1 Building and Installing Emacs on Windows
2 (from 95 to 7 and beyond)
4 Copyright (C) 2001-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 See the end of the file for license conditions.
9 Here are the concise instructions for configuring and building the
10 native Windows binary of Emacs, for those who want to skip the
11 complex explanations and ``just do it'':
13 Do not use this recipe with Cygwin. For building on Cygwin,
14 use the normal installation instructions, ../INSTALL.
16 If you have a Cygwin or MSYS port of Bash on your Path, you will be
17 better off removing it from PATH. (For details, search for "MSYS
20 1. Change to the `nt' directory (the directory of this file):
26 2a.If you use MSVC, set up the build environment by running the
27 SetEnv.cmd batch file from the appropriate SDK directory. (Skip
28 this step if you are using MinGW.) For example:
30 "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.1\Bin\SetEnv.cmd" /x86 /Debug
32 if you are going to compile a debug version, or
34 "C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.1\Bin\SetEnv.cmd" /x86 /Release
36 if you are going to compile an optimized version.
38 2b.From the COMMAND.COM/CMD.EXE command prompt type:
42 From a Unixy shell prompt:
46 command.com /c configure.bat
48 3. Run the Make utility suitable for your environment. If you build
49 with the Microsoft's Visual C compiler:
53 For the development environments based on GNU GCC (MinGW, MSYS,
54 Cygwin - but see notes about Cygwin make below), depending on how
55 Make is called, it could be:
65 (If you are building from Bazaar, say "make bootstrap" or "nmake
66 bootstrap" instead, and avoid using Cygwin make.)
68 With GNU Make, you can use the -j command-line option to have
69 Make execute several commands at once, like this:
73 (With versions of GNU Make before 3.82, you need also set the
74 XMFLAGS variable, like this:
76 gmake -j 2 XMFLAGS="-j 2"
78 The XMFLAGS variable overrides the default behavior of version
79 3.82 and older of GNU Make on Windows, whereby recursive Make
80 invocations reset the maximum number of simultaneous commands to
81 1. The above command allows up to 4 simultaneous commands at
82 once in the top-level Make, and up to 3 in each one of the
85 4. Generate the Info manuals (only if you are building out of Bazaar,
86 and if you have makeinfo.exe installed):
90 (change "make" to "nmake" if you use MSVC).
92 5. Install the produced binaries:
98 If these short instructions somehow fail, read the rest of this
103 If you want to build a Cygwin port of Emacs, use the instructions in
104 the INSTALL file in the main Emacs directory (the parent of this
105 directory). These instructions are for building a native Windows
108 If you used WinZip to unpack the distribution, we suggest to
109 remove the files and unpack again with a different program!
110 WinZip is known to create some subtle and hard to debug problems,
111 such as converting files to DOS CR-LF format, not creating empty
112 directories, etc. We suggest to use djtarnt.exe from the GNU FTP
115 In addition to this file, you should also read INSTALL.BZR in the
116 parent directory, and make sure that you have a version of
117 "touch.exe" in your path, and that it will create files that do not
120 * Supported development environments
122 To compile Emacs, you will need either Microsoft Visual C++ 2.0, or
123 later and nmake, or a Windows port of GCC 2.95 or later with MinGW
124 and Windows API support and a port of GNU Make. You can use the Cygwin
125 ports of GCC, but Emacs requires the MinGW headers and libraries to
126 build (latest versions of the Cygwin toolkit, at least since v1.3.3,
127 include the MinGW headers and libraries as an integral part).
129 The rest of this file assumes you have a working development
130 environment. If you just installed such an environment, try
131 building a trivial C "Hello world" program, and see if it works. If
132 it doesn't work, resolve that problem first! If you use Microsoft
133 Visual Studio .NET 2003, don't forget to run the VCVARS32.BAT batch
134 file from the `Bin' subdirectory of the directory where you have
135 installed VS.NET. With other versions of MSVC, run the SetEnv.cmd
136 batch file from the `Bin' subdirectory of the directory where you
137 have the SDK installed.
139 If you use the MinGW port of GCC and GNU Make to build Emacs, there
140 are some compatibility issues wrt Make and the shell that is run by
141 Make, either the standard COMMAND.COM/CMD.EXE supplied with Windows
142 or sh.exe, a port of a Unixy shell. For reference, below is a list
143 of which builds of GNU Make are known to work or not, and whether
144 they work in the presence and/or absence of sh.exe, the Cygwin port
145 of Bash. Note that any version of Make that is compiled with Cygwin
146 will only work with Cygwin tools, due to the use of Cygwin style
147 paths. This means Cygwin Make is unsuitable for building parts of
148 Emacs that need to invoke Emacs itself (leim and "make bootstrap",
149 for example). Also see the Trouble-shooting section below if you
150 decide to go ahead and use Cygwin make.
152 In addition, using 4NT or TCC as your shell is known to fail the
153 build process, at least since 4NT version 3.01. Use CMD.EXE, the
154 default Windows shell, instead. MSYS sh.exe also appears to cause
155 various problems, e.g., it is known to cause failures in commands
156 like "cmd /c FOO" in the Makefiles, because it thinks "/c" is a
157 Unix-style file name that needs conversion to the Windows format.
158 If you have MSYS installed, try "make SHELL=cmd.exe" to force the
159 use of cmd.exe instead of the MSYS sh.exe.
163 cygwin b20.1 make (3.75): fails[1, 5] fails[2, 5]
164 MSVC compiled gmake 3.77: okay okay
165 MSVC compiled gmake 3.78.1: okay okay
166 MSVC compiled gmake 3.79.1: okay okay
167 mingw32/gcc-2.92.2 make (3.77): okay okay[4]
168 cygwin compiled gmake 3.77: fails[1, 5] fails[2, 5]
169 cygwin compiled make 3.78.1: fails[5] fails[2, 5]
170 cygwin compiled make 3.79.1: fails[3, 5] fails[2?, 5]
171 cygwin compiled make 3.80: okay[6] fails?[7]
172 cygwin compiled make 3.81: fails fails?[7]
173 mingw32 compiled make 3.79.1: okay okay
174 mingw32 compiled make 3.80: okay okay[7]
175 mingw32 compiled make 3.81: okay okay[8]
179 [1] doesn't cope with makefiles with DOS line endings, so must mount
180 emacs source with text!=binary.
181 [2] fails when needs to invoke shell commands; okay invoking gcc etc.
182 [3] requires LC_MESSAGES support to build; cannot build with early
184 [4] may fail on Windows 9X and Windows ME; if so, install Bash.
185 [5] fails when building leim due to the use of cygwin style paths.
186 May work if building emacs without leim.
187 [6] need to uncomment 3 lines in nt/gmake.defs that invoke `cygpath'
188 (look for "cygpath" near line 85 of gmake.defs).
189 [7] not recommended; please report if you try this combination.
190 [8] tested only on Windows XP.
192 Other compilers may work, but specific reports from people that have
193 tried suggest that the Intel C compiler (for example) may produce an
194 Emacs executable with strange filename completion behavior. Unless
195 you would like to assist by finding and fixing the cause of any bugs
196 like this, we recommend the use of the supported compilers mentioned
197 in the previous paragraph.
199 You will also need a copy of the POSIX cp, rm and mv programs. These
200 and other useful POSIX utilities can be obtained from one of several
203 * http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/ ( GnuWin32 )
204 * http://www.mingw.org/ ( MinGW )
205 * http://www.cygwin.com/ ( Cygwin )
206 * http://unxutils.sourceforge.net/ ( UnxUtils )
208 If you build Emacs on 16-bit versions of Windows (9X or ME), we
209 suggest to install the Cygwin port of Bash. That is because the
210 native Windows shell COMMAND.COM is too limited; the Emacs build
211 procedure tries very hard to support even such limited shells, but
212 as none of the Windows developers of Emacs work on Windows 9X, we
213 cannot guarantee that it works without a more powerful shell.
215 Additional instructions and help for building Emacs on Windows can be
216 found at the Emacs Wiki:
218 http://www.emacswiki.org/cgi-bin/wiki/WThirtyTwoInstallationKit
222 http://ourcomments.org/Emacs/w32-build-emacs.html
223 http://derekslager.com/blog/posts/2007/01/emacs-hack-3-compile-emacs-from-cvs-on-windows.ashx
225 Both of those pages were written before Emacs switched from CVS to
226 Bazaar, but the parts about building Emacs still apply in Bazaar.
227 The second URL has instructions for building with MSVC, as well as
228 with MinGW, while the first URL covers only MinGW, but has more
233 Configuration of Emacs is now handled by running configure.bat in the
234 `nt' subdirectory. It will detect which compiler you have available,
235 and generate makefiles accordingly. You can override the compiler
236 detection, and control optimization and debug settings, by specifying
237 options on the command line when invoking configure.
239 To configure Emacs to build with GCC or MSVC, whichever is available,
240 simply change to the `nt' subdirectory and run `configure.bat' with no
241 options. To see what options are available, run `configure --help'.
242 Do NOT use the --no-debug option to configure.bat unless you are
243 absolutely sure the produced binaries will never need to be run under
246 Because of limitations of the stock Windows command shells, special
247 care is needed to pass some characters in the arguments of the
248 --cflags and --ldflags options. Backslashes should not be used in
249 file names passed to the compiler and linker via these options. Use
250 forward slashes instead. If the arguments to these two options
251 include the `=' character, like when passing a -DFOO=bar preprocessor
252 option, the argument with the `=' character should be enclosed in
255 configure --cflags "-DFOO=bar"
257 Support for options that include the `=' character require "command
258 extensions" to be enabled. (They are enabled by default, but your
259 system administrator could have changed that. See "cmd /?" for
260 details.) If command extensions are disabled, a warning message might
261 be displayed informing you that "using parameters that include the =
262 character by enclosing them in quotes will not be supported."
264 You may also use the --cflags and --ldflags options to pass
265 additional parameters to the compiler and linker, respectively; they
266 are frequently used to pass -I and -L flags to specify supplementary
267 include and library directories. If a directory name includes
268 spaces, you will need to enclose it in quotes, as follows
269 -I"C:/Program Files/GnuTLS-2.10.1/include". Note that only the
270 directory name is enclosed in quotes, not the entire argument. Also
271 note that this functionality is only supported if command extensions
272 are available. If command extensions are disabled and you attempt to
273 use this functionality you may see the following warning message
274 "Error in --cflags argument: ... Backslashes and quotes cannot be
275 used with --cflags. Please use forward slashes for filenames and
276 paths (e.g. when passing directories to -I)."
278 N.B. It is normal to see a few error messages output while configure
279 is running, when gcc support is being tested. These cannot be
280 suppressed because of limitations in the Windows 9X command.com shell.
282 You are encouraged to look at the file config.log which shows details
283 for failed tests, after configure.bat finishes. Any unexplained failure
284 should be investigated and perhaps reported as a bug (see the section
285 about reporting bugs in the file README in this directory and in the
288 * Optional image library support
290 In addition to its "native" image formats (pbm and xbm), Emacs can
291 handle other image types: xpm, tiff, gif, png, jpeg and experimental
294 To build Emacs with support for them, the corresponding headers must
295 be in the include path when the configure script is run. This can
296 be setup using environment variables, or by specifying --cflags
297 -I... options on the command-line to configure.bat. The configure
298 script will report whether it was able to detect the headers. If
299 the results of this testing appear to be incorrect, please look for
300 details in the file config.log: it will show the failed test
301 programs and compiler error messages that should explain what is
302 wrong. (Usually, any such failures happen because some headers are
303 missing due to bad packaging of the image support libraries.)
305 Note that any file path passed to the compiler or linker must use
306 forward slashes; using backslashes will cause compiler warnings or
307 errors about unrecognized escape sequences.
309 To use the external image support, the DLLs implementing the
310 functionality must be found when Emacs first needs them, either on the
311 PATH, or in the same directory as emacs.exe. Failure to find a
312 library is not an error; the associated image format will simply be
313 unavailable. Note that once Emacs has determined that a library can
314 not be found, there's no way to force it to try again, other than
315 restarting. See the variable `dynamic-library-alist' to configure the
316 expected names of the libraries.
318 Some image libraries have dependencies on one another, or on zlib.
319 For example, tiff support depends on the jpeg library. If you did not
320 compile the libraries yourself, you must make sure that any dependency
321 is in the PATH or otherwise accessible and that the binaries are
322 compatible (for example, that they were built with the same compiler).
324 Binaries for the image libraries (among many others) can be found at
325 the GnuWin32 project. PNG, JPEG and TIFF libraries are also
326 included with GTK, which is installed along with other Free Software
327 that requires it. These are built with MinGW, but they can be used
328 with both GCC/MinGW and MSVC builds of Emacs. See the info on
329 http://ourcomments.org/Emacs/w32-build-emacs.html, under "How to Get
330 Images Support", for more details about installing image support
331 libraries. Note specifically that, due to some packaging snafus in
332 the GnuWin32-supplied image libraries, you will need to download
333 _source_ packages for some of the libraries in order to get the
334 header files necessary for building Emacs with image support.
336 If GTK 2.0 is installed, addpm will arrange for its image libraries
337 to be on the DLL search path for Emacs.
339 For PNG images, we recommend to use versions 1.4.x and later of
340 libpng, because previous versions had security issues. You can find
341 precompiled libraries and headers on the GTK download page for
342 Windows (http://www.gtk.org/download/win32.php).
344 Versions 1.4.0 and later of libpng are binary incompatible with
345 earlier versions, so Emacs will only look for libpng libraries which
346 are compatible with the version it was compiled against. That
347 version is given by the value of the Lisp variable `libpng-version';
348 e.g., 10403 means version 1.4.3. The variable `dynamic-library-alist'
349 is automatically set to name only those DLL names that are known to
350 be compatible with the version given by `libpng-version'. If PNG
351 support does not work for you even though you have the support DLL
352 installed, check the name of the installed DLL against
353 `dynamic-library-alist' and the value of `libpng-version', and
354 download compatible DLLs if needed.
356 * Optional GnuTLS support
358 If configure.bat finds the gnutls/gnutls.h file in the include path,
359 Emacs is built with GnuTLS support by default; to avoid that you can
360 pass the argument --without-gnutls.
362 In order to support GnuTLS at runtime, a GnuTLS-enabled Emacs must
363 be able to find the relevant DLLs during startup; failure to do so
364 is not an error, but GnuTLS won't be available to the running
367 You can get pre-built binaries (including any required DLL and the
368 header files) at http://sourceforge.net/projects/ezwinports/files/.
370 * Optional libxml2 support
372 If configure.bat finds the libxml/HTMLparser.h file in the include path,
373 Emacs is built with libxml2 support by default; to avoid that you can
374 pass the argument --without-libxml2.
376 In order to support libxml2 at runtime, a libxml2-enabled Emacs must
377 be able to find the relevant DLLs during startup; failure to do so
378 is not an error, but libxml2 features won't be available to the
381 One place where you can get pre-built Windows binaries of libxml2
382 (including any required DLL and the header files) is here:
384 http://sourceforge.net/projects/ezwinports/files/
386 To compile Emacs with libxml2 from that site, you will need to pass
387 the "--cflags -I/path/to/include/libxml2" option to configure.bat,
388 because libxml2 header files are installed in the include/libxml2
389 subdirectory of the directory where you unzip the binary
390 distribution. Other binary distributions might use other
391 directories, although include/libxml2 is the canonical place where
392 libxml2 headers are installed on Posix platforms.
394 You will also need to install the libiconv "development" tarball,
395 because the libiconv headers need to be available to the compiler
396 when you compile with libxml2 support. A MinGW port of libiconv can
397 be found on the MinGW site:
399 http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/MinGW/Base/libiconv/
401 You need the libiconv-X.Y.Z-N-mingw32-dev.tar.lzma tarball from that
404 * Experimental SVG support
406 SVG support is currently experimental, and not built by default.
407 Specify --with-svg and ensure you have all the dependencies in your
408 include path. Unless you have built a minimalist librsvg yourself
409 (untested), librsvg depends on a significant chunk of GTK+ to build,
410 plus a few Gnome libraries, libxml2, libbz2 and zlib at runtime. The
411 easiest way to obtain the dependencies required for building is to
412 download a pre-bundled GTK+ development environment for Windows.
413 GTK puts its header files all over the place, so you will need to
414 run pkgconfig to list the include path you will need (either passed
415 to configure.bat as --cflags options, or set in the environment).
417 To use librsvg at runtime, ensure that librsvg and its dependencies
418 are on your PATH. If you didn't build librsvg yourself, you will
419 need to check with where you downloaded it from for the
420 dependencies, as there are different build options. If it is a
421 short list, then it most likely only lists the immediate
422 dependencies of librsvg, but the dependencies themselves have
423 dependencies - so don't download individual libraries from GTK+,
424 download and install the whole thing. If you think you've got all
425 the dependencies and SVG support is still not working, check your
426 PATH for other libraries that shadow the ones you downloaded.
427 Libraries of the same name from different sources may not be
428 compatible, this problem was encountered with libbzip2 from GnuWin32
429 with libcroco from gnome.org.
431 If you can see etc/images/splash.svg, then you have managed to get
432 SVG support working. Congratulations for making it through DLL hell
433 to this point. You'll probably find that some SVG images crash
434 Emacs. Problems have been observed in some images that contain
435 text, they seem to be a problem in the Windows port of Pango, or
436 maybe a problem with the way Cairo or librsvg is using it that
437 doesn't show up on other platforms.
439 * Optional extra runtime checks
441 The configure.bat option --enable-checking builds Emacs with some
442 optional extra runtime checks and assertions enabled. This may be
443 useful for debugging.
445 * Optional extra libraries
447 You can pass --lib LIBNAME option to configure.bat to cause Emacs to
448 link with the specified library. You can use this option more than once.
452 After running configure, simply run the appropriate `make' program for
453 your compiler to build Emacs. For MSVC, this is nmake; for GCC, it is
454 GNU make. (If you are building out of Bazaar, say "make bootstrap" or
455 "nmake bootstrap" instead.)
457 As the files are compiled, you will see some warning messages
458 declaring that some functions don't return a value, or that some data
459 conversions will be lossy, etc. You can safely ignore these messages.
460 The warnings may be fixed in the main FSF source at some point, but
461 until then we will just live with them.
463 With GNU Make, you can use the -j command-line option to have Make
464 execute several commands at once, like this:
466 gmake -j 4 XMFLAGS="-j 3"
468 The XMFLAGS variable overrides the default behavior of GNU Make on
469 Windows, whereby recursive Make invocations reset the maximum number
470 of simultaneous commands to 1. The above command allows up to 4
471 simultaneous commands at once in the top-level Make, and up to 3 in
472 each one of the recursive Make's; you can use other numbers of jobs,
475 If you are building from Bazaar, the following commands will produce
476 the Info manuals (which are not part of the Bazaar sources):
482 Note that you will need makeinfo.exe (from the GNU Texinfo package)
483 in order for this command to succeed.
487 To install Emacs after it has compiled, simply run `nmake install'
488 or `make install', depending on which version of the Make utility
491 By default, Emacs will be installed in the location where it was
492 built, but a different location can be specified either using the
493 --prefix option to configure, or by setting INSTALL_DIR when running
496 make install INSTALL_DIR=D:/emacs
498 (for `nmake', type "nmake install INSTALL_DIR=D:/emacs" instead).
500 The install process will run addpm to setup the registry entries, and
501 to create a Start menu icon for Emacs.
505 The following make targets may be used by users building the source
506 distribution, or users who have checked out of Bazaar after
507 an initial bootstrapping.
510 Builds Emacs from the available sources and pre-compiled lisp files.
513 Installs programs to the bin directory, and runs addpm to create
517 Removes object and executable files produced by the build process in
518 the current configuration. After make clean, you can rebuild with
519 the same configuration using make.
522 In addition to the files removed by make clean, this also removes
523 Makefiles and other generated files to get back to the state of a
524 freshly unpacked source distribution. Note that this will not remove
525 installed files, or the results of builds performed with different
526 compiler or optimization options than the current configuration.
527 After make distclean, it is necessary to run configure.bat followed
531 Removes object and executable files that may have been created by
532 previous builds with different configure options, in addition to
533 the files produced by the current configuration.
536 Removes the installed files in the bin subdirectory in addition to
537 the files removed by make cleanall.
540 Builds Emacs from the available sources and pre-compiled lisp files.
541 Packages Emacs binaries as full distribution and barebin distribution.
543 The following targets are intended only for use with the Bazaar sources.
546 Creates a temporary emacs binary with lisp source files and
547 uses it to compile the lisp files. Once the lisp files are built,
548 emacs is redumped with the compiled lisp.
551 Recompiles any changed lisp files after an update. This saves
552 doing a full bootstrap after every update. If this or a subsequent
553 make fail, you probably need to perform a full bootstrap, though
554 running this target multiple times may eventually sort out the
557 make maintainer-clean
558 Removes everything that can be recreated, including compiled lisp
559 files, to get back to the state of a fresh Bazaar tree. After make
560 maintainer-clean, it is necessary to run configure.bat and make
561 bootstrap to rebuild. Occasionally it may be necessary to run this
562 target after an update.
564 * Creating binary distributions
566 Binary distributions (full and barebin distributions) can be
567 automatically built and packaged from source tarballs or a bzr
570 When building Emacs binary distributions, the --distfiles argument
571 to configure.bat specifies files to be included in the bin directory
572 of the binary distributions. This is intended for libraries that are
573 not built as part of Emacs, e.g. image libraries.
575 For example, specifying
577 --distfiles D:\distfiles\libXpm.dll
579 results in libXpm.dll being copied from D:\distfiles to the
580 bin directory before packaging starts.
582 Multiple files can be specified using multiple --distfiles arguments:
584 --distfiles D:\distfiles\libXpm.dll --distfiles C:\jpeglib\jpeg.dll
586 For packaging the binary distributions, the 'dist' make target uses
587 7-Zip (http://www.7-zip.org), which must be installed and available
593 The main problems that are likely to be encountered when building
594 Emacs stem from using an old version of GCC, or old MinGW or Windows API
595 headers. Additionally, Cygwin ports of GNU make may require the Emacs
596 source tree to be mounted with text!=binary, because the makefiles
597 generated by configure.bat necessarily use DOS line endings. Also,
598 Cygwin ports of make must run in UNIX mode, either by specifying
599 --unix on the command line, or MAKE_MODE=UNIX in the environment.
601 When configure runs, it attempts to detect when GCC itself, or the
602 headers it is using, are not suitable for building Emacs. GCC version
603 2.95 or later is needed, because that is when the Windows port gained
604 sufficient support for anonymous structs and unions to cope with some
605 definitions from winnt.h that are used by addsection.c.
606 Older versions of the Windows API headers that come with Cygwin and MinGW
607 may be missing some definitions required by Emacs, or broken in other
608 ways. In particular, uniscribe APIs were added to MinGW CVS only on
609 2006-03-26, so releases from before then cannot be used.
611 When in doubt about correctness of what configure did, look at the file
612 config.log, which shows all the failed test programs and compiler
613 messages associated with the failures. If that doesn't give a clue,
614 please report the problems, together with the relevant fragments from
617 If configure succeeds, but make fails, install the Cygwin port of
618 Bash, even if the table above indicates that Emacs should be able to
619 build without sh.exe. (Some versions of Windows shells are too dumb
620 for Makefile's used by Emacs.)
622 If you are using certain Cygwin builds of GCC, such as Cygwin version
623 1.1.8, you may need to specify some extra compiler flags like so:
625 configure --with-gcc --cflags -mwin32 --cflags -D__MSVCRT__
628 However, the latest Cygwin versions, such as 1.3.3, don't need those
629 switches; you can simply use "configure --with-gcc".
631 We will attempt to auto-detect the need for these flags in a future
636 You should be able to debug Emacs using the debugger that is
637 appropriate for the compiler you used, namely DevStudio or Windbg if
638 compiled with MSVC, or GDB if compiled with GCC. (GDB for Windows
639 is available from the MinGW site, http://www.mingw.org/download.shtml.)
641 When Emacs aborts due to a fatal internal error, Emacs on Windows
642 pops up an Emacs Abort Dialog asking you whether you want to debug
643 Emacs or terminate it. If Emacs was built with MSVC, click YES
644 twice, and Windbg or the DevStudio debugger will start up
645 automatically. If Emacs was built with GCC, first start GDB and
646 attach it to the Emacs process with the "gdb -p EMACS-PID" command,
647 where EMACS-PID is the Emacs process ID (which you can see in the
648 Windows Task Manager), type the "continue" command inside GDB, and
649 only then click YES on the abort dialog. This will pass control to
650 the debugger, and you will be able to debug the cause of the fatal
653 The single most important thing to find out when Emacs aborts or
654 crashes is where did that happen in the Emacs code. This is called
657 Emacs on Windows uses more than one thread. When Emacs aborts due
658 to a fatal error, the current thread may not be the application
659 thread running Emacs code. Therefore, to produce a meaningful
660 backtrace from a debugger, you need to instruct it to show the
661 backtrace for every thread. With GDB, you do it like this:
663 (gdb) thread apply all backtrace
665 To run Emacs under a debugger to begin with, simply start it from
666 the debugger. With GDB, chdir to the `src' directory (if you have
667 the source tree) or to a directory with the `.gdbinit' file (if you
668 don't have the source tree), and type these commands:
670 C:\whatever\src> gdb x:\path\to\emacs.exe
671 (gdb) run <ARGUMENTS TO EMACS>
673 Thereafter, use Emacs as usual; you can minimize the debugger
674 window, if you like. The debugger will take control if and when
677 Emacs functions implemented in C use a naming convention that reflects
678 their names in lisp. The names of the C routines are the lisp names
679 prefixed with 'F', and with dashes converted to underscores. For
680 example, the function call-process is implemented in C by
681 Fcall_process. Similarly, lisp variables are prefixed with 'V', again
682 with dashes converted to underscores. These conventions enable you to
683 easily set breakpoints or examine familiar lisp variables by name.
685 Since Emacs data is often in the form of a lisp object, and the
686 Lisp_Object type is difficult to examine manually in a debugger,
687 Emacs provides a helper routine called debug_print that prints out a
688 readable representation of a Lisp_Object. If you are using GDB,
689 there is a .gdbinit file in the src directory which provides
690 definitions that are useful for examining lisp objects. Therefore,
691 the following tips are mainly of interest when using MSVC.
693 The output from debug_print is sent to stderr, and to the debugger
694 via the OutputDebugString routine. The output sent to stderr should
695 be displayed in the console window that was opened when the
696 emacs.exe executable was started. The output sent to the debugger
697 should be displayed in its "Debug" output window.
699 When you are in the process of debugging Emacs and you would like to
700 examine the contents of a Lisp_Object variable, pop up the QuickWatch
701 window (QuickWatch has an eyeglass symbol on its button in the
702 toolbar). In the text field at the top of the window, enter
703 debug_print(<variable>) and hit return. For example, start and run
704 Emacs in the debugger until it is waiting for user input. Then click
705 on the Break button in the debugger to halt execution. Emacs should
706 halt in ZwUserGetMessage waiting for an input event. Use the Call
707 Stack window to select the procedure w32_msp_pump up the call stack
708 (see below for why you have to do this). Open the QuickWatch window
709 and enter debug_print(Vexec_path). Evaluating this expression will
710 then print out the contents of the lisp variable exec-path.
712 If QuickWatch reports that the symbol is unknown, then check the call
713 stack in the Call Stack window. If the selected frame in the call
714 stack is not an Emacs procedure, then the debugger won't recognize
715 Emacs symbols. Instead, select a frame that is inside an Emacs
716 procedure and try using debug_print again.
718 If QuickWatch invokes debug_print but nothing happens, then check the
719 thread that is selected in the debugger. If the selected thread is
720 not the last thread to run (the "current" thread), then it cannot be
721 used to execute debug_print. Use the Debug menu to select the current
722 thread and try using debug_print again. Note that the debugger halts
723 execution (e.g., due to a breakpoint) in the context of the current
724 thread, so this should only be a problem if you've explicitly switched
728 This file is part of GNU Emacs.
730 GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
731 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
732 the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
733 (at your option) any later version.
735 GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
736 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
737 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
738 GNU General Public License for more details.
740 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
741 along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.