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I'm trying to put breakpoints into the GoogleAppEngine sources (SDK 1.7.0) but IDEA Ultimate (11.0.2) just keeps telling me Warning: No executable code found at line 482 in class com.google.appengine.api.memcache.AsyncMemcacheServiceImpl.

I get this error message both when I run the code from unit tests and when I start up the development server.

It's quite annoying. Anyway, my sources are in an external (relative to both the IDEA home and the project home) directory, and my jar files are under the App engine SDK lib dir.

My jar files are added as a project library to the module, and my sources are attached to this library. I was playing around with module dependencies as well, but without any luck. Finally, I decided to put this library into Compile scope, but that was a bad idea since the SDK provides these jars at runtime, so I decided to fall back to Provided scope.

I also played with the export checkbox on the module dependencies tab, but I think this is irrelevant, according to the web help, export is only important when you have dependent modules and you want to make your library available in these modules as well.

Anyway, this question arose 4 years ago also. So I'm wondering now whether it is really so hard to solve this issue?

I'm very disappointed now. I hadn't had any problems with IDEA so far...I saw that this problem arose to other people as well, so this is not unique I guess.

Any help is appreciated.


I edited my question due to my javap experiments below: It seems that the classes and the sources are NOT out of sync. I checked out the 1.7.0 related revision from SVN, and I'm using the 1.7.0 SDK, so these should not be out of sync at all.

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18 Answers 18

98

I had similar problems and various attempts has been applied. Below is my usual steps:

  1. If you are using Maven dependencies, go to Maven Projects -> refresh
  2. If that does not work, Try top menu --> Build --> Rebuild Project
  3. If that still doesn't work, try top menu --> File --> Invalidate Cache/Restart
  4. If that still doesn't work, then $CATALINA_BASE/bin/catalina.sh stop, then start

After this, usually it covers 99% of the problems. Otherwise, Probably you will have to examine some other possibilities.

5
  • is there a way to invalidate caches without deleting the local history?
    – Lama
    Apr 7, 2015 at 10:08
  • 1
    Terminate the server from the task manager solved it in my case. Seems that intellij can't always terminate my server successfully Jul 15, 2016 at 12:15
  • 1
    I tried all the steps from Intellilj, but it didn't work. Finally, I tried running -> mvn clean install from the command line and it fixed the problem May 10, 2019 at 17:19
  • Rebuilding worked Sep 23, 2022 at 17:30
  • I had a similar problem, issue was my source code was changed w.r.t jar deployed, so it was showing this error when I reverted back everything was fine Mar 14, 2023 at 9:13
24

I had faced similar problem while debugging in intellij. I wasn't able to put breakpoint at one of the code snippet, then i changed the line number of the code and after that i was able to put breakpoint. Looks like a bug in intellij or some caching issue.

1
  • I have exactly the same situation :( When I change the line I can put the breakpoint!
    – Sergio
    Aug 13, 2015 at 14:49
11

I found some other cases where people reported that IDEA says "No executable code found". A common pattern is that they were trying to debug code that has been built without debug information. Check that you are compiling with the "-g" flag (or equivalent) set. Use javap to see if there is debug information in the .class file(s).

5
  • 1
    Hmmm.... That sounds logical... :) I'll try to figure out how was it built, but since I'm not the one who compiled the code (it's Google) I don't really know how shall I do that. Any suggestions on this?
    – Alma Alma
    Jul 21, 2012 at 11:30
  • OK... I just found your other answer related to how to see whether debug information is available... You're really a helpful guy! :) I'll give it a try.
    – Alma Alma
    Jul 21, 2012 at 11:38
  • So. I tried the javap -v command which successfully disassembled the class. Now what I see just assured my previous suspicion. The disassembled file says LineNumberTable: line 481: 0 which is exactly the line number of the method header where I put my breakpoint in (I put it on the next line). So it seems that the class and the source is in sync (which is not a big surprise anyway).
    – Alma Alma
    Jul 21, 2012 at 11:55
  • 3
    This didn't work for me. In fact, I have NEVER used the "-g" flag in IDEA and most of the times I was able to debug my code.
    – async
    May 5, 2014 at 14:19
  • @async and others, clearly there are multiple possible causes for this problem. If my suggestion doesn't help, try some of the other suggestions.
    – Stephen C
    May 2, 2023 at 8:44
8

I was able to fix this problem by recompiling the class in question: Build - > Recompile (filename.java)

2
  • This resolved my problem. I was using another maven project containing the code I wanted to debug as a dependency for my main Spring project. Since the code that needs to be debugged isn't executing directly, but rather as a dependency for another project that does, this was causing some issues with the debugging. After recompiling the java file with my breakpoints, it was running as expected without having to restart the main project again!
    – btrballin
    Feb 3, 2021 at 23:59
  • This option is not available in Android Studio (2021.3).
    – WebViewer
    Dec 30, 2022 at 9:06
6

I had same issue. I don't know why, but for me helped to add any modification in code, such as adding or removing comment. Strange, but it resolved my issue

4

The question is rather old but I thought my experience might help someone in the future. In my case I was trying to debug code that was not compiled with debug information. I am using maven in which the original parent pom file before modification looked something like below in the build section.

<build>
    <pluginManagement>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
            <artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>2.1</version>
            <configuration>
              <target>${javaCompilerVersion}</target>
              <source>${javaCompilerVersion}</source>
              <encoding>UTF-8</encoding>
            </configuration>
        </plugin>
        <!--More plugins...-->
     </pluginManagement>
</build>

I changed the above section to make it look like below.

<build>
    <pluginManagement>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
            <artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>2.1</version>
            <configuration>
              <target>${javaCompilerVersion}</target>
              <source>${javaCompilerVersion}</source>
              <encoding>UTF-8</encoding>
              <debug>true</debug>
              <debuglevel>lines,vars,source</debuglevel>
            </configuration>
        </plugin>
        <!--More plugins...-->
     </pluginManagement>
</build>

Note the added <debug> and <debuglevel> elements. debuglevel element can take any combination of the three arguments separated by commas.

After compiling with this change I finally managed to put break points in IDEA.

0
4

The essence of the problem is that the JVM executes a class file (either simple class or a class loaded from jar from the class path) which DOES NOT MATCH the source being used by debugger. Once this is understood, the solution is simple: make sure that the source represents the class being executed. So, to fix the problem you can refresh-synchronize sources to classes, etc.

3

Menu --> File --> Invalidate Cache/Restart

This worked for me under IntelliJ 13.0.2

1
  • This fixed it for me.
    – sud007
    Apr 10, 2020 at 15:26
2

I had a similar problem and it was caused by a mistake in my Tomcat configuration, under the Deployment tab, the "Deploy at the server startup". I had accidentally changed it to a very similar project with ":war exploded". When I changed it back, it worked fine.

2

Had same issue, figured out that the version of code on the server and the one I'm debugging are different. After synching the code the issue was resolved.

2

In my case i was debugging remotely, found out that the version of code on the remote server and Intellij was not in sync. I re-build the latest code locally, placed the same change on remote server and it worked for me.
You can try out few more possible solutions that could be specific to your problems suggested by JetBrains. Impossible to debug "Warning: no executable code found at line."

1

Please, make sure you have not run Proguard. It helped me.

1
  • 4
    This looks more like a comment. Oct 28, 2014 at 14:04
1

If you are using some servers they will go into "low memory mode", that means they will not debug for you, no matter what options or caches you invalidate.

You should stop your server, increase the memory settings on the options that are passed to java and restart your server. Check logs to ensure you don't get a report such as "running in low memory mode".

0

In my case I killed all running processes on the device and disconnected and reconnected it.

0

I had the same issue using debug configuration in my case Tomcat. I tried all above, but nothing. when I just reconfigured the Tomcat (debug > edit configuration > remove the tomcat > add it again from scratch) it was finally working :)

0
0

Check your disc space and free up some memory. If you are running low on disc space, even if your server is not on "low memory mode", intelliJ would not allocate the space to cache the classes required for debugging. As a result it won't allow you to set the break-point.

0

I was working on an Intellij Plugin and when the sandbox Intellij popped up, what finally fixed my issue was, once the sandbox intellij popped up, I rebuilt from there.

After that I built both my Intellij and the sandbox Intellij and they synced finally.

0

Simply by stopping the debugging process and reinitiating it. In my case, simple as that.

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