GNU bug report logs - #12911
24.3.50; let users decide where (& perhaps whether) `emacs_backtrace.txt' files are written

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Package: emacs;

Reported by: "Drew Adams" <drew.adams <at> oracle.com>

Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2012 20:50:01 UTC

Severity: normal

Tags: wontfix

Found in version 24.3.50

Done: Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org>

Bug is archived. No further changes may be made.

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From: "Drew Adams" <drew.adams <at> oracle.com>
To: "'Juanma Barranquero'" <lekktu <at> gmail.com>
Cc: 'Daniel Colascione' <dancol <at> dancol.org>, 12911 <at> debbugs.gnu.org
Subject: bug#12911: 24.3.50; let users decide where (& perhaps whether)`emacs_backtrace.txt' filesare written
Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2012 10:42:01 -0800
> I find an irrelevant distraction that you're discussing "[...] the
> etiquette that applications generally respect on Windows, in order to
> respect the user and user data" when the thread is specifically about
> *one* file, in *one* specific situation, which is a crash backtrace.

It's in fact as far as you can get from irrelevant.  That's precisely what this
bug report is about: the placement by Emacs of that "*one* file, in *one*
specific situation, which is a crash backtrace", into a user folder.

So perhaps this bug report is altogether irrelevant and a distraction to you.
Fair enough.

What can I say, in that case?  We're back to agreeing to disagree.  I think that
that *one* case of disrespecting users should be removed; you think that that
regression should stay, because it is an improvement.

We apparently do not disagree about the other cases for this new feature: the
cases where user folders are not written into.  We both are in favor of the new
feature in those cases.

We apparently disagree only about that *one* corner case, where Emacs apparently
cannot do otherwise than to write its backtrace into a user folder.  That's the
case this bug report is about.





This bug report was last modified 12 years and 236 days ago.

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