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bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers
From: |
Eli Zaretskii |
Subject: |
bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers |
Date: |
Wed, 23 Nov 2016 18:05:37 +0200 |
> From: Noam Postavsky <npostavs@users.sourceforge.net>
> Date: Tue, 22 Nov 2016 16:07:06 -0500
> Cc: 6991@debbugs.gnu.org, Juanma Barranquero <lekktu@gmail.com>, John Wiegley
> <johnw@gnu.org>,
> Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca>, Lars Magne Ingebrigtsen
> <larsi@gnus.org>,
> Drew Adams <drew.adams@oracle.com>
>
> > I'm confused: which problem the above is supposed to fix? Are we
> > still talking about putting null bytes in selections, or are we
> > talking about something else?
>
> The original bug report is about copying backtraces containing byte
> code to other applications (e.g., web browser, mail client, etc). The
> byte code in backtraces is currently printed with several characters
> backslash escaped (newline, formfeed, backslash, double quote, and
> characters higher than 0x80). I propose to extend this escaping to
> null bytes as well. That will (somewhat indirectly) solve the problem
> of copying backtraces to other applications, without lossyness (i.e.,
> (equal (read (print str)) str) remains true). It won't solve the
> problem of copying arbitrary text containing null bytes to other
> applications, it only avoids the most common case of the user needing
> to copy text containing null bytes.
I'm not necessarily opposed, but I never had any problems with binary
nulls, except when copying to clipboard.
> So in addition to that, your proposal to escape null bytes in xselect
> and w32select would still be needed to cover the general case. The
> drawback to replacing nulls in the {x,w32}select code is that the
> conversion is lossy, and there is a slightly increased chance of the
> user not noticing there was lossy conversion (relative to the current
> lossy "conversion" of truncating the string).
Yes, it's lossy, but what other alternative do we have, except losing
much more?
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, (continued)
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Eli Zaretskii, 2016/11/19
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, npostavs, 2016/11/19
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Eli Zaretskii, 2016/11/19
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, npostavs, 2016/11/19
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Eli Zaretskii, 2016/11/19
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, npostavs, 2016/11/19
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Eli Zaretskii, 2016/11/20
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Noam Postavsky, 2016/11/22
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Eli Zaretskii, 2016/11/22
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Noam Postavsky, 2016/11/22
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers,
Eli Zaretskii <=
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, npostavs, 2016/11/26
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Stefan Monnier, 2016/11/26
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Richard Stallman, 2016/11/26
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Noam Postavsky, 2016/11/26
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Clément Pit--Claudel, 2016/11/26
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Eli Zaretskii, 2016/11/26
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Noam Postavsky, 2016/11/27
- bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Richard Stallman, 2016/11/27
bug#6991: Please keep bytecode out of *Backtrace* buffers, Richard Stallman, 2016/11/19