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1 | =head1 NAME |
2 | |
3 | perldebtut - Perl debugging tutorial |
4 | |
5 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
6 | |
7 | A (very) lightweight introduction in the use of the perl debugger, and a |
8 | pointer to existing, deeper sources of information on the subject of debugging |
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9 | perl programs. |
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10 | |
11 | There's an extraordinary number of people out there who don't appear to know |
12 | anything about using the perl debugger, though they use the language every |
13 | day. |
14 | This is for them. |
15 | |
16 | |
17 | =head1 use strict |
18 | |
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19 | First of all, there's a few things you can do to make your life a lot more |
20 | straightforward when it comes to debugging perl programs, without using the |
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21 | debugger at all. To demonstrate, here's a simple script, named "hello", with |
22 | a problem: |
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23 | |
24 | #!/usr/bin/perl |
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25 | |
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26 | $var1 = 'Hello World'; # always wanted to do that :-) |
27 | $var2 = "$varl\n"; |
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28 | |
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29 | print $var2; |
30 | exit; |
31 | |
32 | While this compiles and runs happily, it probably won't do what's expected, |
33 | namely it doesn't print "Hello World\n" at all; It will on the other hand do |
34 | exactly what it was told to do, computers being a bit that way inclined. That |
35 | is, it will print out a newline character, and you'll get what looks like a |
36 | blank line. It looks like there's 2 variables when (because of the typo) |
37 | there's really 3: |
38 | |
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39 | $var1 = 'Hello World'; |
40 | $varl = undef; |
41 | $var2 = "\n"; |
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42 | |
43 | To catch this kind of problem, we can force each variable to be declared |
44 | before use by pulling in the strict module, by putting 'use strict;' after the |
45 | first line of the script. |
46 | |
47 | Now when you run it, perl complains about the 3 undeclared variables and we |
48 | get four error messages because one variable is referenced twice: |
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49 | |
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50 | Global symbol "$var1" requires explicit package name at ./t1 line 4. |
51 | Global symbol "$var2" requires explicit package name at ./t1 line 5. |
52 | Global symbol "$varl" requires explicit package name at ./t1 line 5. |
53 | Global symbol "$var2" requires explicit package name at ./t1 line 7. |
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54 | Execution of ./hello aborted due to compilation errors. |
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55 | |
56 | Luvverly! and to fix this we declare all variables explicitly and now our |
57 | script looks like this: |
58 | |
59 | #!/usr/bin/perl |
60 | use strict; |
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61 | |
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62 | my $var1 = 'Hello World'; |
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63 | my $varl = undef; |
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64 | my $var2 = "$varl\n"; |
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65 | |
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66 | print $var2; |
67 | exit; |
68 | |
69 | We then do (always a good idea) a syntax check before we try to run it again: |
70 | |
71 | > perl -c hello |
72 | hello syntax OK |
73 | |
74 | And now when we run it, we get "\n" still, but at least we know why. Just |
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75 | getting this script to compile has exposed the '$varl' (with the letter 'l') |
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76 | variable, and simply changing $varl to $var1 solves the problem. |
77 | |
78 | |
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79 | =head1 Looking at data and -w and v |
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80 | |
81 | Ok, but how about when you want to really see your data, what's in that |
82 | dynamic variable, just before using it? |
83 | |
84 | #!/usr/bin/perl |
85 | use strict; |
86 | |
87 | my $key = 'welcome'; |
88 | my %data = ( |
89 | 'this' => qw(that), |
90 | 'tom' => qw(and jerry), |
91 | 'welcome' => q(Hello World), |
92 | 'zip' => q(welcome), |
93 | ); |
94 | my @data = keys %data; |
95 | |
96 | print "$data{$key}\n"; |
97 | exit; |
98 | |
99 | Looks OK, after it's been through the syntax check (perl -c scriptname), we |
100 | run it and all we get is a blank line again! Hmmmm. |
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101 | |
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102 | One common debugging approach here, would be to liberally sprinkle a few print |
103 | statements, to add a check just before we print out our data, and another just |
104 | after: |
105 | |
106 | print "All OK\n" if grep($key, keys %data); |
107 | print "$data{$key}\n"; |
108 | print "done: '$data{$key}'\n"; |
109 | |
110 | And try again: |
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111 | |
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112 | > perl data |
113 | All OK |
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114 | |
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115 | done: '' |
116 | |
117 | After much staring at the same piece of code and not seeing the wood for the |
118 | trees for some time, we get a cup of coffee and try another approach. That |
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119 | is, we bring in the cavalry by giving perl the 'B<-d>' switch on the command |
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120 | line: |
121 | |
122 | > perl -d data |
123 | Default die handler restored. |
124 | |
125 | Loading DB routines from perl5db.pl version 1.07 |
126 | Editor support available. |
127 | |
128 | Enter h or `h h' for help, or `man perldebug' for more help. |
129 | |
130 | main::(./data:4): my $key = 'welcome'; |
131 | |
132 | Now, what we've done here is to launch the built-in perl debugger on our |
133 | script. It's stopped at the first line of executable code and is waiting for |
134 | input. |
135 | |
136 | Before we go any further, you'll want to know how to quit the debugger: use |
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137 | just the letter 'B<q>', not the words 'quit' or 'exit': |
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138 | |
139 | DB<1> q |
140 | > |
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141 | |
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142 | That's it, you're back on home turf again. |
143 | |
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144 | |
145 | =head1 help |
146 | |
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147 | Fire the debugger up again on your script and we'll look at the help menu. |
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148 | There's a couple of ways of calling help: a simple 'B<h>' will get the summary |
149 | help list, 'B<|h>' (pipe-h) will pipe the help through your pager (which is |
150 | (probably 'more' or 'less'), and finally, 'B<h h>' (h-space-h) will give you |
151 | the entire help screen. Here is the summary page: |
152 | |
153 | DB<1>h |
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154 | |
155 | List/search source lines: Control script execution: |
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156 | l [ln|sub] List source code T Stack trace |
157 | - or . List previous/current line s [expr] Single step [in expr] |
158 | v [line] View around line n [expr] Next, steps over subs |
159 | f filename View source in file <CR/Enter> Repeat last n or s |
160 | /pattern/ ?patt? Search forw/backw r Return from subroutine |
161 | M Show module versions c [ln|sub] Continue until position |
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162 | Debugger controls: L List break/watch/actions |
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163 | o [...] Set debugger options t [expr] Toggle trace [trace expr] |
164 | <[<]|{[{]|>[>] [cmd] Do pre/post-prompt b [ln|event|sub] [cnd] Set breakpoint |
165 | ! [N|pat] Redo a previous command B ln|* Delete a/all breakpoints |
166 | H [-num] Display last num commands a [ln] cmd Do cmd before line |
167 | = [a val] Define/list an alias A ln|* Delete a/all actions |
168 | h [db_cmd] Get help on command w expr Add a watch expression |
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169 | h h Complete help page W expr|* Delete a/all watch exprs |
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170 | |[|]db_cmd Send output to pager ![!] syscmd Run cmd in a subprocess |
171 | q or ^D Quit R Attempt a restart |
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172 | Data Examination: expr Execute perl code, also see: s,n,t expr |
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173 | x|m expr Evals expr in list context, dumps the result or lists methods. |
174 | p expr Print expression (uses script's current package). |
175 | S [[!]pat] List subroutine names [not] matching pattern |
176 | V [Pk [Vars]] List Variables in Package. Vars can be ~pattern or !pattern. |
177 | X [Vars] Same as "V current_package [Vars]". |
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178 | y [n [Vars]] List lexicals in higher scope <n>. Vars same as V. |
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179 | For more help, type h cmd_letter, or run man perldebug for all docs. |
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180 | |
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181 | More confusing options than you can shake a big stick at! It's not as bad as |
182 | it looks and it's very useful to know more about all of it, and fun too! |
183 | |
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184 | There's a couple of useful ones to know about straight away. You wouldn't |
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185 | think we're using any libraries at all at the moment, but 'B<M>' will show |
186 | which modules are currently loaded, and their version number, while 'B<m>' |
187 | will show the methods, and 'B<S>' shows all subroutines (by pattern) as |
188 | shown below. 'B<V>' and 'B<X>' show variables in the program by package |
189 | scope and can be constrained by pattern. |
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190 | |
191 | DB<2>S str |
192 | dumpvar::stringify |
193 | strict::bits |
194 | strict::import |
195 | strict::unimport |
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196 | |
197 | Using 'X' and cousins requires you not to use the type identifiers ($@%), just |
198 | the 'name': |
199 | |
200 | DM<3>X ~err |
201 | FileHandle(stderr) => fileno(2) |
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202 | |
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203 | Remember we're in our tiny program with a problem, we should have a look at |
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204 | where we are, and what our data looks like. First of all let's view some code |
205 | at our present position (the first line of code in this case), via 'B<v>': |
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206 | |
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207 | DB<4> v |
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208 | 1 #!/usr/bin/perl |
209 | 2: use strict; |
210 | 3 |
211 | 4==> my $key = 'welcome'; |
212 | 5: my %data = ( |
213 | 6 'this' => qw(that), |
214 | 7 'tom' => qw(and jerry), |
215 | 8 'welcome' => q(Hello World), |
216 | 9 'zip' => q(welcome), |
217 | 10 ); |
218 | |
219 | At line number 4 is a helpful pointer, that tells you where you are now. To |
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220 | see more code, type 'v' again: |
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221 | |
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222 | DB<4> v |
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223 | 8 'welcome' => q(Hello World), |
224 | 9 'zip' => q(welcome), |
225 | 10 ); |
226 | 11: my @data = keys %data; |
227 | 12: print "All OK\n" if grep($key, keys %data); |
228 | 13: print "$data{$key}\n"; |
229 | 14: print "done: '$data{$key}'\n"; |
230 | 15: exit; |
231 | |
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232 | And if you wanted to list line 5 again, type 'l 5', (note the space): |
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233 | |
234 | DB<4> l 5 |
235 | 5: my %data = ( |
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236 | |
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237 | In this case, there's not much to see, but of course normally there's pages of |
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238 | stuff to wade through, and 'l' can be very useful. To reset your view to the |
239 | line we're about to execute, type a lone period '.': |
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240 | |
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241 | DB<5> . |
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242 | main::(./data_a:4): my $key = 'welcome'; |
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243 | |
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244 | The line shown is the one that is about to be executed B<next>, it hasn't |
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245 | happened yet. So while we can print a variable with the letter 'B<p>', at |
246 | this point all we'd get is an empty (undefined) value back. What we need to |
247 | do is to step through the next executable statement with an 'B<s>': |
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248 | |
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249 | DB<6> s |
250 | main::(./data_a:5): my %data = ( |
251 | main::(./data_a:6): 'this' => qw(that), |
252 | main::(./data_a:7): 'tom' => qw(and jerry), |
253 | main::(./data_a:8): 'welcome' => q(Hello World), |
254 | main::(./data_a:9): 'zip' => q(welcome), |
255 | main::(./data_a:10): ); |
256 | |
257 | Now we can have a look at that first ($key) variable: |
258 | |
259 | DB<7> p $key |
260 | welcome |
261 | |
262 | line 13 is where the action is, so let's continue down to there via the letter |
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263 | 'B<c>', which by the way, inserts a 'one-time-only' breakpoint at the given |
264 | line or sub routine: |
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265 | |
266 | DB<8> c 13 |
267 | All OK |
268 | main::(./data_a:13): print "$data{$key}\n"; |
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269 | |
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270 | We've gone past our check (where 'All OK' was printed) and have stopped just |
271 | before the meat of our task. We could try to print out a couple of variables |
272 | to see what is happening: |
273 | |
274 | DB<9> p $data{$key} |
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275 | |
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276 | Not much in there, lets have a look at our hash: |
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277 | |
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278 | DB<10> p %data |
279 | Hello Worldziptomandwelcomejerrywelcomethisthat |
280 | |
281 | DB<11> p keys %data |
282 | Hello Worldtomwelcomejerrythis |
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283 | |
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284 | Well, this isn't very easy to read, and using the helpful manual (B<h h>), the |
285 | 'B<x>' command looks promising: |
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286 | |
287 | DB<12> x %data |
288 | 0 'Hello World' |
289 | 1 'zip' |
290 | 2 'tom' |
291 | 3 'and' |
292 | 4 'welcome' |
293 | 5 undef |
294 | 6 'jerry' |
295 | 7 'welcome' |
296 | 8 'this' |
297 | 9 'that' |
298 | |
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299 | That's not much help, a couple of welcomes in there, but no indication of |
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300 | which are keys, and which are values, it's just a listed array dump and, in |
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301 | this case, not particularly helpful. The trick here, is to use a B<reference> |
302 | to the data structure: |
303 | |
304 | DB<13> x \%data |
305 | 0 HASH(0x8194bc4) |
306 | 'Hello World' => 'zip' |
307 | 'jerry' => 'welcome' |
308 | 'this' => 'that' |
309 | 'tom' => 'and' |
310 | 'welcome' => undef |
311 | |
312 | The reference is truly dumped and we can finally see what we're dealing with. |
313 | Our quoting was perfectly valid but wrong for our purposes, with 'and jerry' |
314 | being treated as 2 separate words rather than a phrase, thus throwing the |
315 | evenly paired hash structure out of alignment. |
316 | |
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317 | The 'B<-w>' switch would have told us about this, had we used it at the start, |
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318 | and saved us a lot of trouble: |
319 | |
320 | > perl -w data |
321 | Odd number of elements in hash assignment at ./data line 5. |
322 | |
323 | We fix our quoting: 'tom' => q(and jerry), and run it again, this time we get |
324 | our expected output: |
325 | |
326 | > perl -w data |
327 | Hello World |
328 | |
329 | |
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330 | While we're here, take a closer look at the 'B<x>' command, it's really useful |
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331 | and will merrily dump out nested references, complete objects, partial objects |
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332 | - just about whatever you throw at it: |
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333 | |
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334 | Let's make a quick object and x-plode it, first we'll start the debugger: |
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335 | it wants some form of input from STDIN, so we give it something non-committal, |
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336 | a zero: |
337 | |
338 | > perl -de 0 |
339 | Default die handler restored. |
340 | |
341 | Loading DB routines from perl5db.pl version 1.07 |
342 | Editor support available. |
343 | |
344 | Enter h or `h h' for help, or `man perldebug' for more help. |
345 | |
346 | main::(-e:1): 0 |
347 | |
348 | Now build an on-the-fly object over a couple of lines (note the backslash): |
349 | |
350 | DB<1> $obj = bless({'unique_id'=>'123', 'attr'=> \ |
351 | cont: {'col' => 'black', 'things' => [qw(this that etc)]}}, 'MY_class') |
352 | |
353 | And let's have a look at it: |
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354 | |
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355 | DB<2> x $obj |
356 | 0 MY_class=HASH(0x828ad98) |
357 | 'attr' => HASH(0x828ad68) |
358 | 'col' => 'black' |
359 | 'things' => ARRAY(0x828abb8) |
360 | 0 'this' |
361 | 1 'that' |
362 | 2 'etc' |
363 | 'unique_id' => 123 |
364 | DB<3> |
365 | |
366 | Useful, huh? You can eval nearly anything in there, and experiment with bits |
367 | of code or regexes until the cows come home: |
368 | |
369 | DB<3> @data = qw(this that the other atheism leather theory scythe) |
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370 | |
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371 | DB<4> p 'saw -> '.($cnt += map { print "\t:\t$_\n" } grep(/the/, sort @data)) |
372 | atheism |
373 | leather |
374 | other |
375 | scythe |
376 | the |
377 | theory |
378 | saw -> 6 |
379 | |
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380 | If you want to see the command History, type an 'B<H>': |
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381 | |
382 | DB<5> H |
383 | 4: p 'saw -> '.($cnt += map { print "\t:\t$_\n" } grep(/the/, sort @data)) |
384 | 3: @data = qw(this that the other atheism leather theory scythe) |
385 | 2: x $obj |
386 | 1: $obj = bless({'unique_id'=>'123', 'attr'=> |
387 | {'col' => 'black', 'things' => [qw(this that etc)]}}, 'MY_class') |
388 | DB<5> |
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389 | |
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390 | And if you want to repeat any previous command, use the exclamation: 'B<!>': |
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391 | |
392 | DB<5> !4 |
393 | p 'saw -> '.($cnt += map { print "$_\n" } grep(/the/, sort @data)) |
394 | atheism |
395 | leather |
396 | other |
397 | scythe |
398 | the |
399 | theory |
400 | saw -> 12 |
401 | |
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402 | For more on references see L<perlref> and L<perlreftut> |
403 | |
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404 | |
405 | =head1 Stepping through code |
406 | |
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407 | Here's a simple program which converts between Celsius and Fahrenheit, it too |
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408 | has a problem: |
409 | |
410 | #!/usr/bin/perl -w |
411 | use strict; |
412 | |
413 | my $arg = $ARGV[0] || '-c20'; |
414 | |
415 | if ($arg =~ /^\-(c|f)((\-|\+)*\d+(\.\d+)*)$/) { |
416 | my ($deg, $num) = ($1, $2); |
417 | my ($in, $out) = ($num, $num); |
418 | if ($deg eq 'c') { |
419 | $deg = 'f'; |
420 | $out = &c2f($num); |
421 | } else { |
422 | $deg = 'c'; |
423 | $out = &f2c($num); |
424 | } |
425 | $out = sprintf('%0.2f', $out); |
426 | $out =~ s/^((\-|\+)*\d+)\.0+$/$1/; |
427 | print "$out $deg\n"; |
428 | } else { |
429 | print "Usage: $0 -[c|f] num\n"; |
430 | } |
431 | exit; |
432 | |
433 | sub f2c { |
434 | my $f = shift; |
435 | my $c = 5 * $f - 32 / 9; |
436 | return $c; |
437 | } |
438 | |
439 | sub c2f { |
440 | my $c = shift; |
441 | my $f = 9 * $c / 5 + 32; |
442 | return $f; |
443 | } |
444 | |
445 | |
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446 | For some reason, the Fahrenheit to Celsius conversion fails to return the |
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447 | expected output. This is what it does: |
448 | |
449 | > temp -c0.72 |
450 | 33.30 f |
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451 | |
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452 | > temp -f33.3 |
453 | 162.94 c |
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454 | |
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455 | Not very consistent! We'll set a breakpoint in the code manually and run it |
456 | under the debugger to see what's going on. A breakpoint is a flag, to which |
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457 | the debugger will run without interruption, when it reaches the breakpoint, it |
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458 | will stop execution and offer a prompt for further interaction. In normal |
459 | use, these debugger commands are completely ignored, and they are safe - if a |
460 | little messy, to leave in production code. |
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461 | |
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462 | my ($in, $out) = ($num, $num); |
463 | $DB::single=2; # insert at line 9! |
464 | if ($deg eq 'c') |
465 | ... |
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466 | |
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467 | > perl -d temp -f33.3 |
468 | Default die handler restored. |
469 | |
470 | Loading DB routines from perl5db.pl version 1.07 |
471 | Editor support available. |
472 | |
473 | Enter h or `h h' for help, or `man perldebug' for more help. |
474 | |
475 | main::(temp:4): my $arg = $ARGV[0] || '-c100'; |
476 | |
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477 | We'll simply continue down to our pre-set breakpoint with a 'B<c>': |
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478 | |
479 | DB<1> c |
480 | main::(temp:10): if ($deg eq 'c') { |
481 | |
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482 | Followed by a view command to see where we are: |
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483 | |
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484 | DB<1> v |
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485 | 7: my ($deg, $num) = ($1, $2); |
486 | 8: my ($in, $out) = ($num, $num); |
487 | 9: $DB::single=2; |
488 | 10==> if ($deg eq 'c') { |
489 | 11: $deg = 'f'; |
490 | 12: $out = &c2f($num); |
491 | 13 } else { |
492 | 14: $deg = 'c'; |
493 | 15: $out = &f2c($num); |
494 | 16 } |
495 | |
496 | And a print to show what values we're currently using: |
497 | |
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498 | DB<1> p $deg, $num |
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499 | f33.3 |
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500 | |
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501 | We can put another break point on any line beginning with a colon, we'll use |
502 | line 17 as that's just as we come out of the subroutine, and we'd like to |
503 | pause there later on: |
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504 | |
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505 | DB<2> b 17 |
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506 | |
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507 | There's no feedback from this, but you can see what breakpoints are set by |
508 | using the list 'L' command: |
509 | |
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510 | DB<3> L |
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511 | temp: |
512 | 17: print "$out $deg\n"; |
513 | break if (1) |
514 | |
515 | Note that to delete a breakpoint you use 'd' or 'D'. |
516 | |
517 | Now we'll continue down into our subroutine, this time rather than by line |
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518 | number, we'll use the subroutine name, followed by the now familiar 'v': |
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519 | |
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520 | DB<3> c f2c |
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521 | main::f2c(temp:30): my $f = shift; |
522 | |
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523 | DB<4> v |
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524 | 24: exit; |
525 | 25 |
526 | 26 sub f2c { |
527 | 27==> my $f = shift; |
528 | 28: my $c = 5 * $f - 32 / 9; |
529 | 29: return $c; |
530 | 30 } |
531 | 31 |
532 | 32 sub c2f { |
533 | 33: my $c = shift; |
534 | |
535 | |
536 | Note that if there was a subroutine call between us and line 29, and we wanted |
537 | to B<single-step> through it, we could use the 'B<s>' command, and to step |
538 | over it we would use 'B<n>' which would execute the sub, but not descend into |
539 | it for inspection. In this case though, we simply continue down to line 29: |
540 | |
541 | DB<4> c 29 |
542 | main::f2c(temp:29): return $c; |
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543 | |
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544 | And have a look at the return value: |
545 | |
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546 | DB<5> p $c |
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547 | 162.944444444444 |
548 | |
549 | This is not the right answer at all, but the sum looks correct. I wonder if |
550 | it's anything to do with operator precedence? We'll try a couple of other |
551 | possibilities with our sum: |
552 | |
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553 | DB<6> p (5 * $f - 32 / 9) |
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554 | 162.944444444444 |
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555 | |
7218dffe |
556 | DB<7> p 5 * $f - (32 / 9) |
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557 | 162.944444444444 |
cea6626f |
558 | |
7218dffe |
559 | DB<8> p (5 * $f) - 32 / 9 |
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560 | 162.944444444444 |
cea6626f |
561 | |
7218dffe |
562 | DB<9> p 5 * ($f - 32) / 9 |
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563 | 0.722222222222221 |
564 | |
565 | :-) that's more like it! Ok, now we can set our return variable and we'll |
566 | return out of the sub with an 'r': |
567 | |
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568 | DB<10> $c = 5 * ($f - 32) / 9 |
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569 | |
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570 | DB<11> r |
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571 | scalar context return from main::f2c: 0.722222222222221 |
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572 | |
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573 | Looks good, let's just continue off the end of the script: |
574 | |
7218dffe |
575 | DB<12> c |
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576 | 0.72 c |
577 | Debugged program terminated. Use q to quit or R to restart, |
578 | use O inhibit_exit to avoid stopping after program termination, |
579 | h q, h R or h O to get additional info. |
580 | |
581 | A quick fix to the offending line (insert the missing parentheses) in the |
582 | actual program and we're finished. |
583 | |
584 | |
585 | =head1 Placeholder for a, w, t, T |
586 | |
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587 | Actions, watch variables, stack traces etc.: on the TODO list. |
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588 | |
589 | a |
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590 | |
492652be |
591 | w |
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592 | |
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593 | t |
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594 | |
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595 | T |
596 | |
597 | |
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598 | =head1 REGULAR EXPRESSIONS |
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599 | |
600 | Ever wanted to know what a regex looked like? You'll need perl compiled with |
601 | the DEBUGGING flag for this one: |
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602 | |
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603 | > perl -Dr -e '/^pe(a)*rl$/i' |
604 | Compiling REx `^pe(a)*rl$' |
605 | size 17 first at 2 |
606 | rarest char |
607 | at 0 |
608 | 1: BOL(2) |
609 | 2: EXACTF <pe>(4) |
610 | 4: CURLYN[1] {0,32767}(14) |
611 | 6: NOTHING(8) |
612 | 8: EXACTF <a>(0) |
613 | 12: WHILEM(0) |
614 | 13: NOTHING(14) |
615 | 14: EXACTF <rl>(16) |
616 | 16: EOL(17) |
617 | 17: END(0) |
618 | floating `'$ at 4..2147483647 (checking floating) stclass `EXACTF <pe>' |
619 | anchored(BOL) minlen 4 |
620 | Omitting $` $& $' support. |
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621 | |
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622 | EXECUTING... |
623 | |
624 | Freeing REx: `^pe(a)*rl$' |
625 | |
626 | Did you really want to know? :-) |
7218dffe |
627 | For more gory details on getting regular expressions to work, have a look at |
628 | L<perlre>, L<perlretut>, and to decode the mysterious labels (BOL and CURLYN, |
629 | etc. above), see L<perldebguts>. |
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630 | |
631 | |
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632 | =head1 OUTPUT TIPS |
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633 | |
634 | To get all the output from your error log, and not miss any messages via |
635 | helpful operating system buffering, insert a line like this, at the start of |
636 | your script: |
637 | |
638 | $|=1; |
639 | |
640 | To watch the tail of a dynamically growing logfile, (from the command line): |
641 | |
642 | tail -f $error_log |
643 | |
644 | Wrapping all die calls in a handler routine can be useful to see how, and from |
645 | where, they're being called, L<perlvar> has more information: |
646 | |
7218dffe |
647 | BEGIN { $SIG{__DIE__} = sub { require Carp; Carp::confess(@_) } } |
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648 | |
649 | Various useful techniques for the redirection of STDOUT and STDERR filehandles |
7218dffe |
650 | are explained in L<perlopentut> and L<perlfaq8>. |
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651 | |
652 | |
653 | =head1 CGI |
654 | |
7218dffe |
655 | Just a quick hint here for all those CGI programmers who can't figure out how |
656 | on earth to get past that 'waiting for input' prompt, when running their CGI |
657 | script from the command-line, try something like this: |
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658 | |
659 | > perl -d my_cgi.pl -nodebug |
660 | |
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661 | Of course L<CGI> and L<perlfaq9> will tell you more. |
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662 | |
663 | |
664 | =head1 GUIs |
665 | |
666 | The command line interface is tightly integrated with an B<emacs> extension |
667 | and there's a B<vi> interface too. |
668 | |
669 | You don't have to do this all on the command line, though, there are a few GUI |
670 | options out there. The nice thing about these is you can wave a mouse over a |
3958b146 |
671 | variable and a dump of its data will appear in an appropriate window, or in a |
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672 | popup balloon, no more tiresome typing of 'x $varname' :-) |
673 | |
674 | In particular have a hunt around for the following: |
675 | |
676 | B<ptkdb> perlTK based wrapper for the built-in debugger |
677 | |
678 | B<ddd> data display debugger |
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679 | |
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680 | B<PerlDevKit> and B<PerlBuilder> are NT specific |
681 | |
682 | NB. (more info on these and others would be appreciated). |
683 | |
684 | |
7218dffe |
685 | =head1 SUMMARY |
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686 | |
687 | We've seen how to encourage good coding practices with B<use strict> and |
688 | B<-w>. We can run the perl debugger B<perl -d scriptname> to inspect your |
689 | data from within the perl debugger with the B<p> and B<x> commands. You can |
690 | walk through your code, set breakpoints with B<b> and step through that code |
691 | with B<s> or B<n>, continue with B<c> and return from a sub with B<r>. Fairly |
692 | intuitive stuff when you get down to it. |
693 | |
694 | There is of course lots more to find out about, this has just scratched the |
695 | surface. The best way to learn more is to use perldoc to find out more about |
696 | the language, to read the on-line help (L<perldebug> is probably the next |
697 | place to go), and of course, experiment. |
698 | |
699 | |
700 | =head1 SEE ALSO |
701 | |
702 | L<perldebug>, |
703 | L<perldebguts>, |
704 | L<perldiag>, |
705 | L<dprofpp>, |
706 | L<perlrun> |
707 | |
708 | |
709 | =head1 AUTHOR |
710 | |
2402d92a |
711 | Richard Foley <richard.foley@rfi.net> Copyright (c) 2000 |
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712 | |
713 | |
714 | =head1 CONTRIBUTORS |
715 | |
716 | Various people have made helpful suggestions and contributions, in particular: |
717 | |
718 | Ronald J Kimball <rjk@linguist.dartmouth.edu> |
719 | |
7218dffe |
720 | Hugo van der Sanden <hv@crypt0.demon.co.uk> |
721 | |
10c10266 |
722 | Peter Scott <Peter@PSDT.com> |
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723 | |