Yii2 app debugging - debugging

How do you debug the yii2 app using any IDE(eg. eclipse, netbeans, sublime, aptana, etc...) like debugging in visual studio in which we can put breakpoints? This is much needed, for some errors take days to fix; so any debugging method would be helpful. Thanks in advance!

For the neatbeans (and also for the other IDE) This is possibile if you have properly configurated Xdebug and the Yii2 app if defided correctlty in a netbeans project netbeans.
You see https://xdebug.org/docs/install for xdebug install or
http://wiki.netbeans.org/HowToConfigureXDebug
Once you have installed and confiured xdebug you can run the application in (netbean) debug mode and put breakpoint ... inspecting vars .. trace .. move in the code step by step .. with full debug functionality

Related

Debugging Vue.js app in Visual Studio 2017

I've created a basic Vue.js app from VS2017 template.
Everything is working, but I cannot debug any code.
Could You explain why this happens and is there any workaround?
debugger
Vue is a front-end framework, which means it runs inside a browser, not locally (NodeJs). The best way to debug Vue.js application is to install a VueDevtolls from chrome's app store. Install this, it will help you accelerate your development process.
On a component you want to debug with, right click inspect, on the dialog appeared there should be some tags, find the Vue option and click it, you will see all data flows within any Vue components.
alternatively, if you really prefer break points, you can set up a webpack (if you created your vue project using #vue/cli then its already there), and set a break point inside the sources tag on the chrome's inspection dialog.
It is most certainly possible.
All you have to do is start the browser in debug mode (--remote-debugging-port=9222) and set it (Chrome or Edge) as a Debug target (Attach the debugger to it).
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/visualstudio/javascript/debug-nodejs?view=vs-2019
Actually what made me wonder was that the template you used should be preconfigured for debugging without the need of anything else. There is a catch however, due to the specifics of Vue packaging with WebPack there is a problem with resolving sourcemaps correctly. See: https://developercommunity.visualstudio.com/content/problem/520247/vue-app-in-vs-2019-cannot-debug-javascript-code.html (follow the links in the discussion there). I am not sure if these issue can be resolved in Visual Studio however. I plan to ask about it, for now it can be resolved in Visual Studio Code by overriding the Source Map Paths:
"sourceMapPathOverrides": {
"webpack:///./src/*": "${webRoot}/*",
"webpack:///src/*": "${webRoot}/*",
"webpack:///*": "*",
"webpack:///./~/*": "${webRoot}/node_modules/*"
}
using the following recipe: https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode-recipes/tree/master/vuejs-cli
What wasn't mentioned in the recipe however is that the maps need to be manually built beforehand with vue-cli-service build referenced as preLaunchTask in launch.json (or eventually, should the override be possible in Visual Studio 2017/2019 in <PostBuildEvent> of .njsproj).

Can I debug gwt component directly in intellij IDEA

I am currently working with IntelliJ IDEA and I try to debug gwt components directly in the IDE.
I know I can use Chrome DevTools to debug, but it's always a pain, when the variables names change and it takes quite a long time to debug.
I thing I have seen somewhere the fact that you can directly debug your component in IntelliJ but I am not sure where I have seen that.
I am in superdevmode but when I add a breakpoint in my java class in IntelliJ it does not get validated and does not stop in IntelliJ. It only works in Chrome.
Here is my gwt configuration
Thanks a lot.
Thoma
It sure does work from within IntelliJ.
One thing I noted in your screenshot : Set a checkbox with "with JavaScript debugger".
That is the only thing I see different with my setup, in which breakpoints work in IntelliJ, and in the browser.

Rider EAP And Visual Studio For Mac debug

i try to debug my web app. When i add break point in gutter for proper line, i receive an error says : The breakpoint cound not yet be bound to valid location. What should i do to fix it?
Rider debugging has been hosed on Mac for a few months now. Team is hard at work at fixing it - but it requires building out their own debugger or something of the such (yowch!)
See progress blog post here: https://blog.jetbrains.com/dotnet/2017/02/23/rider-eap-18-coreclr-debugging-back-windows/
I had this issue when working on an Android Xamarin project.
Problem was that I was changing the file after starting the debug session.
If I leave the file alone the debug breakpoints work fine.
Here's the issue I created:
https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/RIDER-7118

Visual Studio 2010: breakpoints in dll-project

I'm developing a plugin for another app. After I press debug, dll is generated and put into the folder for plugins of that app, after that that app is launched. I can't use breakpoint's. they are not fired up. When I move mouse upon breakpoint, there's a hint 'this breakpoint will not currently be hit. No symbols have been loaded for this document'.
Where the problem is?
PS: And yes, i'm running in the Debug mode and not in Release. Yesterday breakpoints worked as they should. Then they start working only in main file. After I deleted .pdb file breakpoints stoped firing-up (despite .pdb file is created again after build).
PSS: I'm new to all this stuff
UPD: When I put a breakpoint into main source file. Breakpoints are fired. Compiled dll is loaded (in modules) tab.
One simple explanation is that your plugin simply never got loaded. Debug + Break All and use Debug + Windows + Modules to check if your plugin is in the list. If it is then you can right-click it and choose "Symbol load information". It shows you where the debugger looked for the .pdb file.
Is your app 'third-party'? I mean it's not a part of VS project, right?
In this case you should use Debug>Attach to process and choose main app process.

The Following Module was built either with optimizations enabled or without debug information

I cannot get rid of this in my VS 2008 web project when debugging. I've checked that it's in debug mode on the non-web project in question and it's in Active(Debug). Deleted all items in my .NET 2.0 temp folder in Windows. Not sure what else to do here.
Try disabling "Enable Just My Code" in Tools/Options/Debugging/Options.
I had the same problem and discovered that I wasn't outputting my debug info on my build. If you right click on the project and go to 'properties', then select the 'build' tab, on the bottom of the page there's an 'Advanced...' button that will display your setting for you output debug info. Set that to 'full' and the error should go away.
I just ran into this issue, and quickly decided that the other answers posted didn't apply to me.
I'm the owner of the project, and I know it was built with debug information, as well as without optimizations. Furthermore, I'm never happy choosing the disabling of a warning as my first choice. Hiding/ignoring this warning could become an issue in a future debugging session.
Since this only started occurring after I signed the assembly, this clued me in on my quick fix: temporarily remove the strong name of my DLL (and consuming EXE). Voila! Problem solved.
A better, long-term solution, could take the form of adding a post-build action to update the GAC so it has the latest version of the signed DLL.
But for now, I'm happy to move on from this diversion, and continue working on the issue that brought me to this debugging session.
resolved. Deleted all occurences (all projects) of the dll in question.
VS2012, clean and rebuild fixed the issue for me. "Properties" -> "Build" -> Optimize code is unchecked. "Properties" -> "Build" -> "Advanced" -> Debug Info: Full
Check out this link
http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/vsdebug/thread/43cb16ba-0759-42ab-8e7d-9f168ace3b6f
try unchecking "Just My Code" in Tools->Options->Debugging->General.
it works for me
Guessing VS 2008 is not rebuilding the dll correctly.
1) Delete all occurrences of the dll
2) Rebuild solution
And that should fix it.
Check your build configuration options. Make sure optimizations are turned off and the DEBUG constant is defined.
If everything else fails, try renaming the Assembly name in the project's properties. This fixed the issue for me.
I get this issue as well, for some reason it's happened 3 or 4 times; I think it must be a Visual Studio 2005 bug/hick up (or at least my installation).
This has worked every time: to fix it I
Right click on my solution and click Properties.
Open Configuration Manager.
Select Debug in the drop down menu (if not already selected).
Uncheck BUILD. Then re-check it.
Rebuild the solution.
Tools > options > Debugging > Symbols > Specify excluded modules
look that if the dll or the exe in the excluded modules list
At least for non-web applications this works:
From: http://www.stellarpc.com/articles/board.aspx?id=40
2 - Allow Debugging...
Due to the nature in which one of the assemblies has been built in your application, you will need to change a few settings to allow the code to be handled by the Visual Studio Debugger.
Right click on any project in question from the solution explorer and select 'Properties'. This will open up the project properties panel giving us access to a great many options for our projects. Navigate to the 'Complile' Tab (or 'Build' if your in a C# environment) and select 'Advanced Compile Options...' from the bottom of the screen. This presents us with a prompt that has two key areas of interest:
1) Optimizations - uncheck 'Enable Optimizations'
2) Generate debug info - Ensure that the option is set to 'Full'
I had this issue with a solution in a certain folder, but if I moved it to another folder or others built it, I didn't get the message. I did the clean, rebuild, and even rebooted and still couldn't get the original to debug without this message. I searched my system for copies of the file causing the error and I found that copies were kept in
c:\User\username\AppData\Local\Assembly\dl3
This was on Win7-64 but will be similar on other Windows OSes. I deleted all of the copies I found there and I no longer get the message. I didn't need to uncheck the "Enable Just My Code".
Also, this was for a WPF app, but I came across this thread in my search so hopefully this will help someone else.
I was able to resolve this issue by following these steps:
Right-click on the Solution (not the Project), and select 'Properties'
In the left panel, select 'Configuration Properties'
In the right panel, select 'Debug' under the 'Configuration' column for your project
If you do not see the Solution listed in Solution Explorer, follow these steps:
In the menu bar, go to Tools -> Options
In the left panel, select 'Projects and Solutions' (you may need to check 'Show all settings' at the bottom-left area of the window
In the right panel, check 'Always show solution'
I hope this helps.
I too have all these. And I've done all this. It appears this happens to me every time I get a fresh copy of the entire solution out of source control. So if we've done all these, deleted dlls & .pdb files for all references (Assemblies) in the web project, used the clean option on the solution, deleted temp files, closed out VS and reopened, made sure debug mode is selected and set at full and optimations are off, what more is there?!?!?!
I had the same issue on my web project in Visual Studio 2010, and finally I found the reason why I was getting this message. What I did was to change an existing debugging option on Visual studio:
Go to Tools->Options->Debugging->Symbols->All modules
Check the "unless excluded" radio button
Click on the link "Specify excluded modules", then remove the DLL that you want to debug.
In my case it was my web dll file...
I had this when trying to remote debug an application on a computer that belongs to a different subnet. I was able to debug and step through the code when running it across the network if the machines were on the same subnet. After changing the subnet though I was unable to step through when running from the network and was getting the "The Following Module was built either with optimizations enabled or without debug information".
The solution? Easy. Copy the built solution across to the machine hosting the remote debugging and run it locally.
Had this happen to me on a VS 2010 winForms project. Seeing that the majority of people here have web projects, i think that it has to do with access to the folder in which the project is stored. I say this because when this problem occurred to me Google Drive was synchronizing the folder in which i keep my projects. It seems that just disabling the synchronization does not fix the problem.
My solution is similar to one of the answers above:
Went to "Project Properties > Compile > Advanced Compile Options"
Checked "Enable optimization"
Set "General debug info:" to "None"
Unchecked "Define DEBUG constant"
And pressed OK
Then went back and returned the options to their initial state.
Hope this helps someone as it seems this still happens.
Follow this : (first STOP debuging)
1:right click on project solution name or project -> Properties
2:under Configuration Properties select configuration Manager
3:Change configuration to debug and click on close
4:Change configuration to debug and click on Apply -> OK
Now rebuild solution....!
For me, Checking the "Optimize code" box in the project properties, saving, unchecking it, then resaving did it for me.
Disabling "Enable Just My Code" also worked, but that was more of a work-around than a fix as I didn't want that setting.
I have had same problem, but with different cause and solution.
The window was the same as that shown by Gustavo (above) but the path was in:
"\users\zzz\AppSettings..." (where zzz is windows username)
I had an Excel addin - I was testing the install of the addin, so I had a copy installed through VS install function. VS was obviously trying to debug both the installed copy and the copy I had just launched, and could not find debug symbols on the installed copy.
None of the above solutions worked (without side affects),
SOLUTION:
uninstalling the addin, and manually deleting the files in App Settings worked.
You mentioned it's a web project...do you have
<compilation debug="true />
in your web.config?
I had the same problem after building with a Release configuration.
It turned out that when I switched back to Debug, VS wasn't detecting any differences, so it was not updating the .dll and .pdb files in the bin folder.
Here's what worked for me:
Run iisreset (to clean up the temporary folders)
Save the web.config (to force VS to actually rebuild)
Rebuild on Debug
Start the project
Try a rebuild then debug.
My case is following: webservice referenced lib1.dll. Later I removed reference as it was no longer used. However lib1.dll remained in the bin folder.
Because library was not referenced then Rebuild and Clean actions were not helpful.
After manually deleting lib1.dll from bin folder I've get rid of this message.
If you are publishing to IIS and not using built in web server -or IIS express- make sure that your publish profile settings is in debug mode. In vs 11 by default it's in release mode.
Just to add, I was looking at this blog to find the solution to the same problem I was facing. Unfortunately the solutions mentioned above didn't help me. At last I figured out, I was installing my bits (along with .pdb) through installer and setting permission explicitly on the installation folder.
Because of which VS was not able to load the pdb even though the file browser was showing the correct file but it was giving the same error mentioned above.
Once I unchecked "Enable Just my code" and removed permission settings from the installer, VS started loading the module.
The one configuration that worked for me was the following
Project --> (Your Project) Properties --> Debug Tab
make sure Configuration is set to Active (Debug)
Under "Unable Debuggers", make sure "Enable unmanaged code debugging" is checked
I'm creating a Windows Service and here's what worked for me:
Uninstall the service.
Open a command prompt and go to c:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.30319
installutil C:\MyFantabulusWindowService\bin\Debug\MyFantabulusWindowService.exe
Greatness has been achieved!
Case : testing assembly with Console project in SharePoint development - if you're doing SharePoint development and seeing this alert in VS, make sure you deploy your SP assembly to the GAC before testing your console app IF your core SP project has methods you need to call in your console test app.

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