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Edebug supports several execution modes for running the program you are debugging. We call these alternatives Edebug execution modes; do not confuse them with major or minor modes. The current Edebug execution mode determines how far Edebug continues execution before stopping—whether it stops at each stop point, or continues to the next breakpoint, for example—and how much Edebug displays the progress of the evaluation before it stops.
Normally, you specify the Edebug execution mode by typing a command to continue the program in a certain mode. Here is a table of these commands; all except for S resume execution of the program, at least for a certain distance.
edebug-stop
).
edebug-step-mode
).
edebug-next-mode
). Also see edebug-forward-sexp
in
Jumping.
edebug-trace-mode
).
edebug-Trace-fast-mode
).
edebug-go-mode
). See Breakpoints.
edebug-continue-mode
).
edebug-Continue-fast-mode
).
edebug-Go-nonstop-mode
). You
can still stop the program by typing S, or any editing command.
In general, the execution modes earlier in the above list run the program more slowly or stop sooner than the modes later in the list.
When you enter a new Edebug level, Edebug will normally stop at the
first instrumented function it encounters. If you prefer to stop only
at a break point, or not at all (for example, when gathering coverage
data), change the value of edebug-initial-mode
from its default
step
to go
, or Go-nonstop
, or one of its other
values (see Edebug Options). You can do this readily with
C-x C-a C-m (edebug-set-initial-mode
):
This command, bound to C-x C-a C-m, sets
edebug-initial-mode
. It prompts you for a key to indicate the mode. You should enter one of the eight keys listed above, which sets the corresponding mode.
Note that you may reenter the same Edebug level several times if, for example, an instrumented function is called several times from one command.
While executing or tracing, you can interrupt the execution by typing any Edebug command. Edebug stops the program at the next stop point and then executes the command you typed. For example, typing t during execution switches to trace mode at the next stop point. You can use S to stop execution without doing anything else.
If your function happens to read input, a character you type intending to interrupt execution may be read by the function instead. You can avoid such unintended results by paying attention to when your program wants input.
Keyboard macros containing the commands in this section do not
completely work: exiting from Edebug, to resume the program, loses track
of the keyboard macro. This is not easy to fix. Also, defining or
executing a keyboard macro outside of Edebug does not affect commands
inside Edebug. This is usually an advantage. See also the
edebug-continue-kbd-macro
option in Edebug Options.