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bug#67637: shell-command-default-error-buffer loss of warning
From: |
Eli Zaretskii |
Subject: |
bug#67637: shell-command-default-error-buffer loss of warning |
Date: |
Tue, 05 Dec 2023 14:36:39 +0200 |
tags 67637 wontfix
thanks
> From: Dan Jacobson <jidanni@jidanni.org>
> Date: Tue, 05 Dec 2023 10:27:51 +0800
>
> (Never mind https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=67542 .
> I have found the real problem.)
>
> $ emacs -Q --eval '(setq shell-command-default-error-buffer
> "shell-command-errors")'
> M-! ls zzzzzzzz
> (Shell command failed with code 2 and some error output to the
> "shell-command-errors" buffer)
>
> OK, we now grow to expect that we will get helpful notification that
> something about "some error output to the "shell-command-errors"
> buffer". That's great.
>
> Until one day when we instead do
> M-! ls .emacs zzzzzzzz #one file that exists and one that doesn't
>
> In this case the bug steps in:
> Even though there indeed is
> "some error output to the "shell-command-errors"
> but there is no message in the minibuffer about it!
>
> That indeed there is also some STDOUT produced does *not* mean
> we somehow are in some party mood and no longer care about the fact that
> indeed the same complete
> "Shell command failed with code 2 and some error output to the
> "shell-command-errors" buffer"
> is 100% still true.
>
> One might think that "oh, that's just the one line successful output
> covering up the error message in the minibuffer." But the same problem
> occurs with
> M-! ls . zzzzzzzz
All I can suggest is "don't do that". Not unless you intend keeping
in mind that the error messages are in a separate buffer.
This option exists for special situations, not for general-purpose
running of shell commands that might produce some important
information on standard error stream.
I don't think we should do anything here.