--- Begin Message ---
Subject: |
26.0.90; No check for nil in some filenotify functions |
Date: |
Sat, 25 Nov 2017 22:18:07 -0800 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/26.0.90 (darwin) |
The documentation for find-file-name-handler says:
find-file-name-handler is a built-in function in ‘C source code’.
(find-file-name-handler FILENAME OPERATION)
Return FILENAME’s handler function for OPERATION, if it has one.
Otherwise, return nil.
However, several of the functions in filenotify use the return value of this
function without checking if it's nil or not:
(defun file-notify-rm-watch (descriptor)
"Remove an existing watch specified by its DESCRIPTOR.
DESCRIPTOR should be an object returned by `file-notify-add-watch'."
(when-let* ((watch (gethash descriptor file-notify-descriptors)))
(let ((handler (find-file-name-handler
(file-notify--watch-directory watch)
'file-notify-rm-watch)))
(condition-case nil
(if handler
;; A file name handler could exist even if there is no
;; local file notification support.
(funcall handler 'file-notify-rm-watch descriptor)
I've been getting several errors with a backtrace like nil(48). This is likely
because some package has done something wrong, but even still, filenotify
should be more defensive.
--
John Wiegley GPG fingerprint = 4710 CF98 AF9B 327B B80F
http://newartisans.com 60E1 46C4 BD1A 7AC1 4BA2
--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message ---
Subject: |
Re: bug#29450: 26.0.90; No check for nil in some filenotify functions |
Date: |
Mon, 05 Feb 2018 08:45:27 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/27.0.50 (gnu/linux) |
John Wiegley <address@hidden> writes:
Hi John,
> I've had file-notify back on for a few days now, and this has not happened
> again, so I'm fine with closing this issue.
I do it herewith.
> However -- and this is a separate bug -- I had to disable it again because it
> was stalling out Emacs regularly. I'd ran an operation that changed the state
> of the disk, and then Emacs would be locked up for minutes at a time until I
> hit C-g repeatedly. Finally, I ran Instruments to see what was going on, and
> it was stuck in a busy loop reading directories, spending 92% of its time
> calling delq over and over again.
In function `file-notify-handle-event', there's a commented `message'
call. Could you enable this, and send the output when this problem
happens, again?
> But that's a separate issue, and disabling file-notify cured the performance
> problem.
Do you write another bug report for this?
Best regards, Michael.
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