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bug#19868: 25.0.50; Compilation eats buffers


From: Richard Copley
Subject: bug#19868: 25.0.50; Compilation eats buffers
Date: Tue, 17 Feb 2015 00:25:41 +0000

On 15 February 2015 at 17:53, Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org> wrote:
>>
>> On Windows, with MinGW gcc.exe installed and on the path, save a file
>> "c:\temp\bug.c" containing these two lines:
>>
>> #include <windows.h>
>> int main () { Sleep (5000); }
>>
>> Compile with "M-x compile RET", supplying this compile-command:
>> gcc -mwindows -o bug.exe bug.c && bug.exe
>>
>> Within 5 seconds, execute "M-x compile" again and answer "yes" to kill
>> the existing process. The process doesn't respond to the signal,
>
> There are no signals on Windows.  Emacs simulates SIGINT and SIGKILL
> by other means, see sys_kill.
>
>> and Emacs hangs inside the call to `delete-process' in
>> `compilation-start'.
>>
>> When the process does eventually die and the `delete-process' call
>> returns, the current buffer has changed from *compilation* to the buffer
>> from which the compilation was launched (which will often be a source
>> code buffer).
>>
>> `compilation-start' then proceeds to erase the buffer and discard its
>> undo history. This is potentially very bad news for the user's source
>> code.
>
> I cannot reproduce this: for me, Emacs doesn't hang at all.  As soon
> as I answer YES to the kill process question, I see in Process
> Explorer that cmdproxy, cmd.exe, and the program that sleeps are all
> terminated, and the new compilation begins.  Like I'd expect.
>
> If I instrument the sys_kill function, I see that we first send a
> simulated Ctrl-C keystroke to the process, and a second afterwards
> terminate it forcefully, which is consistent with the calls to
> interrupt-process and delete-process in compilation-start.
>
> I tried this on Windows 7 and XP, and both show the same correct
> behavior.
>
> It could be that what you see is specific to Windows 8, or to 64-bit
> programs, or to how MinGW64 sets up the process in its startup code (I
> used MinGW32).

I see my problem no matter what compiler I use to build "bug.exe"
(old-fashioned MinGW32, and both the 32- and 64-bit MinGW-W64
GCC 4.9.2 toolchains). I'll try on Windows 7, and if I get time,
with 32-bit Emacs.

when building "bug.exe" with good old MinGW and with
both the 32- and 64-bit toolchains from MinGW-W64. I haven't tried it
with a 32-bit Emacs. I will try that, and on Windows 7, when I have time.

> You say above that Emacs hangs inside the delete-process call -- can
> you show a backtrace in that state, preferably from an unoptimized
> build?  I'd like to see where exactly it hangs.

I tried to work out how to control the optimization level when building
Emacs but I'm stumped. How do you do that? (If there are configure
flags, can they be mentioned in "configure --help"?)

FWIW, attached is the result of "thread apply all bt full" after typing
Ctrl-C in GDB while debugging an optimized Emacs that was hanging.
Looks like I'm doing something horribly wrong. Sorry about that.

> Also, is the -mwindows compiler switch a factor here, i.e. does the
> problem happen with a console application that sleeps?

Yes, -mwindows is needed. Console applications die as expected.

> (I'm not sure it should matter, because the process that we are
> killing is cmdproxy, not the program you compiled.)

Then I don't understand why a GUI program would ever die in response
to that. (Would runemacs.exe?) Really I didn't expect it to; that's
not the bug I was reporting (though I'm happy to help fix it if it is
a bug).

> In addition, can you look at the relevant processes in Process
> Explorer and seed if any of them are killed when you answer YES?

"cmdproxy.exe" and its descendants "cmd.exe" and "conhost.exe"
are killed, leaving just the orphaned "bug.exe".

>> I'm not sure where the buffer gets changed (presumably in a sentinel,
>> but `compilation-sentinel' looks OK to me).
>
> Run all this under GDB, put a breakpoint on a low-level function that
> switches buffers (e.g., in set_buffer_internal), and you will see in
> the backtrace which Lisp function triggers that.  It is advisable to
> manually load compile.el in advance, so that xbacktrace shows more
> details.

I'm sorry to say that, mysteriously, I can no longer reproduce the
effect where the current buffer changes during the `delete-process'
call and causes work to be lost. I can't see what I'm doing differently.
I might have to get back to you another time.

>> In GNU Emacs 25.0.50.1 (x86_64-w64-mingw32)
>>  of 2015-02-09 on MACHINE
>> Repository revision: 21d1f8b85eec8fc1f87bb30398e449f6b20b6ecc
>> Windowing system distributor `Microsoft Corp.', version 6.3.9600
>> Configured using:
>>  `configure --prefix /c/emacs/emacs-20150209-192633
>>  --disable-dependency-tracking
>>  --enable-locallisppath=%emacs_dir%/../site-lisp --with-wide-int
>>  --build=x86_64-w64-mingw32 'CPPFLAGS=-I G:/usr/include -I
>>  C:/GnuWin32/include' 'LDFLAGS=-L G:/usr/lib -L C:/GnuWin32/lib''
>
> Any idea why you are building --with-wide-int?  It's supposed to be a
> no-op in a 64-bit build.  (This is not related to the bug.)

I'll remove it, thanks.

Attachment: bt.txt
Description: Text document


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