TRAMP messages are raised with verbosity levels ranging from 0
to 10. TRAMP does not display all messages; only those with a
verbosity level less than or equal to tramp-verbose
.
The verbosity levels are
With tramp-verbose
greater than or equal to 4, messages are
also written to a TRAMP debug buffer. Such debug buffers are
essential to bug and problem analyzes. For TRAMP bug reports,
set the tramp-verbose
level to 6 (see Reporting Bugs and Problems).
The debug buffer is in Outline Mode. In this buffer, messages can be filtered by their level. To see messages up to verbosity level 5, enter C-u 6 C-c C-q.
TRAMP handles errors internally. Hence, to get a Lisp backtrace, the following settings are required:
(setq debug-on-error t debug-on-signal t)
If tramp-verbose
is greater than or equal to 10, Lisp
backtraces are also added to the TRAMP debug buffer in case of
errors.
In very rare cases it could happen, that TRAMP blocks Emacs. Killing Emacs does not allow inspecting the debug buffer. In that case, you can instruct TRAMP to mirror the debug buffer to a file:
(customize-set-variable 'tramp-debug-to-file t)
The debug buffer is written as a file in your
temporary-file-directory
, which is usually /tmp/. Use
this option with care, because it could decrease the performance of
TRAMP actions.
If tramp-verbose
is greater than or equal to 11, TRAMP
function call traces are written to a TRAMP trace buffer.