TidBITS#449/05-Oct-98
=====================

  Remember those Programming for Poets courses in college? This
  week, our Technical Editor Geoff Duncan waxes poetical about the
  capabilities of Apple's low-level debugger MacsBug when placed in
  the hands of merely geeky non-programmers. Also this week, we
  welcome two new sponsors - Maxum and Dantz, announce Conflict
  Catcher 8.0.2 and a public beta of the hot Eudora Pro 4.1, and
  relay news  of a free version of Nisus Writer you can download.

Topics:
    MailBITS/05-Oct-98
    New TidBITS Sponsors: Maxum & Dantz
    MacsBug for the Merely Geeky, Part One

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-449.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1998/TidBITS#449_05-Oct-98.etx>

Copyright 1998 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
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MailBITS/05-Oct-98
------------------

**Conflict Catcher Completes Mac OS 8.5 Compatibility** -- Casady
  & Greene today released a free update to Conflict Catcher 8.0,
  adding full Mac OS 8.5 compatibility. The previous version, 8.0.1,
  provided partial information for performing a Clean-Install System
  Merge with Mac OS 8.5; the new Conflict Catcher 8.0.2 completes
  the feature in anticipation of Apple's new operating system later
  this month. The 8.0.2 update also includes support for more
  monitor types, along with additional descriptions of startup
  files. For more information about Conflict Catcher 8, see "Nice
  Catch, Conflict Catcher" in TidBITS-446_. The 8.0.2 updater is a
  1.8 MB download. [JLC]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05086>
<http://www.casadyg.com/downloads/>


**Eudora Pro 4.1 in Public Beta** -- We reserve reporting on
  public betas to truly impressive releases, and Qualcomm's Eudora
  Pro 4.1 beta falls squarely into that category. Although the
  revision number is a small bump, the feature list will have long-
  time Eudora users drooling. Eudora Pro 4.1 now supports IMAP,
  includes an inline spell checker like Microsoft Word 98, offers a
  completely revamped Search command, provides an optional preview
  pane in mailbox windows, colorizes quoted text, and adds a Speak
  action to filters. A neat minor feature is the x-eudora-setting
  URL type that enables users to click an x-eudora-setting URL sent
  in an email message and edit that setting in a graphical interface
  - this feature provides access to Eudora's numerous tweaky
  settings without requiring ResEdit or AppleScript. Although the
  time-limited beta has been solid in our testing, it has known
  bugs, and we don't recommend you try it without a backup of your
  mail folder. The current beta, 4.1b26, is a 3 MB download. Do note
  that the README file's wording regarding Eudora not working with
  FreePPP is unfortunate and incorrect - Eudora works fine with
  FreePPP, but the OT/PPP and MacSLIP settings panel doesn't apply
  to FreePPP. [ACE]

<http://www.eudora.com/betas/>


**Nisus Writer 4.1 Free!** Nisus Software has taken the unusual
  step of releasing an older version of their powerful word
  processor, Nisus Writer 4.1, for free. Nisus Writer 4.1 offers
  features that remain unmatched in other word processors, including
  unlimited undo, discontiguous selection, customizable multiple key
  keyboard shortcuts, GREP searching, powerful macro capabilities,
  graphics creation, and support for WorldScript. Nisus Writer 5 has
  been out since 1996 (see "Nisus Writer Turns 5" in TidBITS-352_),
  and although it added many welcome features, Nisus Writer 4.1
  worked well for us for years. You can read more about Nisus in our
  three-issue review of Nisus 3.0 in TidBITS-116_, TidBITS-117_, and
  TidBITS-118_, and in our three-part review of Nisus 4.0 - "Text
  Processing," "Word and Document Processing," and "Multimedia
  Features" - in TidBITS-263_, TidBITS-264_, and TidBITS-265_. [ACE]

<http://www.nisus.com/nisusdl/login.asp?new=yes>
<http://www.nisus-soft.com/5.0_features.html>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1055>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1054>

  The free Nisus Writer 4.1 doesn't include a printed manual or
  technical support, but you can purchase both separately, and a
  copy of Joe Kissell's book, The Nisus Way, might prove useful (see
  "I Am Joe's Book" in TidBITS-319_). You can also upgrade to the
  current Nisus Writer 5.1 for $50 ($40 without a printed manual).
  Nisus Software deserves credit for this bold move - with the
  dominance of juggernauts like Microsoft Word, small companies must
  introduce as many people as possible to their products to stand a
  chance at surviving. Giving away an old version as an incentive
  could be successful guerilla marketing - in the first three days,
  over 6,000 people downloaded Nisus Writer 4.1. [ACE]

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1558284559/tidbitselectro00A/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=01089>


New TidBITS Sponsors: Maxum & Dantz
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  The Mac is back. A year or so ago, many people pointed to the
  thinning of the Macintosh magazines (and the Macworld/MacUser
  merger) as evidence of Apple's troubles. It was true - a
  significant reduction in advertising in major magazines is
  indicative of a shrinking industry. We felt the pinch as well,
  finding it nearly impossible to sign up new sponsors for TidBITS.
  Now, though, Apple is spending heavily on advertising in
  mainstream media, ad pages appear to be on the rebound in the Mac
  magazines, and we're seeing the upswing as well. Last week we
  welcomed Digital River, one of the major players behind the scenes
  in online software sales, and this week we have two new sponsors
  starting, Maxum Development and Dantz Development. The Macintosh
  resurgence is good for us all on both business and emotional
  levels - let's face it, plenty of us have many years invested in
  the Macintosh industry and it's a great feeling to pull back from
  the abyss.


**Maxum Development** -- First off, we're pleased to welcome Maxum
  Development to TidBITS. The community of Macintosh Internet
  developers started out small, and at trade shows the same faces
  appear time after time. Over the years, companies have come and
  gone, but two faces have remained: John O'Fallon, president of
  Maxum, and Mark Kriegsman, president of Clearway Technologies.
  Both companies made their names producing innovative add-ons for
  StarNine's popular Macintosh Web server, WebSTAR - NetCloak and
  NetForms from Maxum, FireSite and Nitro from Clearway.

  Now the two companies have teamed up to produce WebDoubler, a
  full-featured caching proxy server ideal for schools, libraries,
  businesses, and other organizations interested in improving Web
  browsing performance and filtering content inappropriate for the
  situation. WebDoubler fills a hole in the Mac world by providing
  Web caching along with content filtering and usage tracking. Such
  capabilities aren't new, but for those of us who rely entirely on
  Macs as Internet clients and Internet servers, it's been a
  difficult combination of features to find. If you're in charge of
  a Macintosh network connected to the Internet, take a look at the
  30-day demo of WebDoubler to see if it can solve any of your
  problems. And if you follow the link in sponsorship area above to
  purchase WebDoubler, you can get it for 20 percent off.

<http://www.maxum.com/WebDoubler/>


**Dantz Development** -- Our second new sponsor has supported
  TidBITS in the past, and it's great to have them back. Dantz
  Development is one of the longest-standing Macintosh developers.
  Their flagship product, Retrospect, is generally acknowledged to
  be the most powerful and flexible backup program on the Macintosh.
  PC Week even once recommended buying a Macintosh and Retrospect to
  back up networks of PCs.

  The latest version, Retrospect 4.1, provides an emergency CD-ROM
  that can boot many Macintosh models (handy when you're trying to
  restore an entire hard disk from a backup). More important,
  though, Retrospect 4.1 adds the capability to back up to standard
  FTP servers via Internet backup sets (coincidentally, John
  O'Fallon of Maxum just mentioned that they've put some work into
  making their Macintosh FTP server Rumpus work better with
  Retrospect 4.1). Especially when you combine it with Retrospect's
  built-in compression and encryption, backup via FTP is ideal for
  individuals or organizations who don't want to buy or manage a
  backup device (offers for Internet backup services are included)
  or for people who want to increase their peace of mind by adding
  an off-site backup of important files. I fall squarely into that
  latter category, although, as always, I'm hoping that I never need
  to resort to that secondary backup.

<http://www.dantz.com/dantz_products/prod_intros/retro4_1_intro.html>


MacsBug for the Merely Geeky, Part One
--------------------------------------
  by Geoff Duncan <geoff@tidbits.com>

  Here's a fun game: let's plot Macintosh software on a map of the
  Earth, based on how Mac-like the software is.

  We would naturally plot the points representing the easiest, most
  intuitive software for the Mac OS at Apple headquarters in
  Cupertino, California. As we plotted more points, we'd find the
  surrounding San Francisco area would be peppered with thousands of
  dots, each representing a Macintosh program. In fact, most
  Macintosh software - even hard-to-learn programs or obtuse,
  cryptic utilities meant for power users - could be plotted within,
  say, a few thousand miles of Cupertino. That's not the kind of
  travel you'd undertake without packing a toothbrush and some clean
  underwear, but, for many people, getting there is at least
  conceivable in today's world.

  However, on the opposite side of the globe, well south of
  Mauritius in the Indian Ocean, we would find a dot representing
  MacsBug.

  MacsBug is Apple's low-level assembly language Macintosh debugger.
  If I remember correctly, MacsBug stands for "Motorola Advanced
  Computer System Debugger" and predates the Macintosh, first
  appearing in 1981. There's nothing Mac-like about MacsBug: it has
  no menu bar, no menus, no windows, no icons, no dialogs, and no
  buttons. Its display is a jumble of numbers, letters, and some
  cryptic words. You communicate with MacsBug using a command line,
  precisely the thing many people sought to escape with the Mac.
  MacsBug doesn't provide intuitive feedback about practically
  anything - in short, MacsBug violates every aspect of the
  Macintosh ideal.

  MacsBug breaks these rules because it was designed to live
  underneath the Macintosh system software so programmers can see
  what's going on in overwhelming detail. MacsBug provides direct
  access to things users were never meant to see: system globals,
  application heap zones, CPU registers, task queues, and executing
  code.

  Sounds scary, right? It is. But MacsBug is powerful, and power is
  seductive. Mastering MacsBug would require most Macintosh users to
  apply for passports and visas, receive immunizations and
  inoculations, make expensive travel arrangements, endure radical
  culture shock, leave their real lives, and maybe even grow gills.
  However, you can benefit from MacsBug without travelling to the
  other side of the world (or learning to read assembly language).
  MacsBug's not for everybody, but if you've been willing to travel
  from Cupertino to, say, Ohio, for another Macintosh program (like
  DeBabelizer or ResEdit), you should be able to put MacsBug to work
  for you. MacsBug can provide detailed information about your
  computer and problems you might be having, and - perhaps most
  significantly - save work in other applications when an otherwise
  fatal system error occurs.


**Installing MacsBug** -- You can download MacsBug for free from
  Apple. I recommend the most recent version available - even if
  it's not a final release - because it's likely to work with the
  latest versions of the Mac OS. You can also download a PDF version
  of Apple's pre-PowerPC MacsBug documentation, which makes for
  interesting reading if you're curious about MacsBug's more
  abstruse capabilities. As of this writing, the current version of
  MacsBug is 6.5.4.a6.

<http://developer.apple.com/dev/tools/debuggers/MacsBug/>

  You install MacsBug by dragging it into your System Folder and
  restarting your Mac (feel free to ignore other files that come
  with it). Your Mac OS startup screen will say "Debugger installed"
  to let you know MacsBug is there. MacsBug works with any Mac newer
  than the Mac Plus and System 6.0 or higher; it might even work
  with earlier system software. Although for years MacsBug occupied
  only a few hundred kilobytes of RAM, changes to the Macintosh
  architecture over the last few years mean MacsBug commonly
  requires 1 to 1.5 MB of RAM on modern Macs.

  Recent versions of MacsBug come with a program called MacsBugApp,
  which, despite limitations, is a stand-alone application that
  behaves much like MacsBug itself. It's occasionally flaky, but you
  can use it to follow along with some of the examples below without
  installing MacsBug itself.


**Invoking MacsBug** -- Once you've installed MacsBug, you might
  wonder where it is - nothing on your screen changes. There are two
  ways to enter MacsBug: deliberately and dramatically.

  To enter MacsBug deliberately, press Command-Power, where Power is
  the key you use to turn on your Mac from the keyboard. This
  combination works on most Macs; older Macintosh models (up to the
  NuBus Power Macs, I believe) may also have a physical interrupt
  switch on the front, side, or back of the machine. If you've ever
  pressed a switch and seen a mysterious dialog containing only a
  greater-than symbol (">"), that's the interrupt switch. (By the
  way, that dialog is referred to as MicroBug or the programmer's
  window; to get out, your best bet is to type the letter G and
  press Return. You'll never see MicroBug with MacsBug installed,
  but Apple has a brief TechNote about it if you're curious.)

<http://developer.apple.com/technotes/tn/tn1136.html>

  You can also invoke MacsBug by holding down the Control key when
  your Mac starts up. Only programmers typically need to do this,
  but I was once surprised by an old keyboard with sticky modifier
  keys.

  The dramatic way to enter MacsBug is to experience a system error.
  Normally, a system error produces a bomb dialog, or a program
  quits, resulting in a dialog saying "An error of type -1
  occurred." or something equally unhelpful. Now, MacsBug
  instantaneously appears, completely taking over your startup
  monitor. You need to be careful about how you exit MacsBug in
  response to a system error; your options are covered below.

  First, let's describe MacsBug's display - it's divided into four
  areas. At the bottom is the command line, where you type MacsBug
  commands. Immediately above the command line is the PC region: PC
  stands for "program counter," and it displays the next instruction
  the CPU will execute, along with the disassembly of that
  instruction. This information is for programmers: it can give you
  an idea of where a system error occurred, but things like
  instruction pipelining (where the CPU executes more than one
  instruction at a time) sometimes mean the PC may not point to the
  actual error. Programmers sometimes need to disassemble forward
  and backward from the current PC to find the problem.

  The largest area of the MacsBug display is called the output
  region, and it's where MacsBug shows the results of your commands.
  Although it doesn't have scrollbars, the Page Up, Page Down, Home,
  and End keys do scroll the output region's history. When you first
  enter MacsBug, it displays the version and copyright information
  in the output region, along with the reason MacsBug was entered.

  Finally, along the entire left side of the MacsBug display is the
  status region, most of which displays CPU registers (R0 to R31 for
  PowerPC code, D0 to D7 and A0 to A7 for 68K code), along with the
  current stack pointer and, for 68K code, the stack itself. Don't
  worry about the stack and CPU registers. In the middle of all
  this, however, is some important information: beneath the label
  CurAppName, MacsBug shows the name of the currently executing
  application. If you entered MacsBug because of a system error,
  this is the program that had control when the error occurred,
  although it may _not_ be the program you were using. Programs
  continue to execute when they aren't frontmost, and many things we
  think of as extensions - like Web Sharing and File Sharing - are
  in fact faceless applications that run in the background. Further,
  although CurAppName always says what program was in control when a
  problem occurred, the real problem could be in an extension,
  driver, or other software that underlies an application.

  Near CurAppName, MacsBug also displays VM if you're using virtual
  memory, vM to indicate MacsBug was invoked while the Memory
  Manager was swapping between real and virtual memory, or RM to
  show you're using real memory. MacsBug also shows a number from 0
  to 7 that indicates the interrupt level before MacsBug was
  invoked. Interrupts tell your CPU to set aside whatever it's doing
  and immediately take up a more important operation - they're used
  to handle mouse actions, screen redraws, network activity, serial
  port operations, and many other functions. MacsBug itself takes
  control of your system by generating a level 7 interrupt,
  otherwise known as a Non-Maskable Interrupt or NMI. (If you enter
  MacsBug deliberately, it tells you that the reason is an NMI
  rather than a system error.) An NMI overrides everything and can't
  be interrupted by other tasks. Generally, this isn't a problem:
  your applications aren't even aware they've been suspended.
  However, other computers on a network can notice that your Mac is
  no longer responding. After a few minutes, AppleShare servers will
  assume your Mac is gone and drop their connections; similarly,
  Internet servers might drop connections, and ISPs might hang up on
  you.


**Stop This Crazy Thing!** Now that you're in MacsBug, the first
  thing most sensible people want to do is get out. If you invoked
  MacsBug deliberately, this is simple: just type G then press
  Return, or press Command-G. This stands for Go, and tells your Mac
  to resume operating right where it left off. MacsBug then
  vanishes, your Mac's normal display reappears, and your Macintosh
  universe resumes its normal, harmonious state.

  If you entered MacsBug as the result of a system error, try the
  following options. First, under CurAppName in the status region,
  note the name of the program executing when the error occurred.
  Also look at the bottom of the output region for the reason
  MacsBug was triggered. It might say something like "bus error" or
  "illegal instruction." If you need to see what you were doing on
  screen when the error occurred, pressing Escape toggles between
  your normal Macintosh display and MacsBug. Don't become confused:
  pressing Escape _doesn't_ exit MacsBug, it just _shows_ your
  screen at the instant MacsBug was triggered, which can be handy
  for writing down that paragraph of erudition that you otherwise
  stand no chance of recreating. Press Escape again to return to
  MacsBug.

* Next, try typing G then pressing Return, or pressing Command-G.
  Most likely, you'll immediately reenter MacsBug with the same
  error, but it's worth a shot.

* Type ES then press Return. ES stands for Exit to Shell, and
  tells MacsBug to terminate the current application and return you
  to the Finder. This is roughly equivalent to forcing an
  application to quit by pressing Command-Option-Escape. You may
  have to try ES a few times - just make sure you check which
  program is currently executing before repeating the command. If ES
  returns you to the Finder, save all your work and restart. If an
  application appears to have locked up, you can enter MacsBug
  intentionally and use ES to terminate that program. Use this
  capability with discretion, however: there's no telling what might
  be left in your computer's memory, whether any files that program
  had open will be closed properly, whether preferences might be
  damaged, etc. If you do this, restart as soon as possible.

* If none of these techniques work - you keep popping into MacsBug
  with a system error - you may have no choice but to restart, even
  though it means losing unsaved work. You do this by typing RB (for
  ReBoot), then pressing Return. The RB command unmounts your
  startup volume and then restarts the machine. If you have multiple
  volumes, this action can result in delays the next time you need
  to use those disks: since they weren't properly unmounted, the Mac
  makes sure they're okay before mounting them on the desktop. You
  can alternatively use the RS command (for ReStart) to unmount all
  drives, then restart the system. Some programmers may tell you the
  RS command is dangerous, since it could write corrupted volume
  information back to your drives, potentially leading to data loss
  or a session with a disk recovery tool. In my experience, everyday
  problems with the RS command are quite rare, and changes to both
  the RS and RB commands in recent versions of MacsBug reduce the
  danger further. However, either command is preferable to turning
  your computer off and on.

  Note that there are crashes from which MacsBug can't save you, and
  there are crashes that will still freeze your Mac, failing to
  invoke MacsBug at all. (The latter are often caused by poor or
  non-existent error checking when a program is low on memory.) In
  these cases, MacsBug can't help you, but having it installed
  doesn't hurt.


**Impress Your Friends** -- Now that you can get into and out of
  MacsBug, let's look at some simple tricks to enhance your guru
  status.

  Being a low-level programmer's tool, MacsBug's default numbering
  system is base 16, or hexadecimal. Hexadecimal digits run from
  zero to fifteen, with ten through fifteen represented by the
  letters A through F. So, the number 200 is written as C8 in
  hexadecimal, which means "twelve times sixteen, plus eight."
  Hexadecimal is useful for representing binary values, and if
  you've done much HTML authoring, you've seen six-digit hexadecimal
  values like 3366CC used to specify colors. This might be wonderful
  from MacsBug's point of view, but hexadecimal isn't intuitive for
  people like me who have trouble making change for a dollar.
  Fortunately, you can tell MacsBug a number is a normal decimal
  number by preceding it with a pound symbol ("#"). Thus, if you
  type 42, MacsBug sees it as hexadecimal and thinks you mean 66
  (four times sixteen, plus two), but if you type #42, MacsBug
  thinks you mean 42.

  One instance where this esoteric knowledge becomes practical is in
  conjunction with MacsBug's error command, which returns a short
  description of cryptic Mac OS error numbers. If a program
  complains that "an error -43 occurred" you can identify the error
  number by popping into MacsBug, typing "error #-43", and pressing
  Return:

 $FFD5     #-43  fnfErr - File not found

  The application is telling you it tried to open a file, but
  couldn't find it. Depending on the program, this might be caused
  by a missing extension, plug-in, or document, but at least it
  gives you something to go by. The error command can score big
  points: I once got a frantic call from a small business owner who
  had an AppleScript that essentially looked up records in a
  database and printed a variety of labels. "I think it has
  corrupted the hard drive! Every time I need to use the machine, it
  says there's an error -1711 - big error numbers are really bad,
  right?" So, assuring the caller that the number of digits in an
  error has nothing to do with its severity, I popped into MacsBug
  and looked up the number:

 $F951   #-1711  errAEWaitCanceled - in AESend, the user cancelled
  out of wait loop for reply or receipt

  It turned out this script had been designed to run overnight,
  since it spent most of its time waiting around for other
  applications. However, the script was instead being run during
  lunch breaks and other odd times. Whenever someone needed to use
  the machine, they pressed Command-Period to stop the script, which
  promptly produced this error. The situation was harmless, but in
  this case having MacsBug installed helped me reduce my caller's
  blood pressure and gave me a low-stress consulting job fixing the
  script.

  You can also use MacsBug to convert between decimal and
  hexadecimal, which can be useful with other MacsBug commands.
  Since MacsBug assumes numbers are hexadecimal; entering "3366CC"
  on MacsBug's command line yields this result:

 3366cc = $003366CC   #3368652   #3368652   '*3fA' (between #3M and #4M)

  This shows the number 3366CC as a hexadecimal value, an unsigned
  decimal value, a signed decimal value, an ASCII value, and (often)
  a semi-human-friendly conversion to memory units, in this case
  between three and four megabytes. If you're converting from
  hexadecimal to decimal, the number you want is the third - the
  signed ASCII value (notice that it's preceded with a pound sign).
  Thus, 3366CC in hexadecimal is equal to 3,368,652 in decimal. The
  second (unsigned) decimal value will be identical for non-negative
  numbers, but wildly different for negative numbers. Convert #-43
  and see what you get. You can use this trick to convert numbers up
  to about 2.1 billion.

  Recent versions of MacsBug include basic mouse support in the
  output region, enabling you to click on a word, number, or term in
  order to place it in the command line. Although this mouse support
  drives some programmers insane (say, if the mouse moves while
  debugging a problem with a pop-up menu), you can quickly convert a
  number from hexadecimal to decimal by clicking it and pressing
  Return.

  Finally, you can do math using MacsBug - try entering 32 + 32, or
  #32 + #32. Programmers occasionally rave about this capability,
  since they often need to play with hexadecimal values after an
  application has crashed. But most people should stick to the
  Calculator desk accessory.


**Break Point** -- In the next part of this article, we'll look at
  some MacsBug commands that provide important information about
  your computer and applications, and how to make MacsBug
  automatically restart your computer if an application crashes,
  which can be great for unattended servers.


$$

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