pdb++, a drop-in replacement for pdb
Project description
pdb++, a drop-in replacement for pdb
What is it?
This module is an extension of the pdb module of the standard library. It is meant to be fully compatible with its predecessor, yet it introduces a number of new features to make your debugging experience as nice as possible.
pdb++ features include:
colorful TAB completion of Python expressions (through fancycompleter)
optional syntax highlighting of code listings (through pygments)
several new commands to be used from the interactive (Pdb++) prompt
smart command parsing (hint: have you ever typed r or c at the prompt to print the value of some variable?)
additional convenience functions in the pdb module, to be used from your program
pdb++ is meant to be a drop-in replacement for pdb. If you find some unexpected behavior, please report it as a bug.
Installation
Since pdb++ is not a valid identifier for pip and easy_install, the package is named pdbpp:
$ pip install pdbpp -- OR -- $ easy_install pdbpp
pdb++ is also available via conda:
$ conda install -c conda-forge pdbpp
Alternatively, you can just put pdb.py somewhere inside your PYTHONPATH.
Usage
Note that the module is called pdb.py so that pdb++ will automatically be used in all places that do import pdb (e.g. pytest --pdb will give you a pdb++ prompt).
The old pdb module is still available by doing e.g. import pdb; pdb.pdb.set_trace().
New interactive commands
The following are new commands that you can use from the interative (Pdb++) prompt.
- sticky [start end]
Toggle sticky mode. When in this mode, every time the current position changes, the screen is repainted and the whole function shown. Thus, when doing step-by-step execution you can easily follow the flow of the execution. If start and end are given, sticky mode is enabled and only lines within that range (extremes included) will be displayed.
- longlist (ll)
List source code for the current function. Different from the normal pdb list command, longlist displays the whole function. The current line is marked with ->. In case of post-mortem debugging, the line which actually raised the exception is marked with >>. If the highlight config option is set and pygments is installed, the source code is highlighted.
- interact
Start an interative interpreter whose global namespace contains all the names found in the current scope.
- track EXPRESSION
Display a graph showing which objects are the value of the expression refers to and are referred by. This command requires the pypy source code to be importable.
- display EXPRESSION
Add an expression to the display list; expressions in this list are evaluated at each step, and printed every time its value changes. WARNING: since these expressions are evaluated multiple times, make sure not to put expressions with side-effects in the display list.
- undisplay EXPRESSION:
Remove EXPRESSION from the display list.
- source EXPRESSION
Show the source code for the given function/method/class.
- edit EXPRESSION
Open the editor in the right position to edit the given function/method/class. The editor used is specified in a config option.
- hf_unhide, hf_hide, hf_list
Some frames might be marked as “hidden” by e.g. using the @pdb.hideframe function decorator. By default, hidden frames are not shown in the stack trace, and cannot be reached using up and down. You can use hf_unhide to tell pdb to ignore the hidden status (i.e., to treat hidden frames as normal ones), and hf_hide to hide them again. hf_list prints a list of hidden frames.
Smart command parsing
By default, pdb tries hard to interpret what you enter at the command prompt as one of its builtin commands. However, this is inconvenient if you want to just print the value of a local variable which happens to have the same name as one of the commands. E.g.:
(Pdb) list 1 2 def fn(): 3 c = 42 4 import pdb;pdb.set_trace() 5 -> return c (Pdb) c
In the example above, instead of printing 42 pdb interprets the input as the command continue, and then you loose your prompt. It’s even worse than that, because it happens even if you type e.g. c.__class__.
pdb++ fixes this unfriendly (from the author’s point of view, of course :-)) behavior by always prefering variable in scope, if it exists. If you really want to execute the corresponding command, you can prefix it with !!. Thus, the example above becomes:
(Pdb++) list 1 2 def fn(): 3 c = 42 4 import pdb;pdb.set_trace() 5 -> return c (Pdb++) c 42 (Pdb++) !!c
Note that the “smart” behavior takes place only when there is ambiguity, i.e. if there exists a variable with the same name as a command: in all other cases, everything works as usual.
Regarding the list command itself, using list(… is a special case that gets handled as the Python builtin:
(Pdb++) list([1, 2]) [1, 2]
Additional functions in the pdb module
The pdb module that comes with pdb++ includes all the functions and classes that are in the module from the standard library. If you find any difference, please report it as a bug.
In addition, there are some new convenience functions that are unique to pdb++.
- pdb.xpm()
eXtended Post Mortem: it is equivalent to pdb.post_mortem(sys.exc_info()[2]). If used inside an except clause, it will start a post-mortem pdb prompt from the line that raised the exception being caught.
- pdb.disable()
Disable pdb.set_trace(): any subsequent call to it will be ignored.
- pdb.enable()
Re-enable pdb.set_trace(), in case it was disabled by pdb.disable().
- @pdb.hideframe
A function decorator that tells pdb++ to hide the frame corresponding to the function. Hidden frames do not show up when using interactive commands such as up, down or where, unless hf_unhide is invoked.
- @pdb.break_on_setattr(attrname, condition=always)
class decorator: break the execution of the program every time the attribute attrname is set on any instance of the class. condition is a callable that takes the target object of the setattr and the actual value; by default, it breaks every time the attribute is set. E.g.:
@break_on_setattr('bar') class Foo(object): pass f = Foo() f.bar = 42 # the program breaks here
If can be used even after the class has already been created, e.g. if we want to break when some attribute of a particular object is set:
class Foo(object): pass a = Foo() b = Foo() def break_if_a(obj, value): return obj is a break_on_setattr('bar', condition=break_if_a)(Foo) b.bar = 10 # no break a.bar = 42 # the program breaks here
This can be used after pdb.set_trace() also:
(Pdb++) import pdb (Pdb++) pdb.break_on_setattr('tree_id')(obj.__class__) (Pdb++) continue
Configuration and customization
To customize pdb++, you can put a file named .pdbrc.py in your home directory. The file must contain a class named Config inheriting from pdb.DefaultConfig and override the desired values.
The following is a list of the options you can customize, together with their default value:
- prompt = '(Pdb++) '
The prompt to show when in interactive mode.
- highlight = True
Highlight line numbers and the current line when showing the longlist of a function or when in sticky mode.
- encoding = 'utf-8'
File encoding. Useful when there are international characters in your string literals or comments.
- sticky_by_default = False
Determine whether pdb++ starts in sticky mode or not.
- line_number_color = Color.turquoise
The color to use for line numbers.
- filename_color = Color.yellow
The color to use for file names when printing the stack entries.
- current_line_color = 44
The background color to use to highlight the current line; the background color is set by using the ANSI escape sequence ^[Xm where ^ is the ESC character and X is the background color. 44 corresponds to “blue”.
- use_pygments = True
If pygments is installed and highlight == True, apply syntax highlight to the source code when showing the longlist of a function or when in sticky mode.
- bg = 'dark'
Passed directly to the pygments.formatters.TerminalFormatter constructor. Selects the color scheme to use, depending on the background color of your terminal. If you have a light background color, try to set it to 'light'.
- colorscheme = None
Passed directly to the pygments.formatters.TerminalFormatter constructor. It expects a dictionary that maps token types to (lightbg, darkbg) color names or None (default: None = use builtin colorscheme).
- editor = '${EDITOR:-vi}'
The command to invoke when using the edit command. By default, it uses $EDITOR if set, else vi. The command must support the standard notation COMMAND +n filename to open filename at line n. emacs and vi are known to support this.
- truncate_long_lines = True
Truncate lines which exceed the terminal width.
- exec_if_unfocused = None
Shell command to execute when starting the pdb prompt and the terminal window is not focused. Useful to e.g. play a sound to alert the user that the execution of the program stopped. It requires the wmctrl module.
- disable_pytest_capturing = True
Old versions of py.test crash when you execute pdb.set_trace() in a test, but the standard output is captured (i.e., without the -s option, which is the default behavior). When this option is on, the stdout capturing is automatically disabled before showing the interactive prompt.
- def setup(self, pdb): pass
This method is called during the initialization of the Pdb class. Useful to do complex setup.
Coding guidelines
pdb++ is developed using Test Driven Development, and we try to keep test coverage high.
As a general rule, every commit should come with its own test. If it’s a new feature, it should come with one or many tests which excercise it. If it’s a bug fix, the test should fail before the fix, and pass after.
The goal is to make refactoring easier in the future: if you wonder why a certain line of code does something, in principle it should be possible to comment it out and see which tests fail.
In exceptional cases, the test might be too hard or impossible to write: in that cases it is fine to do a commmit without a test, but you should explain very precisely in the commit message why it is hard to write a test and how to reproduce the buggy behaviour by hand.
It is fine NOT to write a test in the following cases:
typos, documentation, and in general any non-coding commit
code refactorings which do not add any feature
commits which fix an already failing test
commits to silence warnings
purely cosmetic changes, such as change the color of the output
CHANGELOG
Changes between 0.9.12 and 0.9.13
Fixes
Fix crash in is_skipped_module with no module name (#163)
Features
Optimize get_stack for show_hidden_frames (#162)
Do not consider the frame with set_trace() as hidden (#161)
Misc
DefaultConfig: make it a new-style class (#166)
Setup coverage reporting (#164)
Changes between 0.9.11 and 0.9.12
Fixes
Fix forget(): check self.lineno, not GLOBAL_PDB.lineno (#160)
do_debug: use func.__globals__ with rebind_globals (#159)
Use super() (#145)
Misc
tests: set_trace: allow to pass in Pdb class (#158)
Changes between 0.9.8 and 0.9.11
Fixes
Make wrapper compatible with python2’s sys.stdout (#155) This was broken since 0.9.4/0.9.5.
- NOTE: 0.9.9 and 0.9.10 were not released to PyPI due to Travis CI
misconfiguration.
Changes between 0.9.7 and 0.9.8
Fixes
interaction: fix ValueError (“signal only works in main thread”) (#143)
rebind_globals: update globals() (#151)
Fix do_debug for py38 (#150)
Misc
do_debug: use PdbppWithConfig class (#147)
tests: harden test_debug_with_overridden_continue (#146)
tests: add test_signal_in_nonmain_thread_with_continue
tests: fail if there is anything on stderr
ci: Travis: add Python 3.8-dev
Changes between 0.9.6 and 0.9.7
Fixes
do_debug: fix setting of use_rawinput (#141)
Changes between 0.9.5 and 0.9.6
Fixes
do_debug: handle SyntaxError (#139)
parseline: handle f-strings with py36 (#138)
Changes between 0.9.3 and 0.9.5
Fixes
Fix python -m pdb … (#135)
Fix “TypeError: write() argument must be str, not bytes” with non-utf8 terminal encodings (#63)
Handle pdb.Pdb._previous_sigint_handler with Python 3.5.3+ (#87)
Misc
Use shutil.get_terminal_size if available (#125)
Slightly improve loading of pdb from stdlib (#133)
NOTE: 0.9.4 was not released to PyPI due to Travis CI misconfiguration.
Changes between 0.9.2 and 0.9.3
Features
Improve sticky_by_default: don’t clear screen the first time (#83)
Handle header kwarg added with Python 3.7 in pdb.set_trace (#115)
config: allow to force use_terminal256formatter (#112)
Add heuristic for which ‘list’ is meant (#82)
Fixes
Skip/step over pdb.set_trace() (#119)
Handle completions from original pdb (#116)
Handle set_trace being invoked during completion (#89)
_pdbpp_path_hack/pdb.py: fix ResourceWarning (#97)
Fix “python -m pdb” (#108)
setup/interaction: use/handle return value from pdb.Pdb.setup (#107)
interaction: use _cmdloop if available (#106)
Fixed virtualenv sys.path shuffling issue (#85)
set_trace: do not delete pdb.curframe (#103)
forget: only call pdb.Pdb.forget with GLOBAL_PDB once
Tests
Travis: test pypy3
Travis/tox: add py37, remove nightly
tests: PdbTest: use nosigint=True (#117)
Add test_debug_with_overridden_continue (#113)
tests: re-enable/fix test_utf8 (#110)
tests: fix conditional skipping with test_pdbrc_continue
tests: runpdb: print output on Exceptions
pytest.ini: addopts: -ra
tests: handle pytest’s --assert=plain mode
tests: harden check: match all lines
tests: fix flake8 errors and invalid-escape DeprecationWarnings
Misc
setup.py: add trove classifier for “… :: Debuggers”
doc: separate usage section (#105)
Format code: flake8 clean, using autopep8 mainly (#118)
Add wheels support
README: grammar and example for break_on_setattr (#99)
README: fix formatting
Simplify the code, since we no longer support python 2.6
Changes between 0.9.1 and 0.9.2
Add LICENSE.txt.
Improved import time for __version__.
Changes between 0.8.2 and 0.9.1
Install ordereddict package only on Python versions older than 2.7.
Python 3 support
Improved Windows support
Changes between 0.8.1 and 0.8.2
- fix wheel packaging; see
https://bitbucket.org/antocuni/pdb/pull-request/38/support-pip-install-and-wheels-natively/diff
Changes between 0.8 and 0.8.1
- fix issue 37: Doesn’t install on OS X
Removed dependency on backports.inspect
Made dependency on funcsigs optional.
(https://bitbucket.org/antocuni/pdb/issue/37/doesn-t-install-on-os-x)
(https://bitbucket.org/antocuni/pdb/pull-request/35/use-funcsigs-package-instead-of/diff)
Changes between 0.7.2 and 0.8
Python 3 compatibility
Optional support for 256 color formatting by setting use_terminal256formatter = True in ~/.pdbrc.py (https://bitbucket.org/antocuni/pdb/pull-request/30)
Make set_trace() in same program remember previous state (https://bitbucket.org/antocuni/pdb/pull-request/33)
Append ? and ?? to callable to get info a la IPython (https://bitbucket.org/antocuni/pdb/pull-request/25)
Don’t treat lines like r = 5 or c = 6 as commands (https://bitbucket.org/antocuni/pdb/pull-request/11)
fix issue 20: support argument-free post mortem
Changes between 0.7.1 and 0.7.2
don’t crash with newer versions of py.test
Changes between 0.7 and 0.7.1
The pp (pretty print) command now uses the actual width of the terminal, instead of hardcoding 80 columns
py.test and unittest internal frames are hidden by default (type help hidden_frames for more info)
don’t crash if py is installed but py.test is not
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