A socket-based remote debugger for Python. Based on celery.contrib.rdb
.
Use the sdb
library to set remote breakpoints in any non-interactive or
background Python code and debug interactively over a telnet session:
# some/python/code.py
class SomeCode(object):
def run(self, **kwargs):
# This will set a breakpoint and open an interactive Python
# debugger exposed on a random port between 6899-6999. The chosen
# port will be reported as a warning
#
# Remote Debugger:6900: Please telnet into 0.0.0.0 6900.
#
# You can access it from your host machine using telnet:
#
# $ telnet <hostname> <port>
import sdb
sdb.set_trace()
Keep in mind that when you interactively debug in this way, any process
that encounters a breakpoint will wait until an active client is established
and concludes the debugging session with a continue
command.
To simplify remote debugging session management, you can use sdb-listen
to automatically discover open remote debugging sessions and connect to them:
$ sdb-listen
This will open a Python process that listens for new debugger sessions and
automatically connects to them for you. If your breakpoint is run on
an entirely different host (e.g. 10.0.0.1
) you can optionally specify the
hostname where sdb-listen
is running:
import sdb
sdb.Sdb(notify_host='10.0.0.1').set_trace()
For OSX users, the Docker for Mac application relies on a separate virtual
machine running the containers. A unique hostname is advertised to containers
pointing back to the virtual machine called: docker.for.mac.host.internal
.
The breakpoint can then be configured to use that host so that it works seamlessly in a Mac:
import sdb
sdb.Sdb(notify_host='docker.for.mac.host.internal').set_trace()
The sdb-listen
tool also includes support for tab-completion and history
tracking.
It is possible to set environment variables to configure sdb
, which allows
to avoid remembering hosts and ports at the time of setting the breakpoints.
SDB_HOST
: Defaults to127.0.0.1
and it is the address thatsdb
should bind to.SDB_PORT
: Defaults to6899
, and it is the port used to bind (used withSDB_HOST
). Note thatsdb
has a range of ports from6899
to6999
.SDB_NOTIFY_HOST
: To advertise a different host, useful for a separate remote host like in the case of Docker for Mac.SDB_CONTEXT_LINES
: How much context should get printed when a breakpoint is reached. Defaults to 60.SDB_COLORIZE
: Toggle to enable or disable colorized output. Defaults to enabled.
If you want to debug a running process without setting a specific breakpoint,
a set_trace()
call can be triggered via SIGTRAP
:
import sdb
sdb.sigtrap()
long_running_process()
$ kill -5 <pid-of-process>
This is particularly useful for investigating Python processes that appear to be hung.
If using Docker Compose, it is useful to open the range of ports that sdb
supports, as well as injecting the environment variables to configure the
connection.
For example:
environment:
- SDB_NOTIFY_HOST=docker.for.mac.host.internal
- SDB_HOST=0.0.0.0
- SDB_PORT=6899
It is useful to define a range of ports that sdb
can use:
ports:
- "6899-6999:6899-6999"
sdb
supports the same commands and aliases as Python's default pdb implementation.
sdb
colorizes output by default. To disable this:
import sdb
sdb.Sdb(colorize=False).set_trace()
sdb
includes a few additional debugger aliases that make interactive debugging more pleasant:
- Prefix commands with an integer to repeat them. For example,
10n
is the same as runningnext
10 times in a row. ?
is the same as callingdir()
??
can be added to the end of a function call to view its source lines e.g.,requests.post??
might print:
def post(url, data=None, json=None, **kwargs):
r"""Sends a POST request.
:param url: URL for the new :class:`Request` object.
:param data: (optional) Dictionary (will be form-encoded), bytes, or file-like object to send in the body of the :class:`Request`.
:param json: (optional) json data to send in the body of the :class:`Request`.
:param \*\*kwargs: Optional arguments that ``request`` takes.
:return: :class:`Response <Response>` object
:rtype: requests.Response
"""
return request('post', url, data=data, json=json, **kwargs)
- By default,
sdb
attempts to fill your entire console with debugger output (representing the current line position for the current frame). You can adjust the height ofsdb
's draw window with thelines
command, e.g.,lines 15
.