|
1263
|
|
1264 in his .kermrc file, to make C-q the kermit escape character.
|
|
1265
|
|
1266 *** The Motif version of Emacs paints the screen a solid color.
|
|
1267
|
|
1268 This has been observed to result from the following X resource:
|
|
1269
|
|
1270 Emacs*default.attributeFont: -*-courier-medium-r-*-*-*-140-*-*-*-*-iso8859-*
|
|
1271
|
|
1272 That the resource has this effect indicates a bug in something, but we
|
|
1273 do not yet know what. If it is an Emacs bug, we hope someone can
|
|
1274 explain what the bug is so we can fix it. In the mean time, removing
|
|
1275 the resource prevents the problem.
|
|
1276
|
|
1277 *** After running emacs once, subsequent invocations crash.
|
|
1278
|
|
1279 Some versions of SVR4 have a serious bug in the implementation of the
|
|
1280 mmap () system call in the kernel; this causes emacs to run correctly
|
|
1281 the first time, and then crash when run a second time.
|
|
1282
|
|
1283 Contact your vendor and ask for the mmap bug fix; in the mean time,
|
|
1284 you may be able to work around the problem by adding a line to your
|
|
1285 operating system description file (whose name is reported by the
|
|
1286 configure script) that reads:
|
|
1287 #define SYSTEM_MALLOC
|
|
1288 This makes Emacs use memory less efficiently, but seems to work around
|
|
1289 the kernel bug.
|
|
1290
|
|
1291 *** Inability to send an Alt-modified key, when Emacs is communicating
|
|
1292 directly with an X server.
|
|
1293
|
|
1294 If you have tried to bind an Alt-modified key as a command, and it
|
|
1295 does not work to type the command, the first thing you should check is
|
|
1296 whether the key is getting through to Emacs. To do this, type C-h c
|
|
1297 followed by the Alt-modified key. C-h c should say what kind of event
|
|
1298 it read. If it says it read an Alt-modified key, then make sure you
|
|
1299 have made the key binding correctly.
|
|
1300
|
|
1301 If C-h c reports an event that doesn't have the Alt modifier, it may
|
|
1302 be because your X server has no key for the Alt modifier. The X
|
|
1303 server that comes from MIT does not set up the Alt modifier by
|
|
1304 default.
|
|
1305
|
|
1306 If your keyboard has keys named Alt, you can enable them as follows:
|
|
1307
|
|
1308 xmodmap -e 'add mod2 = Alt_L'
|
|
1309 xmodmap -e 'add mod2 = Alt_R'
|
|
1310
|
|
1311 If the keyboard has just one key named Alt, then only one of those
|
|
1312 commands is needed. The modifier `mod2' is a reasonable choice if you
|
|
1313 are using an unmodified MIT version of X. Otherwise, choose any
|
|
1314 modifier bit not otherwise used.
|
|
1315
|
|
1316 If your keyboard does not have keys named Alt, you can use some other
|
|
1317 keys. Use the keysym command in xmodmap to turn a function key (or
|
|
1318 some other 'spare' key) into Alt_L or into Alt_R, and then use the
|
|
1319 commands show above to make them modifier keys.
|
|
1320
|
|
1321 Note that if you have Alt keys but no Meta keys, Emacs translates Alt
|
|
1322 into Meta. This is because of the great importance of Meta in Emacs.
|
|
1323
|
|
1324 *** In Shell mode, you get a ^M at the end of every line.
|
|
1325
|
|
1326 This happens to people who use tcsh, because it is trying to be too
|
|
1327 smart. It sees that the Shell uses terminal type `unknown' and turns
|
|
1328 on the flag to output ^M at the end of each line. You can fix the
|
|
1329 problem by adding this to your .cshrc file:
|
|
1330
|
|
1331 if ($?EMACS) then
|
|
1332 if ($EMACS == "t") then
|
454
|
1333 unset edit
|
373
|
1334 stty -icrnl -onlcr -echo susp ^Z
|
|
1335 endif
|
|
1336 endif
|
|
1337
|
|
1338 *** An error message such as `X protocol error: BadMatch (invalid
|
|
1339 parameter attributes) on protocol request 93'.
|
|
1340
|
|
1341 This comes from having an invalid X resource, such as
|
|
1342 emacs*Cursor: black
|
|
1343 (which is invalid because it specifies a color name for something
|
|
1344 that isn't a color.)
|
|
1345
|
|
1346 The fix is to correct your X resources.
|
|
1347
|
|
1348 *** Once you pull down a menu from the menubar, it won't go away.
|
|
1349
|
|
1350 It has been claimed that this is caused by a bug in certain very old
|
|
1351 (1990?) versions of the twm window manager. It doesn't happen with
|
|
1352 recent vintages, or with other window managers.
|
|
1353
|
|
1354 *** Emacs ignores the "help" key when running OLWM.
|
|
1355
|
|
1356 OLWM grabs the help key, and retransmits it to the appropriate client
|
|
1357 using XSendEvent. Allowing emacs to react to synthetic events is a
|
|
1358 security hole, so this is turned off by default. You can enable it by
|
|
1359 setting the variable x-allow-sendevents to t. You can also cause fix
|
|
1360 this by telling OLWM to not grab the help key, with the null binding
|
|
1361 "OpenWindows.KeyboardCommand.Help:".
|
|
1362
|
|
1363 *** Programs running under terminal emulator do not recognize `emacs'
|
|
1364 terminal type.
|
|
1365
|
|
1366 The cause of this is a shell startup file that sets the TERMCAP
|
|
1367 environment variable. The terminal emulator uses that variable to
|
|
1368 provide the information on the special terminal type that Emacs
|
|
1369 emulates.
|
|
1370
|
|
1371 Rewrite your shell startup file so that it does not change TERMCAP
|
|
1372 in such a case. You could use the following conditional which sets
|
|
1373 it only if it is undefined.
|
|
1374
|
|
1375 if ( ! ${?TERMCAP} ) setenv TERMCAP ~/my-termcap-file
|
|
1376
|
|
1377 Or you could set TERMCAP only when you set TERM--which should not
|
|
1378 happen in a non-login shell.
|
|
1379
|
442
|
1380 *** The popup menu appears at the bottom/right of my screen.
|
373
|
1381
|
1389
|
1382 You probably have something like the following in your ~/.Xresources
|
373
|
1383
|
|
1384 Emacs.geometry: 81x56--9--1
|
|
1385
|
|
1386 Use the following instead
|
|
1387
|
|
1388 Emacs*EmacsFrame.geometry: 81x56--9--1
|
|
1389
|
1222
|
1390 *** When I try to use the PostgreSQL functions, I get a message about
|
|
1391 undefined symbols.
|
|
1392
|
|
1393 The only known case in which this happens is if you are using gcc, you
|
2648
|
1394 configured with --enable-error-checking=all and --enable-modules, and
|
|
1395 you compiled with no optimization. If you encounter this problem in any
|
1222
|
1396 other situation, please inform xemacs-beta@xemacs.org.
|
|
1397
|
|
1398 This problem stems from a gcc bug. With no optimization, functions
|
|
1399 declared `extern inline' sometimes are not completely compiled away. An
|
|
1400 undefined symbol with the function's name is put into the resulting
|
|
1401 object file. In this case, when the postgresql module is loaded, the
|
|
1402 linker is unable to resolve that symbol, so the module load fails. The
|
|
1403 workaround is to recompile the module with optimization turned on. Any
|
|
1404 optimization level, including -Os, appears to work.
|
|
1405
|
1332
|
1406 *** C-z just refreshes the screen instead of suspending Emacs.
|
|
1407
|
|
1408 You are probably using a shell that doesn't support job control, even
|
|
1409 though the system itself is capable of it. Try using a different
|
|
1410 shell.
|
373
|
1411
|
1036
|
1412 ** MacOS/X, Darwin
|
|
1413 *** XEmacs crashes on MacOS within font-lock, or when dealing
|
|
1414 with large compilation buffers, or in other regex applications.
|
|
1415
|
3074
|
1416 The default stack size under MacOS/X prior to 10.3 (Panther) is rather
|
|
1417 small (512k as opposed to Solaris 8M), hosing the regexp code, which
|
|
1418 uses alloca() extensively, overflowing the stack when complex regexps
|
|
1419 are used. Workarounds:
|
1036
|
1420
|
|
1421 1) Increase your stack size, using `ulimit -s 8192' or a (t)csh
|
|
1422 equivalent;
|
|
1423
|
|
1424 2) Recompile regex.c with REGEX_MALLOC defined.
|
|
1425
|
373
|
1426 ** AIX
|
|
1427 *** Your Delete key sends a Backspace to the terminal, using an AIXterm.
|
0
|
1428
|
1389
|
1429 The solution is to include in your .Xresources the lines:
|
0
|
1430
|
|
1431 *aixterm.Translations: #override <Key>BackSpace: string(0x7f)
|
|
1432 aixterm*ttyModes: erase ^?
|
|
1433
|
|
1434 This makes your Backspace key send DEL (ASCII 127).
|
|
1435
|
373
|
1436 *** On AIX 4, some programs fail when run in a Shell buffer
|
|
1437 with an error message like No terminfo entry for "unknown".
|
124
|
1438
|
373
|
1439 On AIX, many terminal type definitions are not installed by default.
|
|
1440 `unknown' is one of them. Install the "Special Generic Terminal
|
|
1441 Definitions" to make them defined.
|
124
|
1442
|
373
|
1443 *** On AIX, you get this message when running Emacs:
|
0
|
1444
|
373
|
1445 Could not load program emacs
|
|
1446 Symbol smtcheckinit in csh is undefined
|
|
1447 Error was: Exec format error
|
124
|
1448
|
373
|
1449 or this one:
|
0
|
1450
|
373
|
1451 Could not load program .emacs
|
|
1452 Symbol _system_con in csh is undefined
|
|
1453 Symbol _fp_trapsta in csh is undefined
|
|
1454 Error was: Exec format error
|
124
|
1455
|
373
|
1456 These can happen when you try to run on AIX 3.2.5 a program that was
|
|
1457 compiled with 3.2.4. The fix is to recompile.
|
124
|
1458
|
373
|
1459 *** Trouble using ptys on AIX.
|
|
1460
|
|
1461 People often install the pty devices on AIX incorrectly.
|
|
1462 Use `smit pty' to reinstall them properly.
|
|
1463
|
0
|
1464
|
373
|
1465 ** SunOS/Solaris
|
|
1466 *** The Emacs window disappears when you type M-q.
|
197
|
1467
|
373
|
1468 Some versions of the Open Look window manager interpret M-q as a quit
|
|
1469 command for whatever window you are typing at. If you want to use
|
|
1470 Emacs with that window manager, you should try to configure the window
|
|
1471 manager to use some other command. You can disable the
|
|
1472 shortcut keys entirely by adding this line to ~/.OWdefaults:
|
0
|
1473
|
373
|
1474 OpenWindows.WindowMenuAccelerators: False
|
|
1475
|
|
1476 *** When Emacs tries to ring the bell, you get an error like
|
124
|
1477
|
|
1478 audio: sst_open: SETQSIZE" Invalid argument
|
|
1479 audio: sst_close: SETREG MMR2, Invalid argument
|
|
1480
|
197
|
1481 you have probably compiled using an ANSI C compiler, but with non-ANSI
|
|
1482 include files. In particular, on Suns, the file
|
|
1483 /usr/include/sun/audioio.h uses the _IOW macro to define the constant
|
|
1484 AUDIOSETQSIZE. _IOW in turn uses a K&R preprocessor feature that is
|
|
1485 now explicitly forbidden in ANSI preprocessors, namely substitution
|
|
1486 inside character constants. All ANSI C compilers must provide a
|
|
1487 workaround for this problem. Lucid's C compiler is shipped with a new
|
|
1488 set of system include files. If you are using GCC, there is a script
|
|
1489 called fixincludes that creates new versions of some system include
|
|
1490 files that use this obsolete feature.
|
124
|
1491
|
373
|
1492 *** On Solaris 2.6, XEmacs dumps core when exiting.
|
0
|
1493
|
373
|
1494 This happens if you're XEmacs is running on the same machine as the X
|
|
1495 server, and the optimized memory transport has been turned on by
|
|
1496 setting the environment variable XSUNTRANSPORT. The crash occurs
|
|
1497 during the call to XCloseDisplay.
|
124
|
1498
|
373
|
1499 If this describes your situation, you need to undefine the
|
|
1500 XSUNTRANSPORT environment variable.
|
126
|
1501
|
373
|
1502 *** On Solaris, C-x doesn't get through to Emacs when you use the console.
|
124
|
1503
|
373
|
1504 This is a Solaris feature (at least on Intel x86 cpus). Type C-r
|
|
1505 C-r C-t, to toggle whether C-x gets through to Emacs.
|
124
|
1506
|
373
|
1507 *** On Solaris 2.4, Dired hangs and C-g does not work. Or Emacs hangs
|
197
|
1508 forever waiting for termination of a subprocess that is a zombie.
|
124
|
1509
|
|
1510 casper@fwi.uva.nl says the problem is in X11R6. Rebuild libX11.so
|
|
1511 after changing the file xc/config/cf/sunLib.tmpl. Change the lines
|
|
1512
|
|
1513 #if ThreadedX
|
|
1514 #define SharedX11Reqs -lthread
|
|
1515 #endif
|
|
1516
|
|
1517 to:
|
|
1518
|
|
1519 #if OSMinorVersion < 4
|
|
1520 #if ThreadedX
|
|
1521 #define SharedX11Reqs -lthread
|
|
1522 #endif
|
|
1523 #endif
|
|
1524
|
|
1525 Be sure also to edit x/config/cf/sun.cf so that OSMinorVersion is 4
|
|
1526 (as it should be for Solaris 2.4). The file has three definitions for
|
|
1527 OSMinorVersion: the first is for x86, the second for SPARC under
|
|
1528 Solaris, and the third for SunOS 4. Make sure to update the
|
|
1529 definition for your type of machine and system.
|
|
1530
|
|
1531 Then do `make Everything' in the top directory of X11R6, to rebuild
|
|
1532 the makefiles and rebuild X. The X built this way work only on
|
|
1533 Solaris 2.4, not on 2.3.
|
|
1534
|
|
1535 For multithreaded X to work it necessary to install patch
|
|
1536 101925-02 to fix problems in header files [2.4]. You need
|
|
1537 to reinstall gcc or re-run just-fixinc after installing that
|
|
1538 patch.
|
0
|
1539
|
124
|
1540 However, Frank Rust <frust@iti.cs.tu-bs.de> used a simpler solution:
|
|
1541 he changed
|
|
1542 #define ThreadedX YES
|
|
1543 to
|
|
1544 #define ThreadedX NO
|
|
1545 in sun.cf and did `make World' to rebuild X11R6. Removing all
|
|
1546 `-DXTHREAD*' flags and `-lthread' entries from lib/X11/Makefile and
|
|
1547 typing 'make install' in that directory also seemed to work.
|
|
1548
|
373
|
1549 *** On SunOS 4.1.3, Emacs unpredictably crashes in _yp_dobind_soft.
|
124
|
1550
|
373
|
1551 This happens if you configure Emacs specifying just `sparc-sun-sunos4'
|
|
1552 on a system that is version 4.1.3. You must specify the precise
|
|
1553 version number (or let configure figure out the configuration, which
|
|
1554 it can do perfectly well for SunOS).
|
124
|
1555
|
373
|
1556 *** Mail is lost when sent to local aliases.
|
0
|
1557
|
124
|
1558 Many emacs mail user agents (VM and rmail, for instance) use the
|
|
1559 sendmail.el library. This library can arrange for mail to be
|
|
1560 delivered by passing messages to the /usr/lib/sendmail (usually)
|
|
1561 program . In doing so, it passes the '-t' flag to sendmail, which
|
|
1562 means that the name of the recipient of the message is not on the
|
|
1563 command line and, therefore, that sendmail must parse the message to
|
|
1564 obtain the destination address.
|
|
1565
|
|
1566 There is a bug in the SunOS4.1.1 and SunOS4.1.3 versions of sendmail.
|
|
1567 In short, when given the -t flag, the SunOS sendmail won't recognize
|
|
1568 non-local (i.e. NIS) aliases. It has been reported that the Solaris
|
|
1569 2.x versions of sendmail do not have this bug. For those using SunOS
|
|
1570 4.1, the best fix is to install sendmail V8 or IDA sendmail (which
|
|
1571 have other advantages over the regular sendmail as well). At the time
|
|
1572 of this writing, these official versions are available:
|
|
1573
|
|
1574 Sendmail V8 on ftp.cs.berkeley.edu in /ucb/sendmail:
|
|
1575 sendmail.8.6.9.base.tar.Z (the base system source & documentation)
|
|
1576 sendmail.8.6.9.cf.tar.Z (configuration files)
|
|
1577 sendmail.8.6.9.misc.tar.Z (miscellaneous support programs)
|
|
1578 sendmail.8.6.9.xdoc.tar.Z (extended documentation, with postscript)
|
|
1579
|
|
1580 IDA sendmail on vixen.cso.uiuc.edu in /pub:
|
|
1581 sendmail-5.67b+IDA-1.5.tar.gz
|
|
1582
|
373
|
1583 *** Emacs fails to understand most Internet host names, even though
|
124
|
1584 the names work properly with other programs on the same system.
|
197
|
1585 Emacs won't work with X-windows if the value of DISPLAY is HOSTNAME:0.
|
|
1586 Gnus can't make contact with the specified host for nntp.
|
0
|
1587
|
124
|
1588 This typically happens on Suns and other systems that use shared
|
|
1589 libraries. The cause is that the site has installed a version of the
|
|
1590 shared library which uses a name server--but has not installed a
|
|
1591 similar version of the unshared library which Emacs uses.
|
0
|
1592
|
124
|
1593 The result is that most programs, using the shared library, work with
|
|
1594 the nameserver, but Emacs does not.
|
|
1595
|
|
1596 The fix is to install an unshared library that corresponds to what you
|
|
1597 installed in the shared library, and then relink Emacs.
|
0
|
1598
|
124
|
1599 On SunOS 4.1, simply define HAVE_RES_INIT.
|
|
1600
|
|
1601 If you have already installed the name resolver in the file libresolv.a,
|
|
1602 then you need to compile Emacs to use that library. The easiest way to
|
|
1603 do this is to add to config.h a definition of LIBS_SYSTEM, LIBS_MACHINE
|
|
1604 or LIB_STANDARD which uses -lresolv. Watch out! If you redefine a macro
|
|
1605 that is already in use in your configuration to supply some other libraries,
|
|
1606 be careful not to lose the others.
|
|
1607
|
|
1608 Thus, you could start by adding this to config.h:
|
|
1609
|
|
1610 #define LIBS_SYSTEM -lresolv
|
|
1611
|
|
1612 Then if this gives you an error for redefining a macro, and you see that
|
|
1613 the s- file defines LIBS_SYSTEM as -lfoo -lbar, you could change config.h
|
|
1614 again to say this:
|
|
1615
|
|
1616 #define LIBS_SYSTEM -lresolv -lfoo -lbar
|
|
1617
|
373
|
1618 *** With process-connection-type set to t, each line of subprocess
|
|
1619 output is terminated with a ^M, making ange-ftp and GNUS not work.
|
|
1620
|
|
1621 On SunOS systems, this problem has been seen to be a result of an
|
|
1622 incomplete installation of gcc 2.2 which allowed some non-ANSI
|
|
1623 compatible include files into the compilation. In particular this
|
|
1624 affected virtually all ioctl() calls.
|
|
1625
|
|
1626
|
|
1627 ** Linux
|
845
|
1628 *** XEmacs crashes on startup, in make-frame.
|
|
1629
|
|
1630 Typically the Lisp backtrace includes
|
|
1631
|
|
1632 make-frame(nil #<x-device on ":0.0" 0x2558>)
|
|
1633
|
2648
|
1634 somewhere near the top. The problem is due to an improvement in GNU ld
|
|
1635 that sorts the ELF reloc sections in the executable, giving dramatic
|
|
1636 speedups in startup for large executables. It also confuses the
|
|
1637 traditional unexec code in XEmacs, leading to the core dump. The
|
|
1638 solution is to use the --enable-pdump or --with-ldflags='-z nocombreloc'
|
|
1639 options to configure. Recent 21.4 and 12.5 autodetect this in
|
|
1640 configure.
|
845
|
1641
|
|
1642 Red Hat and SuSE (at least) distributed a prerelease version of ld
|
|
1643 (versions around 2.11.90.x.y) where autodetection is impossible. The
|
|
1644 recommended procedure is to upgrade to binutils >= 2.12 and rerun
|
2648
|
1645 configure. Otherwise you must apply the flags by hand. --enable-pdump
|
|
1646 is recommended.
|
448
|
1647
|
|
1648 *** I want XEmacs to use the Alt key, not the XXX key, for Meta commands
|
|
1649
|
|
1650 For historical reasons, XEmacs looks for a Meta key, then an Alt key.
|
|
1651 It binds Meta commands to the X11 modifier bit attached to the first
|
|
1652 of these it finds. On PCs, the Windows key is often assigned the Meta
|
|
1653 bit, but many desktop environments go to great lengths to get all apps
|
|
1654 to use the Alt key, and reserve the Windows key to (sensibly enough)
|
|
1655 the window manager.
|
|
1656
|
|
1657 One correct way to implement this was suggested on comp.emacs.xemacs
|
|
1658 (by Kilian Foth and in more detail by Michael Piotrowski): unmap the
|
|
1659 Meta modifier using xmodmap or xkb, and then map the Meta/Windows key
|
450
|
1660 to the Super or Hyper keysym and an appropriate mod bit. XEmacs will
|
|
1661 not find the Meta keysym, and default to using the Alt key for Meta
|
|
1662 keybindings. Typically few applications use the (X11) Meta modifier;
|
|
1663 it is tedious but not too much so to teach the ones you need to use
|
|
1664 Super instead of Meta. There may be further useful hints in the
|
|
1665 discussion of keymapping on non-Linux platforms.
|
|
1666
|
|
1667 *** The color-gcc wrapper
|
|
1668
|
|
1669 This wrapper colorizes the error messages from gcc. By default XEmacs
|
|
1670 does not interpret the escape sequences used to generate colors,
|
|
1671 resulting in a cluttered, hard-to-read buffer. You can remove the
|
|
1672 wrapper, or defeat the wrapper colorization in Emacs process buffers
|
|
1673 by editing the "nocolor" attribute in /etc/colorgccrc:
|
|
1674
|
|
1675 $ diff -u /etc/colorgccrc.old /etc/colorgccrc
|
|
1676 --- /etc/colorgccrc.old Tue Dec 26 02:17:46 2000
|
|
1677 +++ /etc/colorgccrc Tue Dec 26 02:15:48 2000
|
|
1678 @@ -34,1 +34,1 @@
|
|
1679 -nocolor: dumb
|
|
1680 +nocolor: dumb emacs
|
|
1681
|
|
1682 If you want colorization in your Emacs buffers, you may get good
|
|
1683 results from the ansi-color.el library:
|
|
1684
|
|
1685 http://www.geocities.com/kensanata/color-emacs.html#ansicolors
|
|
1686
|
|
1687 This is written for the mainline GNU Emacs but the author has made
|
|
1688 efforts to adapt it to XEmacs. YMMV.
|
448
|
1689
|
373
|
1690 *** Slow startup on Linux.
|
|
1691
|
|
1692 People using systems based on the Linux kernel sometimes report that
|
448
|
1693 startup takes 10 to 15 seconds longer than `usual'. There are two
|
|
1694 problems, one older, one newer.
|
|
1695
|
|
1696 **** Old problem: IPv4 host lookup
|
373
|
1697
|
448
|
1698 On older systems, this is because Emacs looks up the host name when it
|
|
1699 starts. Normally, this takes negligible time; the extra delay is due
|
|
1700 to improper system configuration. (Recent Linux distros usually have
|
|
1701 this configuration correct "out of the box".) This problem can occur
|
|
1702 for both networked and non-networked machines.
|
373
|
1703
|
|
1704 Here is how to fix the configuration. It requires being root.
|
|
1705
|
448
|
1706 ***** Networked Case
|
373
|
1707
|
|
1708 First, make sure the files `/etc/hosts' and `/etc/host.conf' both
|
|
1709 exist. The first line in the `/etc/hosts' file should look like this
|
|
1710 (replace HOSTNAME with your host name):
|
|
1711
|
|
1712 127.0.0.1 localhost HOSTNAME
|
|
1713
|
|
1714 Also make sure that the `/etc/host.conf' files contains the following
|
|
1715 lines:
|
|
1716
|
454
|
1717 order hosts, bind
|
373
|
1718 multi on
|
|
1719
|
|
1720 Any changes, permanent and temporary, to the host name should be
|
|
1721 indicated in the `/etc/hosts' file, since it acts a limited local
|
|
1722 database of addresses and names (e.g., some SLIP connections
|
|
1723 dynamically allocate ip addresses).
|
|
1724
|
448
|
1725 ***** Non-Networked Case
|
373
|
1726
|
|
1727 The solution described in the networked case applies here as well.
|
|
1728 However, if you never intend to network your machine, you can use a
|
|
1729 simpler solution: create an empty `/etc/host.conf' file. The command
|
|
1730 `touch /etc/host.conf' suffices to create the file. The `/etc/hosts'
|
|
1731 file is not necessary with this approach.
|
|
1732
|
448
|
1733 **** New problem: IPv6 CNAME lookup
|
|
1734
|
|
1735 A newer problem is due to XEmacs changing to use the modern
|
|
1736 getaddrinfo() interface from the older gethostbyname() interface. The
|
|
1737 solution above is insufficient, because getaddrinfo() by default tries
|
|
1738 to get IPv6 information for localhost. This always involves a dns
|
|
1739 lookup to get the CNAME, and the strategies above don't work. It then
|
724
|
1740 falls back to IPv4 behavior. This is good[tm] according the people at
|
|
1741 WIDE who know about IPv6.
|
448
|
1742
|
|
1743 ***** Robust network case
|
|
1744
|
|
1745 Configure your network so that there are no nameservers configured
|
|
1746 until the network is actually running. getaddrinfo() will not try to
|
|
1747 access a nameserver that isn't configured.
|
|
1748
|
|
1749 ***** Flaky network case
|
|
1750
|
|
1751 If you have a flaky modem or DSL connection that can be relied on only
|
|
1752 to go down whenever you want to bring XEmacs up, you need to force
|
|
1753 IPv4 behavior. Explicitly setting DISPLAY=127.0.0.1:0.0 (or whatever
|
|
1754 is appropriate) works in most cases.
|
|
1755
|
|
1756 If you cannot or do not want to do that, you can hard code IPv4
|
|
1757 behavior in src/process-unix.c. This is bad[tm], on your own head be
|
724
|
1758 it. Use the configure option `--with-ipv6-cname=no'.
|
373
|
1759
|
845
|
1760 *** Mandrake
|
|
1761
|
|
1762 The Mandrake Linux distribution is attempting to comprehensively
|
|
1763 update the user interface, and make it consistent across
|
|
1764 applications. This is very difficult, and will occasionally cause
|
|
1765 conflicts with applications like Emacs with their own long-established
|
|
1766 interfaces. Known issues specific to Mandrake or especially common:
|
|
1767
|
|
1768 Some versions of XEmacs (21.1.9 is known) distributed with Mandrake
|
|
1769 were patched to make the Meta and Alt keysyms synonymous. These
|
|
1770 normally work as expected in the Mandrake environment. However,
|
|
1771 custom-built XEmacsen (including all 21.2 betas) will "inexplicably"
|
|
1772 not respect the "Alt-invokes-Meta-commands" convention. See "I want
|
|
1773 XEmacs to use the Alt key" below.
|
|
1774
|
|
1775 The color-gcc wrapper (see below) is in common use on the Mandrake
|
|
1776 platform.
|
|
1777
|
|
1778 *** You get crashes in a non-C locale with Linux GNU Libc 2.0.
|
|
1779
|
|
1780 Internationalization was not the top priority for GNU Libc 2.0.
|
|
1781 As of this writing (1998-12-28) you may get crashes while running
|
|
1782 XEmacs in a non-C locale. For example, `LC_ALL=en_US xemacs' crashes
|
|
1783 while `LC_ALL=C xemacs' runs fine. This happens for example with GNU
|
|
1784 libc 2.0.7. Installing libintl.a and libintl.h built from gettext
|
|
1785 0.10.35 and re-building XEmacs solves the crashes. Presumably soon
|
|
1786 everyone will upgrade to GNU Libc 2.1 and this problem will go away.
|
|
1787
|
|
1788 *** `C-z', or `M-x suspend-emacs' hangs instead of suspending.
|
|
1789
|
|
1790 If you build with `gpm' support on Linux, you cannot suspend XEmacs
|
|
1791 because gpm installs a buggy SIGTSTP handler. Either compile with
|
|
1792 `--with-gpm=no', or don't suspend XEmacs on the Linux console until
|
|
1793 this bug is fixed.
|
|
1794
|
|
1795 *** With certain fonts, when the cursor appears on a character, the
|
|
1796 character doesn't appear--you get a solid box instead.
|
|
1797
|
|
1798 One user on a Linux system reported that this problem went away with
|
|
1799 installation of a new X server. The failing server was XFree86 3.1.1.
|
|
1800 XFree86 3.1.2 works.
|
|
1801
|
373
|
1802 ** IRIX
|
|
1803 *** On Irix, I don't see the toolbar icons and I'm getting lots of
|
|
1804 entries in the warnings buffer.
|
|
1805
|
|
1806 SGI ships a really old Xpm library in /usr/lib which does not work at
|
|
1807 all well with XEmacs. The solution is to install your own copy of the
|
2648
|
1808 latest version of Xpm somewhere and then use the --with-site-includes
|
|
1809 and --with-site-libraries flags to tell configure where to find it.
|
373
|
1810
|
|
1811 *** Trouble using ptys on IRIX, or running out of ptys.
|
|
1812
|
|
1813 The program mkpts (which may be in `/usr/adm' or `/usr/sbin') needs to
|
|
1814 be set-UID to root, or non-root programs like Emacs will not be able
|
|
1815 to allocate ptys reliably.
|
|
1816
|
|
1817 *** Beware of the default image & graphics library on Irix
|
|
1818
|
|
1819 Richard Cognot <cognot@ensg.u-nancy.fr> writes:
|
|
1820
|
|
1821 You *have* to compile your own jpeg lib. The one delivered with SGI
|
|
1822 systems is a C++ lib, which apparently XEmacs cannot cope with.
|
|
1823
|
|
1824
|
|
1825 ** Digital UNIX/OSF/VMS/Ultrix
|
|
1826 *** XEmacs crashes on Digital Unix within font-lock, or when dealing
|
1036
|
1827 with large compilation buffers, or in other regex applications.
|
373
|
1828
|
|
1829 The default stack size under Digital Unix is rather small (2M as
|
|
1830 opposed to Solaris 8M), hosing the regexp code, which uses alloca()
|
|
1831 extensively, overflowing the stack when complex regexps are used.
|
|
1832 Workarounds:
|
312
|
1833
|
373
|
1834 1) Increase your stack size, using `ulimit -s 8192' or a (t)csh
|
|
1835 equivalent;
|
|
1836
|
|
1837 2) Recompile regex.c with REGEX_MALLOC defined.
|
|
1838
|
|
1839 *** The `Alt' key doesn't behave as `Meta' when running DECwindows.
|
|
1840
|
|
1841 The default DEC keyboard mapping has the Alt keys set up to generate the
|
|
1842 keysym `Multi_key', which has a meaning to xemacs which is distinct from that
|
|
1843 of the `Meta_L' and `Meta-R' keysyms. A second problem is that certain keys
|
|
1844 have the Mod2 modifier attached to them for no adequately explored reason.
|
|
1845 The correct fix is to pass this file to xmodmap upon starting X:
|
|
1846
|
|
1847 clear mod2
|
|
1848 keysym Multi_key = Alt_L
|
|
1849 add mod1 = Alt_L
|
|
1850 add mod1 = Alt_R
|
|
1851
|
|
1852 *** The Compose key on a DEC keyboard does not work as Meta key.
|
|
1853
|
|
1854 This shell command should fix it:
|
|
1855
|
|
1856 xmodmap -e 'keycode 0xb1 = Meta_L'
|
|
1857
|
|
1858 *** `expand-file-name' fails to work on any but the machine you dumped
|
|
1859 Emacs on.
|
|
1860
|
|
1861 On Ultrix, if you use any of the functions which look up information
|
|
1862 in the passwd database before dumping Emacs (say, by using
|
|
1863 expand-file-name in site-init.el), then those functions will not work
|
|
1864 in the dumped Emacs on any host but the one Emacs was dumped on.
|
|
1865
|
|
1866 The solution? Don't use expand-file-name in site-init.el, or in
|
|
1867 anything it loads. Yuck - some solution.
|
|
1868
|
|
1869 I'm not sure why this happens; if you can find out exactly what is
|
|
1870 going on, and perhaps find a fix or a workaround, please let us know.
|
|
1871 Perhaps the YP functions cache some information, the cache is included
|
|
1872 in the dumped Emacs, and is then inaccurate on any other host.
|
|
1873
|
|
1874
|
|
1875 ** HP-UX
|
|
1876 *** I get complaints about the mapping of my HP keyboard at startup,
|
|
1877 but I haven't changed anything.
|
|
1878
|
|
1879 The default HP keymap is set up to have Mod1 assigned to two different keys:
|
|
1880 Meta_L and Mode_switch (even though there is not actually a Mode_switch key on
|
|
1881 the keyboard -- it uses an "imaginary" keycode.) There actually is a reason
|
|
1882 for this, but it's not a good one. The correct fix is to execute this command
|
|
1883 upon starting X:
|
|
1884
|
|
1885 xmodmap -e 'remove mod1 = Mode_switch'
|
312
|
1886
|
373
|
1887 *** On HP-UX, you get "poll: Interrupted system call" message in the
|
|
1888 window where XEmacs was launched.
|
|
1889
|
|
1890 Richard Cognot <cognot@ensg.u-nancy.fr> writes:
|
|
1891
|
|
1892 I get a very strange problem when linking libc.a dynamically: every
|
|
1893 event (mouse, keyboard, expose...) results in a "poll: Interrupted
|
|
1894 system call" message in the window where XEmacs was
|
|
1895 launched. Forcing a static link of libc.a alone by adding
|
|
1896 /usr/lib/libc.a at the end of the link line solves this. Note that
|
|
1897 my 9.07 build of 19.14b17 and my (old) build of 19.13 both exhibit
|
442
|
1898 the same behavior. I've tried various hpux patches to no avail. If
|
373
|
1899 this problem cannot be solved before the release date, binary kits
|
|
1900 for HP *must* be linked statically against libc, otherwise this
|
|
1901 problem will show up. (This is directed at whoever will volunteer
|
|
1902 for this kit, as I won't be available to do it, unless 19.14 gets
|
|
1903 delayed until mid-june ;-). I think this problem will be an FAQ soon
|
|
1904 after the release otherwise.
|
|
1905
|
|
1906 Note: The above entry is probably not valid for XEmacs 21.0 and
|
|
1907 later.
|
|
1908
|
|
1909 *** The right Alt key works wrong on German HP keyboards (and perhaps
|
|
1910 other non-English HP keyboards too).
|
|
1911
|
|
1912 This is because HP-UX defines the modifiers wrong in X. Here is a
|
|
1913 shell script to fix the problem; be sure that it is run after VUE
|
|
1914 configures the X server.
|
|
1915
|
|
1916 xmodmap 2> /dev/null - << EOF
|
|
1917 keysym Alt_L = Meta_L
|
|
1918 keysym Alt_R = Meta_R
|
|
1919 EOF
|
|
1920
|
|
1921 xmodmap - << EOF
|
|
1922 clear mod1
|
|
1923 keysym Mode_switch = NoSymbol
|
|
1924 add mod1 = Meta_L
|
|
1925 keysym Meta_R = Mode_switch
|
|
1926 add mod2 = Mode_switch
|
|
1927 EOF
|
|
1928
|
442
|
1929
|
|
1930 *** XEmacs dumps core at startup when native audio is used. Native
|
|
1931 audio does not work with recent versions of HP-UX.
|
|
1932
|
|
1933 Under HP-UX 10.20 and later (e.g., HP-UX 11.XX), with native audio
|
|
1934 enabled, the dumped XEmacs binary ("xemacs") core dumps at startup if
|
|
1935 recent versions of the libAlib.sl audio shared library is used. Note
|
|
1936 that "temacs" will run, but "xemacs" will dump core. This, of course,
|
|
1937 causes the XEmacs build to fail. If GNU malloc is enabled, a stack
|
|
1938 trace will show XEmacs to have crashed in the "first" call to malloc().
|
|
1939
|
|
1940 This bug currently exists in all versions of XEmacs, when the undump
|
|
1941 mechanism is used. It is not known if using the experimental portable
|
|
1942 dumper will allow native audio to work.
|
|
1943
|
|
1944 **** Cause:
|
|
1945
|
|
1946 Recent versions of the HP-UX 10.20 (and later) audio shared library (in
|
|
1947 /opt/audio/lib), pulls in the libdce shared library, which pulls in a
|
|
1948 thread (libcma) library. This prevents the HP-UX undump() routine (in
|
|
1949 unexhp9k800.c) from properly working. What's happening is that some
|
|
1950 initialization routines are being called in the libcma library, *BEFORE*
|
|
1951 main() is called, and these initialization routines are calling
|
|
1952 malloc(). Unfortunately, in order for the undumper to work, XEmacs must
|
|
1953 adjust (move upwards) the sbrk() value *BEFORE* the first call to
|
|
1954 malloc(); if malloc() is called before XEmacs has properly adjusted sbrk
|
|
1955 (which is what is happening), dumped memory that is being used by
|
|
1956 XEmacs, is improperly re-allocated for use by malloc() and the dumped
|
|
1957 memory is corrupted. This causes XEmacs to die an horrible death.
|
|
1958
|
|
1959 It is believed that versions of the audio library past December 1998
|
|
1960 will trigger this problem. Under HP-UX 10.20, you probably have to
|
|
1961 install audio library patches to encounter this. It's probable that
|
|
1962 recent "fresh, out-of-the-box" HP-UX 11.XX workstations also have this
|
|
1963 problem. For HP-UX 10.20, it's believed that audio patch PHSS_17121 (or
|
|
1964 a superceeding one, like PHSS_17554, PHSS_17971, PHSS_18777, PHSS_21481,
|
|
1965 or PHSS_21662, etc.) will trigger this.
|
|
1966
|
|
1967 To check if your audio library will cause problems for XEmacs, run
|
|
1968 "chatr /opt/audio/lib/libAlib.sl". If "libdce" appears in the displayed
|
|
1969 shared library list, XEmacs will probably encounter problems if audio is
|
|
1970 enabled.
|
|
1971
|
|
1972 **** Workaround:
|
|
1973
|
|
1974 Don't enable native audio. Re-run configure without native audio
|
|
1975 support.
|
|
1976
|
|
1977 If your site supports it, try using NAS (Network Audio Support).
|
|
1978
|
|
1979 Try using the experimental portable dumper. It may work, or it may
|
|
1980 not.
|
|
1981
|
|
1982
|
373
|
1983 *** `Pid xxx killed due to text modification or page I/O error'
|
|
1984
|
|
1985 On HP-UX, you can get that error when the Emacs executable is on an NFS
|
|
1986 file system. HP-UX responds this way if it tries to swap in a page and
|
|
1987 does not get a response from the server within a timeout whose default
|
|
1988 value is just ten seconds.
|
|
1989
|
|
1990 If this happens to you, extend the timeout period.
|
|
1991
|
|
1992 *** Shell mode on HP-UX gives the message, "`tty`: Ambiguous".
|
124
|
1993
|
|
1994 christos@theory.tn.cornell.edu says:
|
|
1995
|
|
1996 The problem is that in your .cshrc you have something that tries to
|
197
|
1997 execute `tty`. If you are not running the shell on a real tty then tty
|
|
1998 will print "not a tty". Csh expects one word in some places, but tty
|
|
1999 is giving it back 3.
|
124
|
2000
|
197
|
2001 The solution is to add a pair of quotes around `tty` to make it a
|
|
2002 single word:
|
0
|
2003
|
454
|
2004 if (`tty` == "/dev/console")
|
124
|
2005
|
|
2006 should be changed to:
|
|
2007
|
454
|
2008 if ("`tty`" == "/dev/console")
|
124
|
2009
|
|
2010 Even better, move things that set up terminal sections out of .cshrc
|
|
2011 and into .login.
|
0
|
2012
|
|
2013
|
373
|
2014 ** SCO
|
|
2015 *** Regular expressions matching bugs on SCO systems.
|
0
|
2016
|
373
|
2017 On SCO, there are problems in regexp matching when Emacs is compiled
|
|
2018 with the system compiler. The compiler version is "Microsoft C
|
|
2019 version 6", SCO 4.2.0h Dev Sys Maintenance Supplement 01/06/93; Quick
|
|
2020 C Compiler Version 1.00.46 (Beta). The solution is to compile with
|
|
2021 GCC.
|
124
|
2022
|
88
|
2023
|
373
|
2024 ** Windows
|
1332
|
2025 *** Conflicts with FSF NTEmacs
|
|
2026
|
|
2027 Depending on how it is installed, FSF NTEmacs may setup various EMACS*
|
|
2028 variables in your environment. The presence of these variables may
|
|
2029 cause XEmacs to fail at startup, cause you to see corrupted
|
|
2030 doc-strings, or cause other random problems.
|
|
2031
|
|
2032 You should remove these variables from your environment. These
|
|
2033 variables are not required to run FSF NTEmacs if you start it by
|
|
2034 running emacs.bat.
|
|
2035
|
|
2036 *** XEmacs can't find my init file
|
|
2037
|
|
2038 XEmacs looks for your init in your "home" directory -- either in
|
|
2039 `~/.xemacs/init.el' or `~/.emacs'. XEmacs decides that your "home"
|
|
2040 directory is, in order of preference:
|
|
2041
|
|
2042 - The value of the HOME environment variable, if the variable exists.
|
|
2043 - The value of the registry entry SOFTWARE\XEmacs\XEmacs\HOME,
|
|
2044 if it exists.
|
|
2045 - The value of the HOMEDRIVE and HOMEPATH environment variables, if
|
|
2046 these variables both exist.
|
|
2047 - C:\.
|
|
2048
|
|
2049 To determine what XEmacs thinks your home directory is, try opening
|
|
2050 a file in the `~' directory, and you should see its expansion in the
|
|
2051 modeline. If this doesn't work, type ESC : (user-home-directory).
|
|
2052
|
|
2053 *** XEmacs can't find any packages
|
|
2054
|
|
2055 XEmacs looks for your packages in subdirectories of a directory which
|
|
2056 is set at compile-time (see `config.inc'), and whose default is
|
|
2057 `C:\Program Files\XEmacs'. XEmacs also looks in `~/.xemacs', where
|
|
2058 `~' refers to your home directory (see previous entry). The variable
|
|
2059 `configure-package-path' holds the actual path that was compiled into
|
|
2060 your copy of XEmacs.
|
|
2061
|
|
2062 The compile-time default location can be overridden by the EMACSPACKAGEPATH
|
|
2063 environment variable or by the SOFTWARE\XEmacs\XEmacs\EMACSPACKAGEPATH
|
|
2064 registry entry. You should check that these variables, if they exist,
|
|
2065 point to the actual location of your package tree.
|
|
2066
|
|
2067 *** XEmacs doesn't die when shutting down Windows 95 or 98
|
|
2068
|
|
2069 When shutting down Windows 95 or 98 you may see a dialog that says
|
|
2070 "xemacs / You must quit this program before you quit Windows".
|
|
2071 It is safe to
|
|
2072 "Click OK to quit the program and Windows",
|
|
2073 but you won't be offered a chance to save any modified XEmacs buffers.
|
|
2074
|
|
2075 *** Key bindings
|
|
2076
|
|
2077 The C-z, C-x, C-c, and C-v keystrokes have traditional uses in both
|
|
2078 emacs and Windows programs. XEmacs binds these keys to their
|
|
2079 traditional emacs uses, and provides Windows 3.x style bindings for
|
|
2080 the Cut, Copy and Paste functions.
|
|
2081
|
|
2082 Function XEmacs binding
|
|
2083 -------- --------------
|
|
2084 Undo C-_
|
|
2085 Cut Sh-Del
|
|
2086 Copy C-Insert
|
|
2087 Paste Sh-Insert
|
|
2088
|
|
2089 You can rebind keys to make XEmacs more Windows-compatible; for
|
|
2090 example, to bind C-z to undo:
|
|
2091
|
|
2092 (global-set-key [(control z)] 'undo)
|
|
2093
|
|
2094 Rebindind C-x and C-c is trickier because by default these are prefix
|
|
2095 keys in XEmacs. See the "Key Bindings" node in the XEmacs manual.
|
|
2096
|
|
2097 *** Behavior of selected regions
|
|
2098
|
|
2099 Use the pending-del package to enable the standard Windows behavior of
|
|
2100 self-inserting deletes region.
|
|
2101
|
|
2102 *** Limitations on the use of the AltGr key.
|
|
2103
|
|
2104 In some locale and OS combinations you can't generate M-AltGr-key or
|
|
2105 C-M-AltGr-key sequences at all.
|
|
2106
|
|
2107 To generate C-AltGr-key or C-M-AltGr-key sequences you must use the
|
|
2108 right-hand Control key and you must press it *after* AltGr.
|
|
2109
|
|
2110 These limitations arise from fundamental problems in the way that the
|
|
2111 win32 API reports AltGr key events. There isn't anything that XEmacs
|
|
2112 can do to work round these problems that it isn't already doing.
|
|
2113
|
|
2114 You may want to create alternative bindings if any of the standard
|
|
2115 XEmacs bindings require you to use some combination of Control or Meta
|
|
2116 and AltGr.
|
|
2117
|
|
2118 *** Limited support for subprocesses under Windows 9x
|
|
2119
|
|
2120 Attempting to use call-process to run a 16bit program gives a
|
|
2121 "Spawning child process: Exec format error". For example shell-command
|
|
2122 fails under Windows 95 and 98 if you use command.com or any other
|
|
2123 16bit program as your shell.
|
|
2124
|
|
2125 XEmacs may incorrectly quote your call-process command if it contains
|
|
2126 double quotes, backslashes or spaces.
|
|
2127
|
|
2128 start-process and functions that rely on it are supported under Windows 95,
|
|
2129 98 and NT. However, starting a 16bit program that requires keyboard input
|
|
2130 may cause XEmacs to hang or crash under Windows 95 and 98, and will leave
|
|
2131 the orphaned 16bit program consuming all available CPU time.
|
|
2132
|
|
2133 Sending signals to subprocesses started by call-process or by
|
|
2134 start-process fails with a "Cannot send signal to process" error under
|
|
2135 Windows 95 and 98. As a side effect of this, quitting XEmacs while it
|
|
2136 is still running subprocesses causes it to crash under Windows 95 and
|
|
2137 98.
|
524
|
2138
|
|
2139
|
|
2140 ** Cygwin
|
1318
|
2141 *** Signal 11 when building or running a dumped XEmacs.
|
|
2142
|
|
2143 See the section on Cygwin above, under building.
|
|
2144
|
1058
|
2145 *** XEmacs fails to start because cygXpm-noX4.dll was not found.
|
|
2146
|
|
2147 Andy Piper <andy@xemacs.org> sez:
|
|
2148
|
|
2149 cygXpm-noX4 is part of the cygwin distribution under libraries or
|
|
2150 graphics, but is not installed by default. You need to run the
|
|
2151 cygwin setup again and select this package.
|
|
2152
|
524
|
2153 *** Subprocesses do not work.
|
|
2154
|
|
2155 You do not have "tty" in your CYGWIN environment variable. This must
|
|
2156 be set in your autoexec.bat (win95) or the system properties (winnt)
|
|
2157 as it must be read before the cygwin DLL initializes.
|
|
2158
|
|
2159 *** ^G does not work on hung subprocesses.
|
124
|
2160
|
524
|
2161 This is a known problem. It can be remedied by defining BROKEN_SIGIO
|
|
2162 in src/s/cygwin.h, however this currently leads to instability in XEmacs.
|
|
2163 (#### is this still true?)
|
|
2164
|
|
2165 *** Errors from make like `/c:not found' when running `M-x compile'.
|
308
|
2166
|
524
|
2167 Make sure you set the environment variable MAKE_MODE to UNIX in your
|
|
2168 init file (.xemacs/init.el), Control Panel (Windows 2000/NT), or
|
|
2169 AUTOEXEC.BAT (Windows 98/95).
|
|
2170
|
|
2171 *** There are no images in the toolbar buttons.
|
|
2172
|
|
2173 You need version 4.71 of commctrl.dll which does not ship with windows
|
|
2174 95. You can get this by installing IE 4.0 or downloading it from the
|
|
2175 microsoft website.
|
308
|
2176
|
197
|
2177
|
124
|
2178 * Compatibility problems (with Emacs 18, GNU Emacs, or previous XEmacs/lemacs)
|
197
|
2179 ==============================================================================
|
88
|
2180
|
373
|
2181 *** "Symbol's value as variable is void: unread-command-char".
|
197
|
2182 "Wrong type argument: arrayp, #<keymap 143 entries>"
|
|
2183 "Wrong type argument: stringp, [#<keypress-event return>]"
|
88
|
2184
|
124
|
2185 There are a few incompatible changes in XEmacs, and these are the
|
|
2186 symptoms. Some of the emacs-lisp code you are running needs to be
|
|
2187 updated to be compatible with XEmacs.
|
|
2188
|
|
2189 The code should not treat keymaps as arrays (use `define-key', etc.),
|
|
2190 should not use obsolete variables like `unread-command-char' (use
|
197
|
2191 `unread-command-events'). Many (most) of the new ways of doing things
|
124
|
2192 are compatible in GNU Emacs and XEmacs.
|
88
|
2193
|
197
|
2194 Modern Emacs packages (Gnus, VM, W3, efs, etc) are written to support
|
|
2195 GNU Emacs and XEmacs. We have provided modified versions of several
|
|
2196 popular emacs packages (dired, etc) which are compatible with this
|
|
2197 version of emacs. Check to make sure you have not set your load-path
|
|
2198 so that your private copies of these packages are being found before
|
|
2199 the versions in the lisp directory.
|
124
|
2200
|
|
2201 Make sure that your load-path and your $EMACSLOADPATH environment
|
|
2202 variable are not pointing at an Emacs18 lisp directory. This will
|
|
2203 cripple emacs.
|
88
|
2204
|
124
|
2205 ** Some packages that worked before now cause the error
|
223
|
2206 Wrong type argument: arrayp, #<face ... >
|
124
|
2207
|
197
|
2208 Code which uses the `face' accessor functions must be recompiled with
|
|
2209 xemacs 19.9 or later. The functions whose callers must be recompiled
|
|
2210 are: face-font, face-foreground, face-background,
|
|
2211 face-background-pixmap, and face-underline-p. The .elc files
|
|
2212 generated by version 19.9 will work in 19.6 and 19.8, but older .elc
|
|
2213 files which contain calls to these functions will not work in 19.9.
|
124
|
2214
|
|
2215 ** Signaling: (error "Byte code stack underflow (byte compiler bug), pc 38")
|
88
|
2216
|
120
|
2217 This error is given when XEmacs 20 is compiled without MULE support
|
88
|
2218 but is attempting to load a .elc which requires MULE support. The fix
|
|
2219 is to rebytecompile the offending file.
|
|
2220
|
124
|
2221 ** Signaling: (wrong-type-argument ...) when loading mail-abbrevs
|
88
|
2222
|
197
|
2223 The is seen when installing the Insidious Big Brother Data Base (bbdb)
|
|
2224 which includes an outdated copy of mail-abbrevs.el. Remove the copy
|
|
2225 that comes with bbdb and use the one that comes with XEmacs.
|
|
2226
|
144
|
2227
|
|
2228 * MULE issues
|
197
|
2229 =============
|
144
|
2230
|
223
|
2231 ** A reminder: XEmacs/Mule work does not currently receive *any*
|
|
2232 funding, and all work is done by volunteers. If you think you can
|
|
2233 help, please contact the XEmacs maintainers.
|
|
2234
|
278
|
2235 ** XEmacs/Mule doesn't support TTY's satisfactorily.
|
223
|
2236
|
|
2237 This is a major problem, which we plan to address in a future release
|
|
2238 of XEmacs. Basically, XEmacs should have primitives to be told
|
|
2239 whether the terminal can handle international output, and which
|
|
2240 locale. Also, it should be able to do approximations of characters to
|
|
2241 the nearest supported by the locale.
|
|
2242
|
197
|
2243 ** Internationalized (Asian) Isearch doesn't work.
|
144
|
2244
|
|
2245 Currently, Isearch doesn't directly support any of the input methods
|
|
2246 that are not XIM based (like egg, canna and quail) (and there are
|
223
|
2247 potential problems with XIM version too...). If you're using egg
|
|
2248 there is a workaround. Hitting <RET> right after C-s to invoke
|
|
2249 Isearch will put Isearch in string mode, where a complete string can
|
|
2250 be typed into the minibuffer and then processed by Isearch afterwards.
|
|
2251 Since egg is now supported in the minibuffer using string mode you can
|
|
2252 now use egg to input your Japanese, Korean or Chinese string, then hit
|
|
2253 return to send that to Isearch and then use standard Isearch commands
|
|
2254 from there.
|
144
|
2255
|
223
|
2256 ** Using egg and mousing around while in 'fence' mode screws up my
|
|
2257 buffer.
|
144
|
2258
|
|
2259 Don't do this. The fence modes of egg and canna are currently very
|
|
2260 modal, and messing with where they expect point to be and what they
|
|
2261 think is the current buffer is just asking for trouble. If you're
|
|
2262 lucky they will realize that something is awry, and simply delete the
|
|
2263 fence, but worst case can trash other buffers too. We've tried to
|
|
2264 protect against this where we can, but there still are many ways to
|
|
2265 shoot yourself in the foot. So just finish what you are typing into
|
|
2266 the fence before reaching for the mouse.
|
223
|
2267
|
|
2268 ** Not all languages in Quail are supported like Devanagari and Indian
|
|
2269 languages, Lao and Tibetan.
|
|
2270
|
|
2271 Quail requires more work and testing. Although it has been ported to
|
|
2272 XEmacs, it works really well for Japanese and for the European
|
|
2273 languages.
|
|
2274
|
|
2275 ** Right-to-left mode is not yet implemented, so languages like
|
|
2276 Arabic, Hebrew and Thai don't work.
|
|
2277
|
|
2278 Getting this right requires more work. It may be implemented in a
|
|
2279 future XEmacs version, but don't hold your breath. If you know
|
|
2280 someone who is ready to implement this, please let us know.
|
|
2281
|
|
2282 ** We need more developers and native language testers. It's extremely
|
|
2283 difficult (and not particularly productive) to address languages that
|
|
2284 nobody is using and testing.
|
|
2285
|
|
2286 ** The kWnn and cWnn support for Chinese and Korean needs developers
|
|
2287 and testers. It probably doesn't work.
|
|
2288
|
|
2289 ** There are no `native XEmacs' TUTORIALs for any Asian languages,
|
454
|
2290 including Japanese. FSF Emacs and XEmacs tutorials are quite similar,
|
223
|
2291 so it should be sufficient to skim through the differences and apply
|
|
2292 them to the Japanese version.
|
|
2293
|
|
2294 ** We only have localized menus translated for Japanese, and the
|
|
2295 Japanese menus are developing bitrot (the Mule menu appears in
|
|
2296 English).
|
|
2297
|
|
2298 ** XIM is untested for any language other than Japanese.
|