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When a program loops infinitely and fails to return, your first problem is to stop the loop. On most operating systems, you can do this with C-g, which causes quit.
Ordinary quitting gives no information about why the program was
looping. To get more information, you can set the variable
debug-on-quit
to non-nil
. Quitting with C-g is not
considered an error, and debug-on-error
has no effect on the
handling of C-g. Likewise, debug-on-quit
has no effect on
errors.
Once you have the debugger running in the middle of the infinite loop, you can proceed from the debugger using the stepping commands. If you step through the entire loop, you will probably get enough information to solve the problem.
This variable determines whether the debugger is called when quit
is signaled and not handled. If debug-on-quit
is non-nil
,
then the debugger is called whenever you quit (that is, type C-g).
If debug-on-quit
is nil
, then the debugger is not called
when you quit. See Quitting.