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#78777
30.1; insert-file-contents should not set buffer-file-name to nil
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> From: Jimmy Yuen Ho Wong <wyuenho <at> gmail.com>
> Date: Thu, 12 Jun 2025 20:34:30 +0100
> Cc: 78777 <at> debbugs.gnu.org
>
> On Thu, Jun 12, 2025 at 7:19 PM Eli Zaretskii <eliz <at> gnu.org> wrote:
>
> > From: Jimmy Yuen Ho Wong <wyuenho <at> gmail.com>
> > Date: Thu, 12 Jun 2025 17:58:34 +0100
> >
> >
> > When investigating https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-mode/issues/4782 and
> > https://github.com/purcell/emacs-reformatter/issues/63, I've discovered
> > the following bug in insert-file-contents.
> >
> > Reproduction:
> >
> > 1. echo "hello world" > ~/test.txt
> > 2. emacs -q ~/test.txt
> > 3. M-x eval-expression RET (add-hook 'after-change-functions (lambda (&rest _) (message
> "buffer-file-name: %s, current-buffer: %s" (buffer-file-name) (current-buffer))) nil t) RET
> > 4. Type something into the buffer
> > 5. M-x eval-expression RET (insert-file-contents (buffer-file-name) nil nil nil t) RET
> > 6. Switch to the *Messages* buffer and observe the buffer file name is nil.
> >
> > Expectation:
> >
> > insert-file-contents should not set buffer-file-name to nil
>
> I don't think it does. (buffer-file-name) returns nil when the call
> is evaluated in the minibuffer, and I thin that's what you see. After
> performing the above recipe the buffer-filename of the buffer that
> visits test.txt remains to be "test.txt", at least in my testing. So
> the only evidence that it's set to nil are the messages logged in
> *Messages*, and they are about a different buffer.
>
> When a lisp expression is evaluated in the minibuffer, the current buffer is the file buffer, not the minibuffer.
> You can easily verify this with M-x eval-expression RET (current-buffer) RET.
>
> The crux of the matter is the lambda added to after-change-function. `insert-file-contents` calls
> `signals_after_change` (fileio.c line 5007 on master), which will run the after-change-functions. It is at this
> moment the buffer-file-name is nil.
>
> In addition, the following will NOT result in insert-file-contents temporarily setting the buffer-file-name of the
> current buffer to nil:
>
> (let ((coding-system-for-read 'no-conversion)
> (coding-system-for-write 'no-conversion))
> (insert-file-contents (buffer-file-name) nil nil nil t))
>
> Which suggests some of the code conversion logic in the C function is erroneously setting the current
> buffer's file-name to nil, and then running the after-change-functions before resetting it.
I think your after-change-function is called not due to
insert-file-contents inserting the text from the file, but from the
functions that decode the file's text. To see if this is true, make
your after-change-function show the name of the current buffer. If
I'm right, you will see something like " *code conversion works" as
the name of the buffer, in which case indeed buffer-filename is
expected to be nil, and I don't see a bug here.
This bug report was last modified today.
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