Is there any way of detecting that a debugger is running in memory?

and here comes the on Form Load pseudocode.

if debugger.IsRunning then
Application.exit
end if

Edit: The original title was "Detecting an in memory debugger"

link|improve this question

Most debuggers can be attached to a process at runtime. In that case checking for debugger on statrup won't help much. – MichaƂ Piaskowski Aug 25 '09 at 19:40
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

Try the following

if ( System.Diagnostics.Debugger.IsAttached ) {
  ...
}
link|improve this answer
feedback

Two things to keep in mind before using this to close an application running in the debugger:

  1. I've used a debugger to pull a crash trace from a commercial .NET application and send it to the company where it was subsequently fixed with a thank you for making it easy and
  2. That check can be trivially defeated.

Now, to be of more use, here's how to use this detection to keep func eval in the debugger from changing your program state if you have a cache a lazily evaluated property for performance reasons.

private object _calculatedProperty;

public object SomeCalculatedProperty
{
    get
    {
        if (_calculatedProperty == null)
        {
            object property = /*calculate property*/;
            if (System.Diagnostics.Debugger.IsAttached)
                return property;

            _calculatedProperty = property;
        }

        return _calculatedProperty;
    }
}

I've also used this variant at times to ensure my debugger step-through doesn't skip the evaluation:

private object _calculatedProperty;

public object SomeCalculatedProperty
{
    get
    {
        bool debuggerAttached = System.Diagnostics.Debugger.IsAttached;

        if (_calculatedProperty == null || debuggerAttached)
        {
            object property = /*calculate property*/;
            if (debuggerAttached)
                return property;

            _calculatedProperty = property;
        }

        return _calculatedProperty;
    }
}
link|improve this answer
That's a cool idea - but it changes the flow of your program when running under a debugger, so you're no longer debugging the code that you use in release. IMHO it would be better in most cases to provide a non-cached variant of the property (inside #if DEBUG so it's not built into releases) that you can use in the debugger to examine the value, leaving the "real" property working the same way in both debug & release builds. – Jason Williams Aug 25 '09 at 20:01
@Jason: yes and no. In this case, all methods called to evaluate the property are pure (no side effects regardless of when called), so I was actually ensuring that this held for properties as well from the application's perspective. – 280Z28 Aug 25 '09 at 20:20
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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