wine/documentation/bugreports
Adam the Jazz Guy 1bc4c49df7 Added "The Easy Way" and "The Hard Way", largely favoring the easy way,
which uses my bug_report.pl script.
Added info on a command that can be run on all shells to print debug
msgs to a file and not to xterm.
1999-02-25 17:33:29 +00:00

93 lines
3.8 KiB
Text

How To Report A Bug
-------------------
There are two ways for you to make a bug report. One uses a simple perl
script, and is recommended if you don't want to spend a lot of time
producing the report. It is designed for use by just about anyone, from
the newest of newbies to advanced developers. You can also make a bug
report the hard way -- advanced developers will probably prefer this.
A. The Easy Way
1) Your computer *must* have perl on it for this method to work. To
find out if you have perl, run:
which perl
If it returns something like "/usr/bin/perl", you're in business.
Otherwise, skip on down to "The Hard Way".
If you aren't sure, just keep on going. When you try to run the script, it
will become *very* apparent if you don't have perl.
2) Change directory to <dirs to wine>/tools
3) Type in "./bug_report.pl" and follow the directions.
4) Post a message to the comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine newsgroup with the
"Nice Formatted Report" attatched. If possible, upload the full debug
output to a web/ftp server and provide the address in your message.
B. The Hard Way:
Some simple advice on making your bug report more useful (and thus more
likely to get answered and fixed):
1) Post as much information as possible.
This means we need more information than a simple
"MS Word crashes whenever I run it. Do you know why?"
Include at least the following information:
- Version of Wine you're using (run 'wine -v')
- Operating system you're using, what distribution (if any), and what
version
- Compiler and version (run 'gcc -v')
- Windows version, if installed
- Program you're trying to run, its version number, and a URL for
where the program can be obtained (if available)
- Command line you used to start wine
- Any other information you think may be relevant or helpful, such as
X server version in case of X problems, libc version etc.
2) Re-run the program with the -debugmsg +relay,+snoop option
(i.e., 'wine -debugmsg +relay,+snoop sol.exe').
If Wine crashes while running your program, it is important that we
have this information to have a chance at figuring out what is causing
the crash. This can put out quite a lot (several MB) of information,
though, so it's best to output it to a file. When the Wine-dbg> prompt
appears, type 'quit'.
To accomplish this, use the following commands:
all shells:
echo quit|wine -debugmsg +relay,+snoop [other_options] program_name >& filename.out; tail -n 100 filename.out > report_file
(This will print wine's debug msgs only to the file and then
auto-quit. It's probably a good idea to use this command, since wine
prints out so many debug msgs that they flood the terminal, eating CPU.)
tcsh and other csh-like shells:
wine -debugmsg +relay,+snoop [other_options] program_name |& tee filename.out
tail -100 filename.out > report_file
bash and other sh-like shells:
wine -debugmsg +relay,+snoop [other_options] program_name 2>&1 | tee filename.out
tail -100 filename.out > report_file
'report_file' will now contain the last hundred lines of the debugging
output, including the register dump and backtrace, which are the most
important pieces of information. Please do not delete this part, even
if you don't understand what it means.
3) Post your report to the newsgroup comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine
In your post, include all of the information from part 1), and insert
the text from the output file in part 2). If you do this, your chances
of receiving some sort of helpful response should be very good.
4) Questions and comments
If after reading this document there is something you couldn't figure
out, or think could be explained better, or that should have been
included, please post to comp.emulators.ms-windows.wine to let us know
how this document can be improved.