1 ;;; shadow.el --- locate Emacs Lisp file shadowings
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1995, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005,
4 ;; 2006, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6 ;; Author: Terry Jones <terry@santafe.edu>
8 ;; Created: 15 December 1995
10 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
12 ;; GNU Emacs is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
13 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
14 ;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option)
17 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
18 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
19 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
20 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
22 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
23 ;; along with GNU Emacs; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the
24 ;; Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
25 ;; Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
29 ;; The functions in this file detect (`find-emacs-lisp-shadows')
30 ;; and display (`list-load-path-shadows') potential load-path
31 ;; problems that arise when Emacs Lisp files "shadow" each other.
33 ;; For example, a file XXX.el early in one's load-path will shadow
34 ;; a file with the same name in a later load-path directory. When
35 ;; this is unintentional, it may result in problems that could have
36 ;; been easily avoided. This occurs often (to me) when installing a
37 ;; new version of emacs and something in the site-lisp directory
38 ;; has been updated and added to the emacs distribution. The old
39 ;; version, now outdated, shadows the new one. This is obviously
42 ;; The `list-load-path-shadows' function was run when you installed
43 ;; this version of emacs. To run it by hand in emacs:
45 ;; M-x load-library RET shadow RET
46 ;; M-x list-load-path-shadows
48 ;; or run it non-interactively via:
50 ;; emacs -batch -l shadow.el -f list-load-path-shadows
52 ;; Thanks to Francesco Potorti` <pot@cnuce.cnr.it> for suggestions,
53 ;; rewritings & speedups.
57 (defgroup lisp-shadow nil
58 "Locate Emacs Lisp file shadowings."
62 (defcustom shadows-compare-text-p nil
63 "*If non-nil, then shadowing files are reported only if their text differs.
64 This is slower, but filters out some innocuous shadowing."
68 (defun find-emacs-lisp-shadows (&optional path
)
69 "Return a list of Emacs Lisp files that create shadows.
70 This function does the work for `list-load-path-shadows'.
72 We traverse PATH looking for shadows, and return a \(possibly empty\)
73 even-length list of files. A file in this list at position 2i shadows
74 the file in position 2i+1. Emacs Lisp file suffixes \(.el and .elc\)
75 are stripped from the file names in the list.
77 See the documentation for `list-load-path-shadows' for further information."
79 (or path
(setq path load-path
))
81 (let (true-names ; List of dirs considered.
82 shadows
; List of shadowings, to be returned.
83 files
; File names ever seen, with dirs.
84 dir
; The dir being currently scanned.
85 curr-files
; This dir's Emacs Lisp files.
86 orig-dir
; Where the file was first seen.
87 files-seen-this-dir
; Files seen so far in this dir.
88 file
) ; The current file.
93 (setq dir
(directory-file-name (file-truename (or (car path
) "."))))
94 (if (member dir true-names
)
95 ;; We have already considered this PATH redundant directory.
96 ;; Show the redundancy if we are interactive, unless the PATH
97 ;; dir is nil or "." (these redundant directories are just a
98 ;; result of the current working directory, and are therefore
99 ;; not always redundant).
102 (not (string= (car path
) "."))
103 (message "Ignoring redundant directory %s" (car path
))))
105 (setq true-names
(append true-names
(list dir
)))
106 (setq dir
(directory-file-name (or (car path
) ".")))
107 (setq curr-files
(if (file-accessible-directory-p dir
)
108 (directory-files dir nil
".\\.elc?\\(\\.gz\\)?$" t
)))
111 (message "Checking %d files in %s..." (length curr-files
) dir
))
113 (setq files-seen-this-dir nil
)
117 (setq file
(car curr-files
))
118 (if (string-match "\\.gz$" file
)
119 (setq file
(substring file
0 -
3)))
120 (setq file
(substring
121 file
0 (if (string= (substring file -
1) "c") -
4 -
3)))
123 ;; FILE now contains the current file name, with no suffix.
124 (unless (or (member file files-seen-this-dir
)
125 ;; Ignore these files.
126 (member file
'("subdirs")))
127 ;; File has not been seen yet in this directory.
128 ;; This test prevents us declaring that XXX.el shadows
129 ;; XXX.elc (or vice-versa) when they are in the same directory.
130 (setq files-seen-this-dir
(cons file files-seen-this-dir
))
132 (if (setq orig-dir
(assoc file files
))
133 ;; This file was seen before, we have a shadowing.
134 ;; Report it unless the files are identical.
135 (let ((base1 (concat (cdr orig-dir
) "/" file
))
136 (base2 (concat dir
"/" file
)))
137 (if (not (and shadows-compare-text-p
138 (shadow-same-file-or-nonexistent
139 (concat base1
".el") (concat base2
".el"))
140 ;; This is a bit strict, but safe.
141 (shadow-same-file-or-nonexistent
142 (concat base1
".elc") (concat base2
".elc"))))
144 (append shadows
(list base1 base2
)))))
146 ;; Not seen before, add it to the list of seen files.
147 (setq files
(cons (cons file dir
) files
))))
149 (setq curr-files
(cdr curr-files
))))
150 (setq path
(cdr path
)))
152 ;; Return the list of shadowings.
155 ;; Return true if neither file exists, or if both exist and have identical
157 (defun shadow-same-file-or-nonexistent (f1 f2
)
158 (let ((exists1 (file-exists-p f1
))
159 (exists2 (file-exists-p f2
)))
160 (or (and (not exists1
) (not exists2
))
162 (or (equal (file-truename f1
) (file-truename f2
))
163 ;; As a quick test, avoiding spawning a process, compare file
165 (and (= (nth 7 (file-attributes f1
))
166 (nth 7 (file-attributes f2
)))
167 (eq 0 (call-process "cmp" nil nil nil
"-s" f1 f2
))))))))
170 (defun list-load-path-shadows ()
171 "Display a list of Emacs Lisp files that shadow other files.
173 This function lists potential load path problems. Directories in
174 the `load-path' variable are searched, in order, for Emacs Lisp
175 files. When a previously encountered file name is found again, a
176 message is displayed indicating that the later file is \"hidden\" by
179 For example, suppose `load-path' is set to
181 \(\"/usr/gnu/emacs/site-lisp\" \"/usr/gnu/emacs/share/emacs/19.30/lisp\"\)
183 and that each of these directories contains a file called XXX.el. Then
184 XXX.el in the site-lisp directory is referred to by all of:
185 \(require 'XXX\), \(autoload .... \"XXX\"\), \(load-library \"XXX\"\) etc.
187 The first XXX.el file prevents Emacs from seeing the second \(unless
188 the second is loaded explicitly via `load-file'\).
190 When not intended, such shadowings can be the source of subtle
191 problems. For example, the above situation may have arisen because the
192 XXX package was not distributed with versions of Emacs prior to
193 19.30. An Emacs maintainer downloaded XXX from elsewhere and installed
194 it. Later, XXX was updated and included in the Emacs distribution.
195 Unless the Emacs maintainer checks for this, the new version of XXX
196 will be hidden behind the old \(which may no longer work with the new
199 This function performs these checks and flags all possible
200 shadowings. Because a .el file may exist without a corresponding .elc
201 \(or vice-versa\), these suffixes are essentially ignored. A file
202 XXX.elc in an early directory \(that does not contain XXX.el\) is
203 considered to shadow a later file XXX.el, and vice-versa.
205 When run interactively, the shadowings \(if any\) are displayed in a
206 buffer called `*Shadows*'. Shadowings are located by calling the
207 \(non-interactive\) companion function, `find-emacs-lisp-shadows'."
210 (let* ((path (copy-sequence load-path
))
213 ;; If we can find simple.el in two places,
215 (if (or (file-exists-p (expand-file-name "simple.el" (car tem
)))
216 (file-exists-p (expand-file-name "simple.el.gz" (car tem
))))
217 (setq toplevs
(cons (car tem
) toplevs
)))
218 (setq tem
(cdr tem
)))
219 (if (> (length toplevs
) 1)
220 ;; Cut off our copy of load-path right before
221 ;; the last directory which has simple.el in it.
222 ;; This avoids loads of duplications between the source dir
223 ;; and the dir where these files were copied by installation.
224 (let ((break (car toplevs
)))
227 (if (eq (nth 1 tem
) break
)
231 (setq tem
(cdr tem
)))))
233 (let* ((shadows (find-emacs-lisp-shadows path
))
234 (n (/ (length shadows
) 2))
235 (msg (format "%s Emacs Lisp load-path shadowing%s found"
236 (if (zerop n
) "No" (concat "\n" (number-to-string n
)))
237 (if (= n
1) " was" "s were"))))
240 ;; We are interactive.
241 ;; Create the *Shadows* buffer and display shadowings there.
242 (let ((output-buffer (get-buffer-create "*Shadows*")))
243 (display-buffer output-buffer
)
244 (set-buffer output-buffer
)
247 (insert (format "%s hides %s\n" (car shadows
)
248 (car (cdr shadows
))))
249 (setq shadows
(cdr (cdr shadows
))))
251 ;; We are non-interactive, print shadows via message.
253 (message "This site has duplicate Lisp libraries with the same name.
254 If a locally-installed Lisp library overrides a library in the Emacs release,
255 that can cause trouble, and you should probably remove the locally-installed
256 version unless you know what you are doing.\n")
258 (message "%s hides %s" (car shadows
) (car (cdr shadows
)))
259 (setq shadows
(cdr (cdr shadows
))))
260 (message "%s" msg
))))))
264 ;;; arch-tag: 0480e8a7-62ed-4a12-a9f6-f44ded9b0830
265 ;;; shadow.el ends here