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bug#14091: 24.3.50; Crash switching buffer on TTY emacsclient session of
From: |
Jan Djärv |
Subject: |
bug#14091: 24.3.50; Crash switching buffer on TTY emacsclient session of NS emacs |
Date: |
Mon, 1 Apr 2013 12:06:37 +0200 |
Hello.
31 mar 2013 kl. 13:18 skrev Huw Giddens <hgiddens@gmail.com>:
> Hi Jan,
>
> Thanks for having a look at this. I haven't succeeded in reproducing it in
> either a clean environment or a minimal one with just server, desktop, and a
> few other things. Even with my full environment I can only reproduce it maybe
> one time every thirty or so. I still have a core from the crash the
> stacktrace in the report is from, along with the sandbox and binaries used to
> build it. I can give that to you if you'd like, but it does weigh in north of
> 200 megs compressed and probably depends on my copies of libxml2/gnutls.
>
I'm confident that FRAME_NS_P fixes the crashes. But why a command in a
terminal frame generates an event in a GUI frame is a mystery, that probably
can't be deduced by looking at a core in gdb.
Jan D.
> On 31/03/2013, at 9:02 PM, Jan Djärv <jan.h.d@swipnet.se> wrote:
>
>> Hello.
>>
>>> Emacs crashes sometimes under the following circumstances:
>>>
>>> * Ensure Emacs not currently running.
>>> * Position mouse cursor so that the new Emacs frame will appear under the
>>> cursor.
>>> * Start NS emacs session: ./nextstep/Emacs.app/Contents/MacOS/Emacs
>>> * Move the cursor out of the new, selected Emacs frame, and click in a
>>> new terminal emulator window.
>>> * Run "./nextstep/Emacs.app/Contents/MacOS/bin/emacsclient -t"
>>> * In the new TTY frame that has opened, C-x b RET; in my case, this
>>> should have switched to an existing scala-mode2 buffer, open via
>>> desktop mode. Emacs crashes after hitting enter.
>>
>> I can not reproduce it. The recepie depends on many things in your
>> environment, for starters, you obviously have server-start in .emacs (or
>> some other startup file). Can you reproduce this starting with Emacs -Q?
>>
>>>
>>> From my digging through the backtrace, the problem appears to be that
>>> we call ns_mouse_position because of a mouse event from the NS frame,
>>> inside ns_mouse_position we in some cases ignore the frame passed in
>>> (*fp) and instead try and find it ourselves. In this particular case,
>>> both last_mouse_frame and dpyinfo->x_focus_frame are false, leading us
>>> to call remember_mouse_glpyh on the value of SELECTED_FRAME() which is
>>> the TTY frame. We then access the wrong union member and bad things
>>> happen.
>>>
>>> There's a comment on line 1857 of nsterm.m asking if the
>>> f->output_data.ns check is still needed, I wonder if this was meant to
>>> be instead FRAME_NS_P(f). It strikes me as odd that we receive a mouse
>>> event on the NS frame in response to keyboard input on the TTY frame,
>>> but I don't understand at all what's actually meant to be happening
>>> there. I also think it's odd that the position passed to
>>> remember_mouse_glyph is derived from *fp which, as we see here, is not
>>> necessarily the same as f.
>>
>> Another frame may have grabbed the mouse, but the event comes to *fp. We
>> report the position for that other frame, and set *fp to it.
>>
>> The f->output_data.ns is wrong though, I will change that.
>>
>> Jan D.
>>
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