Byebug

Version Build Climate Dependencies Coverage Gittip

Debugging in Ruby 2

Byebug is a simple to use, feature rich debugger for Ruby 2. It uses the new TracePoint API for execution control and the new Debug Inspector API for call stack navigation, so it doesn't depend on internal core sources. It's developed as a C extension, so it's fast. And it has a full test suite so it's reliable.

It allows you to see what is going on inside a Ruby program while it executes and can do four main kinds of things to help you catch bugs in the act:

  • Start your program or attach to it, specifying anything that might affect its behavior.
  • Make your program stop on specified conditions.
  • Examine what has happened when your program has stopped.
  • Change things in your program, so you can experiment with correcting the effects of one bug and go on to learn about another.

Install

$ gem install byebug

Usage

Simply drop

byebug

wherever you want to start debugging and the execution will stop there. If you are debugging rails, start the server and once the execution gets to your byebug command you will get a debugging prompt.

Former debugger or ruby-debug users, notice:

  • Some gems (rails, rspec) implement debugging flags (-d, --debugger) that early require and start the debugger. These flags are a performance penalty and Byebug doesn't need them anymore so my recommendation is not to use them.
  • The startup configuration file is now called .byebugrc instead of .rdebugrc.

What's different from debugger

  • Works on Ruby 2.x but it doesn't on 1.9.x (you should probably upgrade anyways).
  • Has no MRI internal source code dependencies, just a clean API (no more bump ruby_core_source dependency entries in CHANGELOG, no more broken debugger's on ruby's releases).
  • Fixes a lot of debugger's issues, such as ruby 2.x support or post_mortem debugging. It also provides several enhancements, such as the fact the byebug can now be placed at the end of a block or method call.
  • Actively mantained.
  • Editor agnostic: no external editor built-in support.
  • Pry command is built-in. No need of external gem like debugger-pry.

Byebug's commands

Command Aliases Subcommands
backtrace bt where
break
catch
condition
continue
delete
disable breakpoints display
display
down
edit
enable breakpoints display
finish
frame
help
history
info args breakpoints catch display file files global_variables instance_variables line locals program stack variables
irb
kill
list
method instance iv
next
p eval
pp
pry
ps
putl
quit exit
reload
restart
save
set autoeval autoirb autolist autoreload autosave basename callstyle forcestep fullpath histfile histsize linetrace tracing_plus listsize post_mortem stack_on_error testing verbose width
show autoeval autoirb autolist autoreload autosave basename callstyle forcestep fullpath histfile histsize linetrace tracing_plus listsize post_mortem stack_on_error testing verbose width
skip
source
step
thread current list resume stop switch
tracevar
undisplay
up
var class constant global instance local

Semantic Versioning

Byebug tries to follow semantic versioning and tries to bump major version only when backwards incompatible changes are released. Backwards compatibility is targeted to pry-byebug and any other plugins relying on byebug.

Getting Started

Read byebug's markdown guide to get started. Proper documentation will be eventually written.

TODO List (by priority)

  • Write tests for remote debugging support.
  • Add printers support.
  • Libify and test byebug's executable.
  • Support rubies other than MRI.

Credits

Everybody who has ever contributed to this forked and reforked piece of software, specially:

  • @ko1, author of the awesome TracePoint API for Ruby.
  • @cldwalker, debugger's mantainer.
  • @denofevil, author of debase, the starting point of this.
  • @kevjames3 for testing, bug reports and the interest in the project.
  • @FooBarWidget for working and helping with remote debugging.