173

I copied the following Ruby code from the Internet and made a few changes but it doesn't work.

What can I do to debug the program by myself?

2
  • Please, check "debug.rb" - a new Ruby debugging tool developed by the Ruby core team. stackoverflow.com/a/70104576/12201472
    – Marian13
    Nov 25, 2021 at 8:56
  • For a more up-to-date answer that shows how to use pry-byebug with pry to pause, inspect, continue, and step into and out of the methods, check out my answer for a similar question. Dec 7, 2021 at 3:16

17 Answers 17

159

Use Pry (GitHub).

Install via:

$ gem install pry
$ pry

Then add:

require 'pry'; binding.pry

into your program.

As of pry 0.12.2 however, there are no navigation commands such as next, break, etc. Some other gems additionally provide this, see for example pry-byebug.

7
  • 11
    I also recommend using Pry (definitely a life changer!).. Once installed and required in your program, setting a breakpoint is as easy as writing binding.pry. It also comes with colour completion, documentation lookup, and possibility to dynamically edit and reload a method.. Jan 17, 2012 at 12:05
  • 5
    Pry's homepage is available here: pryrepl.org.
    – shadowbq
    Jan 4, 2013 at 19:27
  • 5
    Pry / byebug are great, but not as your 1st step when debugging. In most cases, raising an exception with raise object.inspect will solve your issue faster than opening up an irb session. I recommend only using the console debuggers once more simple solutions like raising an exception are unable to solve your problem. Aug 14, 2015 at 3:56
  • 3
    Is there a way to single-step code with pry? I couldn't find how to do it; and that's what I expect of a debugger.
    – jpetazzo
    Jul 6, 2016 at 4:49
  • 2
    @jpetazzo yes, by typing 'next'
    – marcbest
    Jul 19, 2016 at 12:19
114
  1. In Ruby:

    ruby -rdebug myscript.rb 
    

    then,

    • b <line>: put break-point
    • and n(ext) or s(tep) and c(ontinue)
    • p(uts) for display

    (like perl debug)

  2. In Rails: Launch the server with

    script/server --debugger
    

    and add debugger in the code.

4
  • 7
    -rdebug is rubbish. And unmaintained. Use Pry (see the other answer).
    – Snowcrash
    Mar 22, 2013 at 18:31
  • 3
    @SnowCrash - Why do you say that -r debug is rubbish ?
    – sid smith
    Sep 21, 2014 at 20:12
  • 9
    with -rdebug :no need to change source file in order to debug Sep 23, 2014 at 21:18
  • 3
    For a new Ruby/Rails application, Pry is the correct answer. But I spent over an hour trying to find an ancient version of Pry to run on a Rails 2.2 app with a specific version of facets in the gem requirements, and was unsuccessful. For ancient Rails apps ruby-debug is a bit nasty but gets the job done. Dec 30, 2014 at 20:45
57

As banister recommended: use pry! I can only agree on this.

pry is a much better repl than irb.

You need to add

require 'pry'

to your source file and then insert a breakpoint in your source code by adding

binding.pry

at the place where you want to have a look at the things (this is like triggering a breakpoint in a classic IDE environment)

Once your program hits the

binding.pry

line, you'll be thrown right into the pry repl, with all the context of your program right at hand, so that you can simply explore everything around, investigate all objects, change state, and even change code on the fly.

I believe you can not change the code of the method that you are currently in, so you can sadly not change the next line to be executed. But good ruby code tends to be single line anyway ;-)

0
38

Debugging by raising exceptions is far easier than squinting through print log statements, and for most bugs, its generally much faster than opening up an irb debugger like pry or byebug. Those tools should not always be your first step.


Debugging Ruby/Rails Quickly:

1. Fast Method: Raise an Exception then and .inspect its result

The fastest way to debug Ruby (especially Rails) code is to raise an exception along the execution path of your code while calling .inspect on the method or object (e.g. foo):

raise foo.inspect

In the above code, raise triggers an Exception that halts execution of your code, and returns an error message that conveniently contains .inspect information about the object/method (i.e. foo) on the line that you're trying to debug.

This technique is useful for quickly examining an object or method (e.g. is it nil?) and for immediately confirming whether a line of code is even getting executed at all within a given context.

2. Fallback: Use a ruby IRB debugger like byebug or pry

Only after you have information about the state of your codes execution flow should you consider moving to a ruby gem irb debugger like pry or byebug where you can delve more deeply into the state of objects within your execution path.


General Beginner Advice

When you are trying to debug a problem, good advice is to always: Read The !@#$ing Error Message (RTFM)

That means reading error messages carefully and completely before acting so that you understand what it's trying to tell you. When you debug, ask the following mental questions, in this order, when reading an error message:

  1. What class does the error reference? (i.e. do I have the correct object class or is my object nil?)
  2. What method does the error reference? (i.e. is their a type in the method; can I call this method on this type/class of object?)
  3. Finally, using what I can infer from my last two questions, what lines of code should I investigate? (remember: the last line of code in the stack trace is not necessarily where the problem lies.)

In the stack trace pay particular attention to lines of code that come from your project (e.g. lines starting with app/... if you are using Rails). 99% of the time the problem is with your own code.


To illustrate why interpreting in this order is important...

E.g. a Ruby error message that confuses many beginners:

You execute code that at some point executes as such:

@foo = Foo.new

...

@foo.bar

and you get an error that states:

undefined method "bar" for Nil:nilClass

Beginners see this error and think the problem is that the method bar is undefined. It's not. In this error the real part that matters is:

for Nil:nilClass

for Nil:nilClass means that @foo is Nil! @foo is not a Foo instance variable! You have an object that is Nil. When you see this error, it's simply ruby trying to tell you that the method bar doesn't exist for objects of the class Nil. (well duh! since we are trying to use a method for an object of the class Foo not Nil).

Unfortunately, due to how this error is written (undefined method "bar" for Nil:nilClass) its easy to get tricked into thinking this error has to do with bar being undefined. When not read carefully this error causes beginners to mistakenly go digging into the details of the bar method on Foo, entirely missing the part of the error that hints that the object is of the wrong class (in this case: nil). It's a mistake that's easily avoided by reading error messages in their entirety.

Summary:

Always carefully read the entire error message before beginning any debugging. That means: Always check the class type of an object in an error message first, then its methods, before you begin sleuthing into any stacktrace or line of code where you think the error may be occurring. Those 5 seconds can save you 5 hours of frustration.

tl;dr: Don't squint at print logs: raise exceptions or use an irb debugger instead. Avoid rabbit holes by reading errors carefully before debugging.

4
  • 3
    While I agree with you that reading print logs is tedious, I think recommending to not use a debugger in the first place is very bad advice. Adding a breakpoint and triggering it is exactly the same effort as raising an exception but it gives you a full view of the current state of the application. If any further questions come up as a result of inspecting the dubious state you can interactively drill down instead of adding yet another exception and restarting the application.
    – Patrick R.
    Feb 16, 2017 at 11:54
  • 2
    @PatrickR. In my experience IRB debuggers are not a good first step when you're still trying to drill down into exactly where a problem is in your code is. Adding and removing many IRB breakpoints takes more time than adding exceptions, and do not give definite answers about your code's control flow in the way that exceptions can with beginners to weed out bad assumptions. IRB breakpoints are also easy to forget about, causing confusion when requests hang. If you know exactly where a problem is and need to debug its state, then sure, start with an IRB debugger. But often that's not true. Feb 20, 2017 at 4:24
  • 1
    Hah! Reading the error messages is helpful for Ruby, but other scripting languages? I can't blame the OP for not even bothering. Apr 27, 2017 at 4:02
  • 1
    My initial reaction was similar to @PatrickR., but I tried this anyway. In the end, I find this to be bad advice, or maybe in the best light, advice tailored to a different use case than I have. In particular a case where (a) not using Rails and (b) have a wrong result but no errors or exceptions raised, i.e. the code computes a number, it's just the wrong number. Trying to iteratively guess where to make a program that would otherwise execute crash is a strategy, but it's more work since I have to keep restarting and re-running. Each cycle has its own start-up time that's wasted.
    – Brick
    May 13, 2019 at 16:27
21
  1. Print out the variables whenever possible. (This is called printf debugging) You can do this by running

    STDERR.puts x.inspect
    

    or

    STDERR.puts "Variable x is #{x.inspect}"
    

    If you want to make this easier to type, then you may want to use the exemplor gem.

  2. Turn warnings on. If you're running ruby then run it with the -w switch (eg ruby -w script.rb). If you're running it from irb, and you're using a version of ruby prior to 1.9.2, type $VERBOSE = true at the start of your session. If you misspell an instance variable, once warnings are on you'll get

    warning: instance variable @valeus not initialized

  3. Understand the concept of a binary chop (the following quote is from Practices of an Agile Developer)

    Divide the problem space in half, and see which half contains the problem. Then divide that half in half again, and repeat.

  4. If you're successful with a binary chop, you may find that there's a single line that doesn't do what you expect it to do. For example

    [1, 2, 3].include?([1,2])
    

    gives a value of false, even though you'd think it'd return true. In that case, you may want to look at the documentation. Web sites for documentation include ruby-doc.org, or APIdock. In the latter case, you'd type include? next to the magnifying glass near the top right corner, choose the include? which has Array underneath it (if you don't know what class [1, 2, 3] is, type [1, 2, 3].class in irb), and you get to include? (Array), which describes what it does.

    However, if the documentation doesn't help, you're more likely to get a good answer if you can ask a question on how a specific line isn't doing what it should, rather than why an entire script isn't doing what it should.

0
7

To easily debug Ruby shell script, just change its first line from:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby

to:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby -rdebug

Then every time when debugger console is shown, you can choose:

  • c for Continue (to the next Exception, breakpoint or line with: debugger),
  • n for Next line,
  • w/where to Display frame/call stack,
  • l to Show the current code,
  • cat to show catchpoints.
  • h for more Help.

See also: Debugging with ruby-debug, Key shortcuts for ruby-debug gem.


In case the script just hangs and you need a backtrace, try using lldb/gdb like:

echo 'call (void)rb_backtrace()' | lldb -p $(pgrep -nf ruby)

and then check your process foreground.

Replace lldb with gdb if works better. Prefix with sudo to debug non-owned process.

2
  • 1
    ruby-debug looks pretty dated. The git repo for ruby-debug has only one commit for this year - is it still actively maintained? Aug 1, 2015 at 23:48
  • It also seems to come packaged with ruby, which is great when you're in a pinch. Great answer!
    – Breedly
    Dec 7, 2017 at 14:43
7

As of Ruby 2.4.0, it is easier to start an IRB REPL session in the middle of any Ruby program. Put these lines at the point in the program that you want to debug:

require 'irb'
binding.irb

You can run Ruby code and print out local variables. Type Ctrl+D or quit to end the REPL and let Ruby program keep running.

You can also use puts and p to print out values from your program as it is running.

7

I just discovered this gem ( turns Pry into a debugger for MRI Ruby 2.0+ )

https://github.com/deivid-rodriguez/pry-byebug

Install with:

gem install pry-byebug

then use exactly like pry, mark the line you want to break at:

require 'pry'; binding.pry

Unlike vanilla pry however, this gem has some key GDB-like navigation commands such as next, step and break:

break SomeClass#run            # Break at the start of `SomeClass#run`.
break Foo#bar if baz?          # Break at `Foo#bar` only if `baz?`.
break app/models/user.rb:15    # Break at line 15 in user.rb.
break 14                       # Break at line 14 in the current file.
6

I strongly recommend this video, in order to pick the proper tool at the moment to debug our code.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GwgF8GcynV0

Personally, I'd highlight two big topics in this video.

  • Pry is awesome for debug data, "pry is a data explorer" (sic)
  • Debugger seems to be better to debug step by step.

That's my two cents!

6

All other answers already give almost everything... Just a little addition.

If you want some more IDE-like debugger (non-CLI) and are not afraid of using Vim as editor, I suggest Vim Ruby Debugger plugin for it.

Its documentation is pretty straightforward, so follow the link and see. In short, it allows you to set breakpoint at current line in editor, view local variables in nifty window on pause, step over/into — almost all usual debugger features.

For me it was pretty enjoyable to use this vim debugger for debugging a Rails app, although rich logger abilities of Rails almost eliminates the need for it.

6

deletes all the things

Welcome to 2017 ^_^

Okay, so if you're not opposed to trying out a new IDE you can do the following for free.

Quick Instructions

  1. Install vscode
  2. Install Ruby Dev Kit if you haven't already
  3. Install Ruby, ruby-linter, and ruby-rubocop extensions for vscode
  4. Manually install whatever gems rubyide/vscode-ruby specifies, if needed
  5. Configure your launch.json to use "cwd" and and "program" fields using the {workspaceRoot} macro
  6. Add a field called "showDebuggerOutput" and set it to true
  7. Enable breakpoints everywhere in your Debug preferences as "debug.allowBreakpointsEverywhere": true

Detailed Instructions

  1. Download Visual Studio Code aka vscode; this is not the same as Visual Studio. It's free, light-weight, and generally positively regarded.
  2. Install the Ruby Dev Kit; you should follow the instructions at their repo here: https://github.com/oneclick/rubyinstaller/wiki/Development-Kit
  3. Next you can either install extensions via a web browser, or inside the IDE; this is for inside the IDE. If you choose the other, you can go here. Navigate to the Extensions part of vscode; you can do this a couple ways, but the most future-proof method will probably be hitting F1, and typing out ext until an option called Extensions: Install Extensions becomes available. Alternatives are CtrlShiftx and from the top menu bar, View->Extensions
  4. Next you're going to want the following extensions; these aren't 100% necessary, but I'll let you decide what to keep after you've tinkered some:
    • Ruby; extension author Peng Lv
    • ruby-rubocop; extension author misogi
    • ruby-linter; extension author Cody Hoover
  5. Inside your ruby script's directory, we're going to make a directory via command-line called .vscode and in there we'll but a file called launch.json where we're going to store some config options.
    • launch.json contents

{ "version": "0.2.0", "configurations": [ { "name": "Debug Local File", "type":"Ruby", "request": "launch", "cwd": "${workspaceRoot}", "program": "{workspaceRoot}/../script_name.rb", "args": [], "showDebuggerOutput": true } ] }

  1. Follow the instructions from the extension authors for manual gem installations. It's located here for now: https://github.com/rubyide/vscode-ruby#install-ruby-dependencies
  2. You'll probably want the ability to put breakpoints wherever you like; not having this option enabled can cause confusion. To do this, we'll go to the top menu bar and select File->Preferences->Settings (or Ctrl, ) and scroll until you reach the Debug section. Expand it and look for a field called "debug.allowBreakpointsEverywhere" -- select that field and click on the little pencil-looking icon and set it to true.

After doing all that fun stuff, you should be able to set breakpoints and debug in a menu similar to this for mid-2017 and a darker theme:enter image description here with all the fun stuff like your call stack, variable viewer, etc.

The biggest PITA is 1) installing the pre-reqs and 2) Remembering to configure the .vscode\launch.json file. Only #2 should add any baggage to future projects, and you can just copy a generic enough config like the one listed above. There's probably a more general config location, but I don't know off the top of my head.

3
  • It's 2018 now, 😉 but unfortunately, you still cannot debug a unit test using the plugins you listed here… 😕 Quite sad. Nov 15, 2018 at 22:30
  • 1
    @MonsieurDart When I wrote this, it was meant for basic debugging of ruby scripts. I'm not familiar with anything specifically about unit tests. If this answer is incorrect or outdated, please let me know what needs attention and any info that can help speed that process up. Nov 16, 2018 at 0:24
  • Hey @kayleeFrye_onDeck! Your response is great, I totally give you that. But, last time I checked Peng Lv's Ruby plugin for VSC, it was not able to set breakpoints inside a unit test (or any other test). It was one of the known limitations of the plugin. I think people need to know this before trying to configure their instance of VSC: it takes time and, for many people, running a tests is the number one way to write and debug code. 😊 Nov 19, 2018 at 9:06
5
  1. You can print your variables out along the way
  2. Turn on the -w (warnings) flag
  3. Use a tool such as ruby-debug
1
  • 2
    I'll add that irb is a great starting place. Try using irb with small questionable chunks. I love ruby-debug (ruby-debug19 for Ruby 1.9+) because it makes it easy to stop the running program, examine variables, drop into irb, then continue running. Oct 17, 2010 at 23:40
4

If you are using RubyMine, debugging ruby scripts is simple and straightforward.

Suppose you have a Ruby script hello_world.rb

1. Set breakpoints

Set a breakpoint at line 6 as below.

enter image description here

2. Start debugging

Now you can just start the debugger to run the script:

enter image description here

enter image description here

3. Inspect variables, etc.

Then when the execution hits a breakpoint, you'll be able to inspect variables, etc.

enter image description here

Further information for your reference

  1. If you would like to use RubyMine to do remote debugging, you can do so.
  2. If you would like to use RubyMine to remote debug rails running inside a docker, it is also straightforward.
1
  • Do we have a way to debug external libraries in RubyMine?
    – Am33d
    Oct 14, 2019 at 10:32
3

Well, ruby standard lib has an easy to use gdb-like console debugger: http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.1.0/libdoc/debug/rdoc/DEBUGGER__.html No need to install any extra gems. Rails scripts can be debugged that way too.

e.g.

def say(word)
  require 'debug'
  puts word
end
0
2

printf debugging

There has always been a controversy around debugging techniques, some people like to debug by print statements, some other ones like to dig deep with a debugger.

I'd suggest that you try both approaches.

Actually one of the old Unix men recently said, that printf debugging was a faster way to go for him at some points.

But if you are new at some job and need to understand a big blob of code, then it's really usefull to step throughout there, putting some breakpoints here and there, going along with it how it works.

It should give you some understanding how the code is weaved.

If you are new to some other peoples software, It might help you to step through there.

You'll quickly find out if they arranged it in a clever way, or if that's just a bunch of shit.

1
  • this is without a doubt the best answer,,,it depends
    – menriquez
    Oct 19, 2016 at 20:11
1

The mother of all debugger is plain old print screen. Most of the time, you probably only want to inspect some simple objects, a quick and easy way is like this:

@result = fetch_result

p "--------------------------"
p @result

This will print out the contents of @result to STDOUT with a line in front for easy identification.

Bonus if you use a autoload / reload capable framework like Rails, you won't even need to restart your app. (Unless the code you are debugging is not reloaded due to framework specific settings)

I find this works for 90% of the use case for me. You can also use ruby-debug, but I find it overkill most of the time.

1

There is many debuggers with different features, based on which you make choice. My priorities was satisfied with pry-moves which was:

  • quickly comprehensible info on how to use
  • intuitive steps (like easy stepping into blocks)
  • "stepping back" (pry-moves partially satisfies the need)

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.