emacs-orgmode
[Top][All Lists]
Advanced

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: Lazy load of org-protocol


From: Max Nikulin
Subject: Re: Lazy load of org-protocol
Date: Thu, 10 Feb 2022 21:44:40 +0700
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:91.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/91.5.0

On 10/02/2022 02:22, Jim Porter wrote:
On 2/9/2022 8:46 AM, Max Nikulin wrote:

On a related note, there is still an issue with `--eval' in some cases. It fails to work with emacsclient when invoking an alternate editor:

   emacsclient --alternate-editor emacs --eval '(message "hi")'

If Emacs isn't already running, that will open a new buffer named '(message "hi")'. I think that's just a bug in how emacsclient handles `--eval', though fixing it would make org-protocol links work more reliably (if they used `--eval' as proposed, that is).

     emacsclient --alternate-editor '' --eval '(message "hi")'

But it makes it harder to use it during debugging when -Q -L ~/src/org-mode/lisp options are required.

Right, invoking the main Emacs instance as a daemon (i.e. when --alternate-editor is the empty string) works pretty differently from invoking the main Emacs instance directly (i.e. when --alternate-editor is "emacs" or somesuch). In the former case, emacsclient starts "emacs --daemon" and then tries to reconnect to the daemon; in the latter, it just takes the arguments passed to emacsclient and forwards them (well, some of them) to emacs. The end result is that it runs "emacs '(message "hi")'", which isn't correct.

It looks like a bug. I believed that other application may be specified as --alternate-editor, so --eval arguments should not be passed to it.

Actually I do not like --alternate-editor option at all. It is a single string, not an array of executable and options. It allows quotes but does not support escaping.

On linux a solution is to start emacs daemon from systemd session as a socket-activated application.




reply via email to

[Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread]